Yukon, YT 2015 Federal Election Results Map

Yukon — 2015 Election Results

📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Yukon was contested in the 2015 election.

🏆 Larry Bagnell, the Liberal candidate, won the riding with 10,887 votes (53.7% of the vote).

🥈 The runner-up was Ryan Leef (Conservative) with 4,928 votes (24.3%), defeated by a margin of 5,959 votes.

📊 Other notable candidates: Melissa Atkinson (NDP-New Democratic Party, 19%).

Riding information

Auto generated. Flag an issue.

Yukon

Canada's only single-member federal riding covering an entire territory, Yukon spans 482,443 square kilometres of subarctic and boreal landscape in the country's northwest. The vast majority of the territory's approximately 36,000 residents live in or near the capital city of Whitehorse, with smaller communities scattered along the Alaska Highway, the Klondike Highway, and in remote locations accessible only by air.

Candidates

Larry Bagnell (Liberal) — Born in Toronto, Bagnell moved to the Yukon as a federal civil servant and served as head of Industry Canada's territorial office. He was elected to Parliament in 2000 by a margin of just 70 votes and served four consecutive terms before losing to Conservative Ryan Leef in 2011. During his years out of office, Bagnell remained active in the Whitehorse community and sought to reclaim the seat.

Ryan Leef (Conservative) — The incumbent MP since 2011, Leef had previously worked as an RCMP officer, a conservation officer, and as deputy superintendent of operations at the Whitehorse Correctional Centre. He sought re-election on the strength of his single term in office.

Melissa Atkinson (NDP) — A lawyer of Han, Kaska Dene, and Tlingit heritage and a citizen of the Tr'ondek Hwech'in First Nation, Atkinson was Yukon's first Indigenous Crown prosecutor. She had also served as chair of the Yukon Human Rights Commission. This was her first run for federal office.

Frank de Jong (Green Party) — A resident of Faro, de Jong was the former longtime leader of the Green Party of Ontario, having held that post from 1993 to 2009. He relocated to the Yukon and carried the federal Green Party banner in this race.

About the Riding

Yukon's economy rests on three pillars: mining, tourism, and government employment. Mineral extraction—including gold, silver, lead, zinc, and copper—has been central to the territory's economy since the Klondike Gold Rush of 1897–1898, though production fluctuates with global commodity prices. Tourism brings visitors for the northern lights, the historic Dawson City goldfields, and wilderness experiences in Kluane National Park, home to Mount Logan, Canada's highest peak at 5,959 metres. The territorial and federal governments are among the largest employers in Whitehorse, where the Erik Nielsen Whitehorse International Airport serves as the territory's aviation hub. Fourteen First Nations are recognized under the Umbrella Final Agreement, with eleven having concluded self-government agreements by 2015, making Indigenous governance and land claims a persistent federal issue. Other concerns in the 2015 campaign included the territory's reliance on the aging Alaska Highway corridor for ground transportation, access to health care in remote communities, and support for resource-sector employment amid volatile commodity markets. The Council of Yukon First Nations endorsed Bagnell, citing strategic voting to unseat the Conservative government.

Census Data (2016)

Population by Age & Sex

Residence Type

Income Distribution