Brampton East, ON — 2019 Federal Election Results Map
Brampton East — 2019 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Brampton East was contested in the 2019 election.
🏆 Maninder Sidhu, the Liberal candidate, won the riding with 24,050 votes (47.4% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Saranjit Singh (NDP-New Democratic Party) with 13,368 votes (26.3%), defeated by a margin of 10,682 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Ramona Singh (Conservative, 24%).
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Brampton East
Brampton East occupies the eastern portion of the City of Brampton in Peel Region, a riding defined by newer residential subdivisions, strip plazas, and places of worship that reflect one of the most distinctive demographic profiles of any federal constituency in Canada.
Candidates
Maninder Sidhu (Liberal) — A Brampton resident, Sidhu graduated from the University of Waterloo and built a customs brokerage business. He founded The Kindness Movement Charity, which supports economically disadvantaged students in Canada and India. He entered the race as the Liberal nominee after the previous MP, Raj Grewal, departed caucus and did not seek re-election.
Saranjit Singh (NDP) — A labour lawyer who had served as in-house counsel to the Canadian Union of Public Employees and the United Food and Commercial Workers, Singh drew on his family's experience as refugees who settled in Canada in 1988. He campaigned on healthcare access, housing, and workers' rights.
Ramona Singh (Conservative) — A graduate of Carleton University with a degree in criminology and criminal justice, Ramona Singh had worked as a project officer at Correctional Service Canada and co-hosted the current affairs show "Various Views" on TIN TV. She was active in community organizations serving seniors.
Teresa Burgess-Ogilvie (Green Party) — Burgess-Ogilvie carried the Green Party banner in Brampton East.
Gaurav Walia (People's Party), Manpreet Othi (Independent), and Partap Dua (Canada's Fourth Front) also appeared on the ballot.
About the Riding
Brampton East had a high proportion of South Asian residents, with Punjabi as the most common mother tongue. The riding's population was overwhelmingly young and family-oriented. Healthcare access was the dominant local issue: residents in the eastern portion of Brampton were often farthest from hospital facilities, and the absence of a second full-service hospital in the city meant overcrowded emergency departments. Family doctor shortages compounded the problem, with many residents relying on emergency rooms for primary care. Housing affordability hit young families particularly hard, as home prices escalated rapidly while multi-generational living arrangements and unregistered basement apartment conversions became widespread. Transit infrastructure lagged behind the population surge, with limited rapid transit links and infrequent GO Transit service from nearby stations. The riding's economy was tied to the broader Brampton logistics and manufacturing ecosystem, with warehousing and distribution centres along major freight corridors providing significant local employment. The 2019 contest drew attention as an open race following the departure of the previous Liberal MP.





