
Ottawa elects 3 new faces including an extra Liberal MPP
When the election was called, the Liberals held only nine seats across the entire province, and four of those were held by Ottawa Liberal MPPs.
The party retained that quartet of seats on Thursday but also secured a fifth one in the formerly Conservative riding of Nepean thanks to Tyler Watt, a health-care worker.
Watt succeeds Lisa MacLeod of the Progressive Conservatives, who announced in September she wouldn't be running again in her longtime riding.
"I was nervous going into tonight, so I'm just trying to take in how exciting this is," Watt told CBC after he was projected to win. "It's just [a] really incredible experience that I will remember for the rest of my life."
Familiar figures
The other two Ottawa newcomers to the Ontario Legislature are both experienced municipal politicians.
George Darouze, the city councillor for Ottawa's Osgoode ward, reclaimed the provincial Carleton seat for the Progressive Conservatives. Goldie Ghamari had won the riding for the PCs in 2022 but turned Independent last year and didn't run again.
A number of Darouze's cohorts on council joined him at a golf and country club to track the results.
"I'm feeling very humble. I'm very happy," Darouze said, crediting his team for slogging through a winter campaign.
"We [had] people flipping, slipping and falling. It's amazing."
George Darouze will be the new MPP for Carleton
4 hours ago
Duration 1:30
Catherine McKenney, the former city councillor for Ottawa's Somerset ward, won the provincial seat of Ottawa Centre for the Ontario New Democratic Party. McKenney takes on the mantle from the NDP's Joel Harden, who will run in the upcoming federal election.
McKenney said they felt a lot of relief once they were declared the winner.
"You know, you work hard. You go to the doors, day in and day out, you talk to people. It always felt good ... but you want the results in and now we have them," McKenney said.
WATCH | McKenney keeps it in the NDP family:
Catherine McKenney wins Ottawa Centre
5 hours ago
Duration 2:38
McCrimmon, Pasma returned to office
In Kanata-Carleton, the Liberals' Karen McCrimmon secured her second term. She was first elected to the riding in a 2023 byelection, but only by a small margin, which made her riding one to watch last night.
"I'm grateful to the people ... who have placed their trust [in me] once again," McCrimmon said.
"And I'm grateful for my family. They're the ones who make the sacrifices to allow me to do this. Just a whole lot of gratitude going on here."
During the last general election in 2022, Ottawa West-Nepean incumbent Chandra Pasma of the NDP also took her seat by a relatively small lead, raising the question of whether the party would hold it this time around.
It did, with Pasma besting her opponents.
"We knocked on as many doors as we could," Pasma said. "But of course there's extra challenges when you're doing this in February, from the freezing temperatures to the ice and snow.... We dealt with some slips and falls but we were really happy to have those conversations."
After Thursday night's results, the Liberals emerged with five out of the nine ridings where Ottawa residents cast a ballot, with the PCs and the NDP each garnering two seats.
Stephen Blais helped shore up the Liberals' local fortunes by retaining the Orléans seat, though the results for that race did not get released until after 11 p.m.
With Watt's win in Nepean, the Liberals were the only party to pick up an additional seat.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Toronto Sun
23 minutes ago
- Toronto Sun
Federal green subsidy program not expected to come close to reaching goals
The Low Carbon Economy Fund was meant to support projects that reduce greenhouse gas emissions and create green jobs Liberal and Conservative governments have been setting and failing to meet emission reduction targets since 1988. Photo by iStock / GETTY IMAGES Despite twice moving the goalposts, a pricey green subsidy program won't come close to meeting its targets, says an internal report. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS ONLY Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments Enjoy additional articles per month Get email updates from your favourite authors Don't have an account? Create Account The internal Department of Environment report evaluating the Low Carbon Economy Fund — a 2016 government program meant to support projects that reduce greenhouse gas emissions and create green jobs — concluded the program wasn't living up to potential, reports Blacklock's Reporter. 'Higher than expected project delays, cancellations and withdrawals impacted the program's ability to meet established greenhouse gas reduction targets within planned timelines,' reads an excerpt from the report. 'A robust uncertainty analysis could help to ensure that at least some of these challenges are integrated into the analysis used to estimate a project's emission reduction. ' The program was granted a $2 billion budget upon its 2016 launch before it was expanded to $2.2 billion — but delays, cancellations and the continued failure of its projects saw those funds slashed to just $820 million. The program had aimed to cut emissions by 10 million tonnes by 2030, but that goal was lowered to 7 million tonnes and later 3.9 million tonnes. Job creation targets were likewise lowered from 115,200 by 2030, to just 34,500 jobs. Columnists Columnists Canada World Television
an hour ago
Was Battle River-Crowfoot the last hurrah for the long ballot protest?
In attempting to give Monday's federal byelection in Alberta the longest ballot in Canadian history, a group of electoral reform advocates may have instead created the shortest one — and with further policy changes possibly on the horizon, the future of such protests is unclear. Elections Canada issued special write-in ballots — where voters simply fill in the name of their preferred candidate — after the group known as the Longest Ballot Committee organized over 200 candidates to run against Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre in Battle River-Crowfoot. Combined, the candidates affiliated with the group received just over 300 votes — 0.6 per cent of the ballots cast. More than 70 long-ballot candidates received no vote at all. Despite the name of his group, organizer Tomas Szuchewycz doesn't seem bothered that no long ballot was printed, or that his candidates earned only a fraction of the votes. Overall it's been a really fantastic experience, he told CBC News. Enlarge image (new window) An example of a ballot that included the names of 91 candidates. Photo: La Presse canadienne / Justin Tang The Longest Ballot Committee has organized dozens of candidates to run in byelections over the past five years, forcing Elections Canada to adapt its rules to accommodate dozens of names on a single ballot. Prior to Battle River-Crowfoot, the largest number of candidates the group had gotten on a ballot was 91, resulting in a metre-long document that caused counting delays and irritated some voters. By using a write-in ballot, Szuchewycz said Canada's elections body found a great solution in the face of his group's efforts. Enlarge image (new window) A sign reminds people how to spell Pierre Poilievre's name on the ballot for the Battle River-Crowfoot byelection in Camrose on Monday. Photo: The Canadian Press / Jason Franson Elections Canada showed that the ballot hysteria is a non-issue. There are other ways to solve the problem of large ballots than to try to prevent people from exercising their Charter rights, he said. [For us] it's about getting the message out that our election rules need to be passed to an independent, non-partisan body. The Longest Ballot Committee wants a citizens' assembly in charge of electoral reform, and says political parties are too reluctant to make government more representative of the electorate. Politicians looking to change election rules The group's efforts have certainly caught the attention of politicians who are willing to make changes to Canada's electoral system — but only to make it harder to organize long ballot protests. Poilievre — who has twice run in a riding where the long-ballot candidates have organized, including his victory in Battle River-Crowfoot on Monday — is pushing for the government to bring in legislation that would prevent Szuchewycz and his group from running dozens of candidates in any one riding. We have to take action because this is a scam. It is unfair, it is unjust and it must stop, Poilievre said on the campaign trail earlier this summer. One of the suggestions Poilievre made is to change the rules around the number of signatures a candidate is required to gather to run — from the current 100 to 0.5 per cent of a riding's population. Enlarge image (new window) Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre looks on as his swife Anaida Poilievre casts her vote in the federal election on April 28 in Ottawa. The Carleton riding featured a long ballot of 91 candidates. Photo: (Adrian Wyld/The Canadian Press) The Liberals say they are open to some changes. House leader Steve MacKinnon's office has said the government shares the concerns about the longest ballot initiative and is examining the issue. Jayson Cowan, a Battle River-Crowfoot candidate affiliated with the Longest Ballot Committee, said making it harder for candidates to gather signatures could prevent people like him from getting on the ballot. Although the long ballot initiative has been framed as a protest, Cowan said that wasn't the case for him. He argues there aren't enough politicians who are Indigenous or from the disabled community. A member of the Métis Nation of Alberta, Cowan previously tried to run as an Independent, but he struggled to gather enough signatures, in part due to mobility issues. He credits the Longest Ballot Committee for helping get his name on the ballot for the first time. I don't know that I would have had that experience any other way, he said. Both Cowan and Szuchewycz cautioned that raising the bar regarding the number of signatures might also force smaller parties out of the picture. Chief Electoral Officer Stéphane Perrault, the head of Elections Canada, offered his own suggestions on how to prevent long ballots (new window) in front of a House committee last fall. The long ballot group is able to put forward so many candidates by having electors sign multiple candidates' nomination forms. Perrault argued that rather than raising the number of signatures a candidate is required to gather, certain penalties should be imposed on individuals who sign — or encourage others to sign — multiple nomination papers. He didn't say what he thinks those penalties should be. Enlarge image (new window) Chief Electoral Officer Stephane Perrault holds up a sample ballot from a byelection that featured 91 candidates during a meeting of a House of Commons committee on Nov. 21, 2024. Photo: Parliament of Canada Despite indications of rule changes on the horizon, Szuchewycz said the group is garnering more interest from people seeking to run. We've been able to put out our message that politicians shouldn't be in charge of their own election rules because it's obviously a conflict of interest, and that message is really resonating with people, he said. Even though the committee has been able to recruit more candidates, it hasn't necessarily translated into success on the ballot. Last year in a Toronto byelection, long-ballot candidate Félix-Antoine Hamel achieved a first in Canadian electoral history (new window) by receiving zero votes in a contested riding. While Hamel's result was a novelty just a year ago, dozens more long-ballot candidates have laid a goose egg since — including 75 in Battle River-Crowfoot (although results there still need to be finalized). Brian Wishart, one of the long-ballot candidates who received no votes, said he isn't fixated on the result. For me, it's about bringing attention to some of the flaws in our election system, he told CBC News. Enlarge image (new window) A mock ranked ballot shown here was used to educate voters ahead of the 2018 municipal election in London, Ont. Photo: Radio-Canada / Hala Ghonaim A resident of London, Ont., Wishart voted using a ranked ballot in the city's 2018 mayoral election (new window) , but was dismayed when the Ontario government later scrapped the initiative (new window) . It was absolutely fantastic. It's the best I've ever felt about voting in my life, he said. Cowan, who doesn't live in Battle River-Crowfoot and was unable to vote for himself, received just one vote on Monday. I want to believe that I got through to somebody … [for] somebody who's disabled, who can't get around [to] get through to people, I think that's fantastic, Cowan said, adding that he would run again if the opportunity presents itself. I really do think that it's an experience that everybody should have…. I want regular people giving it a shot. That would be amazing. Szuchewycz said the Long Ballot Committee intends to keep going in some capacity, but how will depend on what rule changes are pushed through Parliament. We'll have to see what exactly the legislation is that they pass. Maybe it becomes impossible to do this, maybe it's just slightly harder, or maybe it's even easier. Who knows? he said. We'll just have to wait and see. Darren Major (new window) · CBC News · Senior writer Darren Major is a senior writer for CBC's parliamentary bureau in Ottawa. He previously worked as a digital reporter for CBC Ottawa and a producer for CBC's Power & Politics. He holds a master's degree in journalism and a bachelor's degree in public affairs and policy management, both from Carleton University. He also holds master's degree in arts from Queen's University. He can be reached at


CTV News
an hour ago
- CTV News
Canada among countries condemning Israel settlement plan as ‘a violation of international law'
The Arab neighborhood of El Za'im, on the outskirts of east Jerusalem in the West Bank, near where Israeli government says housing units will be built as part of the E1 settlement project, Thursday, Aug. 21, 2025. (AP Photo/Ohad Zwigenberg) Canada's foreign minister has joined officials from several other countries in demanding an 'immediate reversal in the strongest terms' to Israel's plan to settle an area in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, also known as 'E1.' 'The decision by the Israeli Higher Planning Committee to approve plans for settlement construction in the E1 area, East of Jerusalem, is unacceptable and a violation of international law,' reads a statement from Canada and the foreign ministries of several other countries. More details to come.