For the 45th time since 1867, Canadians went to the polls today to choose their local representatives in the House of Commons.
As of 1:30 a.m. CDT, it was clear that the Liberal Party would form the next government. What still wasn't clear was whether it would be a minority or majority government. Several ridings across the country had tight races, and counts from advanced voting polls were resulting in large swings.
It was also clear that the NDP would lose official party status after being decimated, falling from 25 seats to seven as of 1:30 a.m. CDT. A party must win at least 12 seats to have official party status. Leader Jagmeet Singh announced late Monday night that he would resign once an interim leader was selected. Singh had failed to win his seat.
The Conservative Party of Canada will once again form the official opposition, but the party's leader may not be in the House of Commons. Pierre Pollievre was trailing all evening in his Carleton riding, but in his concession speech, he vowed to continue leading the party and holding the Liberal government accountable.
Total seat count (elected or leading)
172 seats are needed to form a majority government. Numbers are updated as they come in from Elections Canada. 12 seats are needed for a party to hold official party status.
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Winnipeg results
Results are courtesy of Elections Canada and are unofficial until declared official by the Chief Electoral Officer.
The vote counts sent in on election night are preliminary, unvalidated, and may change. Preliminary results show votes per candidate by riding and are considered incomplete until all ballots are counted.