Burnaby North—Seymour, BC — 2019 Federal Election Results Map
Burnaby North—Seymour — 2019 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Burnaby North—Seymour was contested in the 2019 election.
🏆 Terry Beech, the Liberal candidate, won the riding with 17,770 votes (35.5% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Svend Robinson (NDP-New Democratic Party) with 16,185 votes (32.3%), defeated by a margin of 1,585 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Heather Leung (Conservative, 19%) and Amita Kuttner (Green Party, 10%).
Riding information
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Burnaby North—Seymour joins the northern half of the City of Burnaby with the eastern portion of the District of North Vancouver across the waters of Burrard Inlet. Created in the 2012 redistribution, the riding encompasses Burnaby's neighbourhoods north of Highway 7 — including the slopes of Burnaby Mountain, home to Simon Fraser University — and the section of North Vancouver east of the Seymour River. The two halves of the riding have no direct road link, connected instead by the Ironworkers Memorial Second Narrows Crossing.
Candidates
Terry Beech (Liberal) — Elected to Nanaimo city council as an independent at age 18 in 1999, Beech later earned degrees from Simon Fraser University and an MBA from Oxford University. With his twin brother, he co-founded the technology company HireTheWorld and the non-profit Twinbro Local Leaders, which helped students access scholarships. He won the riding in 2015 and served as Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Fisheries, Oceans and the Canadian Coast Guard.
Svend Robinson (NDP) — One of the most recognizable figures in NDP history, Robinson represented Burnaby-area constituencies in Parliament for 25 years from 1979 to 2004. He was the first sitting member of Parliament to come out publicly as gay, in 1988. After a 15-year absence from electoral politics, Robinson sought a comeback in Burnaby North—Seymour, running on environmental issues including opposition to the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion.
Heather Leung (Conservative) — Leung was nominated as the Conservative candidate but was dropped by the party during the campaign after past remarks surfaced. Because she was removed after the nomination deadline, her name remained on the ballot under the Conservative banner, though the party stated she would not sit in their caucus if elected.
Amita Kuttner (Green Party) — Born and raised in the North Vancouver portion of the riding, Kuttner held a PhD in astronomy and astrophysics from the University of California, Santa Cruz. They served as the Green Party's Science and Innovation Critic.
Rocky Dong (People's Party), Robert Taylor (Independent), and Lewis Clarke Dahlby (Libertarian) also sought election.
About the Riding
Simon Fraser University, perched atop Burnaby Mountain in Arthur Erickson's landmark terraced campus, is the riding's most prominent institution, enrolling tens of thousands of students and employing a large workforce. The Burnaby portion of the riding includes the Capitol Hill, Burnaby Heights, and Brentwood areas, featuring a mix of single-family homes and rapidly densifying condominium towers near the SkyTrain corridor.
Across Burrard Inlet, the North Vancouver section includes the forested slopes of the North Shore Mountains, with residents enjoying access to hiking and skiing on Mount Seymour and the protected Seymour River valley watershed. The riding is one of the most linguistically diverse in Canada, with significant Cantonese, Mandarin, Korean, and Persian-speaking communities alongside English speakers.
The Trans Mountain pipeline expansion was a defining local issue, as the Westridge Marine Terminal on Burrard Inlet sits within the riding. Housing affordability was another dominant concern, as rising real estate prices and limited rental vacancy squeezed both young families and long-term residents. Transit expansion — including the long-debated proposal for improved rapid transit to SFU's mountaintop campus — and environmental protection of the North Shore watershed were also prominent campaign topics.





