Scarborough—Agincourt, ON — 2019 Federal Election Results Map
Scarborough—Agincourt — 2019 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Scarborough—Agincourt was contested in the 2019 election.
🏆 Jean Yip, the Liberal candidate, won the riding with 21,115 votes (50.5% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Sean Hu (Conservative) with 15,492 votes (37.0%), defeated by a margin of 5,623 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Larisa Julius (NDP-New Democratic Party, 9%).
Riding information
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Scarborough—Agincourt lies in the northwestern corner of Scarborough within the City of Toronto, stretching from Steeles Avenue East at the northern boundary to Highway 401 in the south, and from Victoria Park Avenue in the west to Midland Avenue in the east. The riding encompasses the neighbourhoods of L'Amoreaux, Tam O'Shanter–Sullivan, and portions of Agincourt and Milliken, an area of postwar suburban development that has become one of the most immigrant-dense constituencies in Canada.
Candidates
Jean Yip (Liberal) — Born and raised in Scarborough, Yip studied at the University of Toronto and built a career in the insurance industry. She entered public life following the death of her husband, Arnold Chan—the riding's previous Liberal MP—and won a December 2017 by-election to succeed him. She was seeking her first full-term mandate in 2019.
Sean Hu (Conservative) — Hu was the Conservative Party's candidate in Scarborough—Agincourt, seeking to build on the party's support base in the riding's Chinese-Canadian community.
Larisa Julius (NDP) — A university student who had moved to Canada at age two and grown up in the riding, Julius represented the NDP in Scarborough—Agincourt.
Randi Ramdeen ran for the Green Party and Anthony Internicola for the People's Party of Canada.
About the Riding
Scarborough—Agincourt has one of the highest proportions of immigrants of any federal electoral district in Canada. Chinese Canadians form the largest single community, and the riding's commercial corridors along Sheppard Avenue East and Finch Avenue East are defined by Asian shopping centres, restaurants, and cultural institutions. The nearby Pacific Mall in Markham, one of the largest indoor Asian shopping centres in North America, draws heavily from the riding's population.
The riding is overwhelmingly residential, composed largely of apartment towers, townhouse complexes, and postwar suburban homes. The Tam O'Shanter Golf Course and L'Amoreaux Park, with its sports fields, community centre, and walking trails, serve as recreational anchors for the surrounding neighbourhoods. Transit connectivity has been a persistent concern: many residents rely on TTC bus routes feeding into the Sheppard and Finch subway stations, and commute times to employment centres elsewhere in the Greater Toronto Area can be lengthy. The Sheppard Avenue corridor runs through the riding, and the question of rapid transit expansion along this route was a recurring local issue.
Language accessibility, settlement services for newcomers, affordable housing, and seniors' services—particularly for older immigrants navigating language barriers in accessing health care and social programs—have been enduring local priorities. The riding's political character has been shaped by its immigrant communities, and it had been held by Liberals continuously since its creation in 1988, first by Jim Karygiannis for over two decades, then by Arnold Chan, and by Yip since the 2017 by-election.





