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2025 Canadian federal election in Nova Scotia

In the 2025 Canadian federal election, 11 members of Parliament were elected to the House of Commons from the province of Nova Scotia (3.2% of all members).

2022 electoral redistribution

The 2025 Canadian federal election was the first election to utilize the electoral districts established following the 2022 Canadian federal electoral redistribution. The House of Commons increased from 338 seats to 343 seats. Nova Scotia's seat allocation stayed the same at 11 seats. This ensures that the average population per constituency in Nova Scotia is 88,126 (according to the 2021 Canadian census), which is 19,722 less people per electoral district than the national average.

Timeline

Predictions

Results

Summary

Comparison with national results

Student vote results

Student votes are mock elections that run parallel to actual elections, in which students not of voting age participate. They are administered by Student Vote Canada. These are for educational purposes and do not count towards the results.

! colspan="2" rowspan="2" | Party ! rowspan="2" | Leader ! colspan="3" | Seats ! colspan="3" | Popular vote |- ! Elected ! % ! Δ ! Votes ! % ! Δ () |-

| style="text-align: left;"| Mark Carney | 8 || 72.73 || 4|| 11,460 || 39.99|| 11.88 |-

| style="text-align: left;"| Pierre Poilievre | 3 || 27.27 || 1|| 8,611|| 30.05|| 9.85 |-

| style="text-align: left;"| Jagmeet Singh | 0 || 0 || 5|| 3,694 || 12.89|| 18.67 |-

| style="text-align: left;"| Elizabeth May & Jonathan Pedneault | 0 || 0 || 0|| 2,657|| 9.27|| 1.65 |-

| style="text-align: left;"| Maxime Bernier | 0 || 0 || 0|| 1,638 || 5.72|| 0.87 |- | style="background-color:gainsboro"| | colspan="2" style="text-align: left;" | Other | 0 || 0 || 0|| 597 || 2.08|| 0.54 |- | colspan="3" style="text-align: left;" | Total | 11 || 100.00 || 0 || 28,657 || 100.00|| – |- | colspan="7" style="text-align: left;" | Source: Student Vote Canada

Aftermath

Several months following the election, Chris d'Entremont, the Conservative MP for Acadie—Annapolis, crossed the floor to the Liberal Party. This meant that Nova Scotia's entire delegation to the House of Commons were members of the Liberal Party.

See also

Notes

References