King—Vaughan, ON — 2019 Federal Election Results Map
King—Vaughan — 2019 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of King—Vaughan was contested in the 2019 election.
🏆 Deb Schulte, the Liberal candidate, won the riding with 28,725 votes (45.0% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Anna Roberts (Conservative) with 27,584 votes (43.2%), defeated by a margin of 1,141 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Emilio Bernardo-Ciddio (NDP-New Democratic Party, 7%).
Riding information
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King—Vaughan occupies the northern reaches of York Region, joining the rural Township of King with the fast-developing northern sections of the City of Vaughan. The riding stretches from Schomberg and Nobleton in King Township southward through Kleinburg and into the newer subdivisions of Maple and Woodbridge North, combining horse country and conservation lands with some of the Greater Toronto Area's most active residential construction zones.
Candidates
Deb Schulte (Liberal) — A Princeton University graduate in mechanical and aerospace engineering, Schulte spent twenty-two years in management at Bombardier Aerospace before entering public life. She served on Vaughan City Council and York Regional Council from 2010 to 2014, where she advocated for the Highway 427 extension and the planned Mackenzie Vaughan Hospital. First elected to Parliament in 2015, she sought re-election as the incumbent in King—Vaughan.
Anna Roberts (Conservative) — Roberts built a career spanning more than three decades in the banking and financial industry, earning a Branch Manager of the Year award during her tenure. A longtime community volunteer, she contributed years of service to organizations including the Salvation Army, the Toronto Hospital for Sick Children, and the King City Lodge Nursing Home, and was recognized with the Ontario Provincial Volunteer Award.
Emilio Bernardo-Ciddio (NDP) — Bernardo-Ciddio had been politically active in King—Vaughan since 2014, contributing to two prior election campaigns and volunteering with the local NDP riding association.
Ann Raney (Green Party) — A professional engineer with a master's degree in structural engineering, Raney worked primarily in historical building conservation as both a contractor and consultant. She also held a degree in education and had previously carried the Green Party banner in the riding during the 2015 election.
Anton Strgacic also stood as the People's Party candidate.
About the Riding
King—Vaughan's landscape is defined by the tension between preservation and growth. King Township's rolling hills, horse farms, and conservation areas along the Humber River valley sit atop the Oak Ridges Moraine, an environmentally sensitive glacial formation protected under provincial legislation. Fifteen Olympic equestrians called King Township home, and the township maintained over 41,000 acres of active agricultural production. The communities of King City, Nobleton, and Schomberg retained a small-town character shaped by generations of farming families.
South of King, the Vaughan portion of the riding was transforming rapidly. The Vaughan Metropolitan Centre, anchored by the Toronto-York Spadina subway extension station that opened in December 2017, was emerging as a major transit-oriented development hub. Vaughan accounted for a significant share of York Region's economic output, with food processing, construction, logistics, and manufacturing forming the commercial base. Canada's Wonderland, one of the country's largest amusement parks, operated within the City of Vaughan.
With a large Italian-Canadian population in the Vaughan communities and an electorate shaped by homeownership, entrepreneurship, and family-centred values, the riding leaned fiscally conservative. Transit infrastructure, managing the pace of suburban expansion, and protecting agricultural land on the moraine were the dominant local concerns heading into the 2019 contest.





