Surrey Centre, BC — 2019 Federal Election Results Map
Surrey Centre — 2019 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Surrey Centre was contested in the 2019 election.
🏆 Randeep Singh Sarai, the Liberal candidate, won the riding with 15,453 votes (37.4% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Sarjit Singh Saran (NDP-New Democratic Party) with 11,353 votes (27.5%), defeated by a margin of 4,100 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Tina Bains (Conservative, 25%) and John Werring (Green Party, 6%).
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Surrey Centre
Surrey Centre encompasses the urban core of Surrey, British Columbia's second-largest and fastest-growing city. The riding is centred on the Whalley neighbourhood and the emerging downtown along the SkyTrain Expo Line corridor, which provides rapid transit stations at Gateway, Scott Road, Surrey Central, and King George Boulevard connecting the area to Vancouver and the broader Metro Vancouver network.
Candidates
Randeep Singh Sarai (Liberal) — The incumbent MP, first elected in 2015, Sarai was born and raised in Burnaby. He earned a political science degree from the University of British Columbia and a law degree from Queen's University, then was called to the bar in 2002 and practiced at a Surrey law firm before entering politics.
Sarjit Singh Saran (NDP) — A Surrey resident of twenty years, Saran entered the race after hearing from constituents who felt their concerns were being ignored at the federal level. He campaigned on addressing crime through investments in mental health services and social supports.
Tina Bains (Conservative) — A public servant who began her career in the British Columbia Public Service in 1997, Bains had lived in Surrey for nearly three decades.
John Werring (Green Party) — A registered professional biologist and senior science and policy advisor, Werring was a father of four who identified affordability as the central issue of his campaign. He argued that property crime in the riding was tied to poverty, addiction, and mental health challenges.
Jaswinder Singh Dilawari ran for the People's Party, Kevin Pielak for the Christian Heritage Party, Jeffrey Breti as an Independent, and George Gidora for the Communist Party.
About the Riding
Surrey Centre was created in the 2012 redistribution, carved from the former Surrey North. The area has undergone rapid transformation as Surrey pursued its ambition to build a genuine downtown core in the Whalley–City Centre area. Simon Fraser University's Surrey campus, which opened in 2002, and the adjacent Central City tower anchor an education and innovation corridor. Surrey City Hall, which opened in 2014, signalled the municipal government's commitment to the area's urban future. High-rise residential towers were rising along King George Boulevard, reshaping the skyline.
The riding's population is young and one of the most ethnically diverse in Metro Vancouver, with a large South Asian community alongside significant East Asian and other immigrant populations. Guildford Town Centre, one of the province's largest shopping malls, sits within the riding's boundaries and serves as a major commercial anchor.
Public safety was a dominant campaign issue. The Whalley neighbourhood had long grappled with visible homelessness, street-level drug activity, and property crime even as condominium towers rose nearby. Surrey's 2018 decision to transition from the RCMP to a new municipal police force divided local opinion and featured prominently in campaign debates. Transit expansion was another pressing concern — the proposed extension of SkyTrain along the Fraser Highway corridor through Surrey to Langley was in early planning stages, and residents sought firm federal funding commitments. Affordable housing was increasingly urgent as Surrey's population growth outpaced the construction of new rental stock.





