Lanark—Frontenac—Kingston, ON — 2019 Federal Election Results Map
Lanark—Frontenac—Kingston — 2019 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Lanark—Frontenac—Kingston was contested in the 2019 election.
🏆 Scott Reid, the Conservative candidate, won the riding with 30,077 votes (48.1% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Kayley Kennedy (Liberal) with 15,441 votes (24.7%), defeated by a margin of 14,636 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Satinka Schilling (NDP-New Democratic Party, 14%) and Stephen Kotze (Green Party, 11%).
Riding information
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Lanark—Frontenac—Kingston covers a wide swath of eastern Ontario's rural interior, encompassing all of Lanark County and the portion of Frontenac County north of Highway 401. The riding wraps around the City of Kingston without including it, taking in the towns of Perth, Smiths Falls, Carleton Place, and Almonte, along with the villages of Westport, Sharbot Lake, and Sydenham scattered across the Canadian Shield.
Candidates
Scott Reid (Conservative) — First elected to Parliament in 2000 as a member of the Canadian Alliance, Reid held a Bachelor of Arts in political science and a Master of Arts in Russian history from Carleton University. Before entering politics, he served as an advisor to Reform Party leader Preston Manning and authored two books on Canadian federalism. He served as a lead negotiator for the Alliance during the 2003 merger with the Progressive Conservative Party and had represented the area for nearly two decades by the time of the 2019 election.
Kayley Kennedy (Liberal) — A twenty-four-year-old recent graduate with a master's degree in political management, Kennedy had worked in the parliamentary office of Toronto MP Julie Dzerowicz and ran a communications business from her family home near Smiths Falls. Her company specialized in making documents more accessible for people with disabilities.
Satinka Schilling (NDP) — Raised on a rural property near Perth in Tay Valley Township, Schilling worked as a baker at the Perth Pie Company and was a slam poet involved with the Lanark County Live Poets Society. She was motivated to run by a sense that political discourse focused too heavily on urban realities and lacked the perspective of rural, low-income communities.
Stephen Kotze (Green Party) — A resident of Lanark Highlands for thirty-five years, Kotze operated In Balance, an accounting practice specializing in small businesses and non-profit organizations, from the hamlet of Elphin. He served as treasurer of the Mississippi Madawaska Land Trust, an organization dedicated to land preservation.
Matthew Barton stood as the People's Party candidate.
About the Riding
Lanark—Frontenac—Kingston's geography ranges from the agricultural flatlands of Lanark County to the rugged Canadian Shield terrain of North Frontenac, where lakes, forests, and cottage country define the landscape. The region bills itself as the Maple Syrup Capital of Ontario, and the local economy draws on agriculture, forestry, tourism, and small-scale manufacturing.
Perth, established as a military settlement in 1816, is recognized for its heritage stone architecture and artisan culture. Carleton Place, on the Mississippi River, had grown as a commuter community for Ottawa. Almonte, birthplace of basketball inventor James Naismith, had reinvented itself as a destination for artists, independent retailers, and heritage tourism.
Smiths Falls had undergone a notable economic transformation after Canopy Growth established its cannabis production headquarters in the town's former Hershey chocolate factory, creating hundreds of jobs and drawing new investment to a community that had struggled after earlier plant closures. The Rideau Canal, a UNESCO World Heritage Site running from Kingston to Ottawa, passed through the riding and supported recreational tourism.
Rural broadband access, healthcare services in small communities, and the cost of living were prominent local concerns. Scott Reid had held the seat since 2000, and the riding's blend of small-town conservatism, agricultural traditions, and a growing base of Ottawa commuters gave it a stable but gradually shifting political character.





