
4 races in Waterloo region remain too close to call
Four races in Waterloo region remained too close to call and will need the mail-in ballots to be counted to confirm who has won.
In three of the four ridings, Conservatives were leading which would result in flipping those seats from being held by Liberals and a Green MP.
In Cambridge, Conservative candidate Connie Cody was leading with 1,577 votes more than Liberal incumbent Bryan May. May has been the MP for the riding since 2015.
In Kitchener Centre, it's a much closer race. Conservative candidate Kelly DeRidder had a 423 vote lead over Green incumbent Mike Morrice.
This race was very close for the top three candidates for much of the night. On Tuesday morning, DeRidder had 20,013 votes, Morrice had 19,590 and Liberal Brian Adeba had 17,021 votes.
The race in Kitchener-Conestoga ping-ponged throughout the night as results were reported between the Liberal incumbent Tim Louis and Conservative candidate Doug Treleaven. As of Tuesday morning, Louis held a 371 vote lead over Treleaven.
This is very much a two-candidate race as NDP candidate Maya Bozorgzad was in third with 1,803, trailing Louis by 27,785 votes.
In Kitchener South-Hespeler, Conservative Matt Strauss had 28,555 votes, which is 1,148 over Liberal incumbent Valerie Bradford's 27,407 votes. In this riding, it appeared to be a two-person race with NDP candidate Lorne Bruce was third with 1,791 votes.
Nationally, the Liberals led by Mark Carney won the election; however, many races across the country remained too close to call as of Tuesday morning so it was unclear if the Liberals would have a minority or a majority government.
Elections Canada said mail-in ballot counting would begin at 9:30 a.m. on Tuesday.
Local incumbents win, new MP in Guelph
The first local race to be called on Monday night was Waterloo MP Bardish Chagger, who has served as a Liberal MP since 2015.
Conservative incumbents Michael Chong in Wellington-Halton Hills North and John Nater in Perth-Wellington both also won their seats early in the evening.
In Guelph, Liberal Dominique O'Rourke won the seat, which had been left vacant by Liberal MP Lloyd Longfield, who opted not to run again in this election.
O'Rourke is a sitting city councillor who will now need to resign her seat. Council will declare her seat vacant, then decide how to fill it, either by a byelection or going through the process of appointing someone.
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