Winnipeg North, MB — 2019 Federal Election Results Map
Winnipeg North — 2019 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Winnipeg North was contested in the 2019 election.
🏆 Kevin Lamoureux, the Liberal candidate, won the riding with 15,581 votes (47.6% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Kyle Mason (NDP-New Democratic Party) with 8,469 votes (25.9%), defeated by a margin of 7,112 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Jordyn Ham (Conservative, 21%).
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Winnipeg North
Winnipeg North covers the northern tier of Manitoba's capital, a patchwork of older residential neighbourhoods stretching from the inner-city North End northward through Garden City, Tyndall Park, and into the southern edges of The Maples. The riding is among the most linguistically diverse in western Canada, with Tagalog, Punjabi, and Portuguese widely spoken alongside English.
Candidates
Kevin Lamoureux (Liberal) — One of the longest-serving Liberal politicians in Manitoba, Lamoureux spent three years in the Canadian Armed Forces before entering politics. He represented the provincial riding of Inkster in the Manitoba Legislature from 1988 to 1999 and again from 2003 to 2010, then won the federal Winnipeg North seat in a November 2010 by-election, flipping what had been an NDP stronghold. He served as Parliamentary Secretary to the Leader of the Government in the House of Commons.
Kyle Mason (NDP) — Mason founded the North End Family Centre, a community organization, and served as its executive director for nine years before seeking the NDP nomination in Winnipeg North.
Jordyn Ham (Conservative) — Ham ran as the Conservative candidate in the riding, challenging in a seat where the party had not been competitive in recent elections.
Sai Shanthanand Rajagopal (Green Party), Victor Ong (People's Party), Henry Hizon (Christian Heritage Party), Kathy Doyle (Independent), and Andrew Taylor (Communist) also contested the riding.
About the Riding
Winnipeg North is a working-class urban riding shaped by successive waves of immigration. In the early twentieth century, the North End received Eastern European Jewish, Ukrainian, and Polish newcomers; by 2019, the dominant communities of new arrival were Filipino and South Asian, particularly Punjabi Sikh. The riding has one of the highest concentrations of Filipino-Canadians in the country. Garden City, with its regional shopping centre, anchors the suburban middle class, while inner-city neighbourhoods face challenges of aging housing stock and poverty. Manufacturing and food-processing operations in the city's industrial north end are important employers, and retail corridors along McPhillips Street and Main Street serve as commercial hubs. Politically, the riding was an NDP stronghold for much of the late twentieth century before Lamoureux flipped it to the Liberals in a 2010 by-election, building a personal brand through prodigious door-knocking and a near-constant presence at community events. Immigration policy, affordable housing, health-care wait times, and transit access were prominent issues in the 2019 campaign.





