Vancouver Kingsway, BC — 2015 Federal Election Results Map
Vancouver Kingsway — 2015 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Vancouver Kingsway was contested in the 2015 election.
🏆 Don Davies, the NDP-New Democratic Party candidate, won the riding with 20,763 votes (45.7% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Steven Kou (Liberal) with 12,625 votes (27.8%), defeated by a margin of 8,138 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Jojo Quimpo (Conservative, 21%).
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Vancouver Kingsway
Situated in the eastern half of the City of Vancouver, Vancouver Kingsway follows the Kingsway arterial road that cuts diagonally through the riding's core. After the 2012 redistribution, the riding lost its territory west of Main Street to the newly created Vancouver Granville district. The riding takes in the neighbourhoods of Kensington–Cedar Cottage, Renfrew–Collingwood, and portions of Mount Pleasant and Sunset.
Candidates
Don Davies (NDP) — First elected in Vancouver Kingsway in 2008, Davies held a Bachelor of Arts in political science and a law degree from the University of Alberta. He moved to Vancouver in 1991 and worked for over fifteen years as director of legal services for Teamsters Local 31 before entering Parliament, where he served as the NDP's critic for citizenship and immigration and later for international trade.
Steven Kou (Liberal) — Kou was a professional accountant and financial advisor who carried the Liberal banner in a riding the party had not won since the 1990s.
Jojo Quimpo (Conservative) — Quimpo represented the Conservative Party in a riding with a large Filipino-Canadian community along the Kingsway corridor.
Catherine Moore (Green Party) — Moore ran for the Green Party, focusing on environmental sustainability in one of Vancouver's most densely populated ridings.
Matt Kadioglu (Libertarian), Kimball Cariou (Communist), and Donna Petersen (Marxist-Leninist) also stood as candidates.
About the Riding
Vancouver Kingsway is one of Canada's most linguistically and culturally diverse federal ridings. Kingsway, the riding's commercial spine, is lined with Vietnamese, Chinese, and Filipino businesses stretching from Mount Pleasant to the Burnaby border. The Joyce–Collingwood SkyTrain station area was undergoing rapid densification, raising concerns about displacement and rental affordability. Federal issues centred on immigration processing times, affordable housing, and transit investment along the Broadway and Kingsway corridors.





