Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The following is a list of nominated candidates and those seeking nominations for the 2025 Canadian federal election.Nominations announced before the new representation order are assumed to apply to whatever new riding most closely corresponds to ridings under the old representation order; riding names from the old representation order are in italics.
The NDP does not currently hold any seats in the Legislative Assemblies of Quebec, Prince Edward Island or New Brunswick. The territorial assemblies in Nunavut and the Northwest Territories, additionally, are non-partisan consensus government bodies.
The New Democratic Party (NDP; French: Nouveau Parti démocratique; NPD) is a federal political party in Canada.Widely described as social democratic, [5] the party sits at the centre-left [10] to left-wing [17] of the Canadian political spectrum, with the party generally sitting to the left of the Liberal Party. [20]
Zariwny did not stand for a second term in office in 1997 and the riding returned NDP candidate Raj Pannu by 58 votes over Liberal candidate Mary McDonald. That race was split almost three ways, with Pannu winning with just 31% of the vote. The third-placing candidate, Progressive Conservative John Logan, finished just 176 votes behind Pannu.
The NDP candidate is Rob Miyashiro, who served on Lethbridge City Council from 2013 to 2021, and contested Lethbridge-East in the 2023 Alberta general election. [8] The United Conservative Party (UCP) candidate is Lethbridge city councillor John Middleton-Hope. [9] He is a former police officer and Lethbridge police chief. [10]
Positions in the shadow cabinet were announced on October 29, 2021, following the federal election on September 20 the same year. [1] Appointed by party leader Jagmeet Singh, the shadow cabinet contains members of the NDP caucus in the Canadian House of Commons. [2]
Pierre Nantel (2011–2019; removed from NDP caucus following revelations he was in talks about joining another party) Peggy Nash (2006–2008, 2011–2015) Paddy Neale (1973–1974) Nels Nelson (1973–1974) Eli Nesdoly (1973–1974) Jamie Nicholls (2011–2015) José Nunez-Melo (2011–2015) Lorne Nystrom (1968–1993, 1997–2004)
The New Brunswick NDP did not run candidates in the 1963 provincial election and ran only three candidates in the 1967 provincial election. In 1971, a party convention narrowly endorsed a manifesto proposed by the New Brunswick Waffle, a local group loosely related to the minority wing of the federal NDP known as The Waffle , which was known ...