Fundy Royal, NB — 2021 Federal Election Results Map
Fundy Royal — 2021 Election Results
Poll-by-poll results for Fundy Royal in the 2021 Canadian federal election. The Conservative candidate won this riding. Explore detailed voting data, candidate results, and turnout statistics at the poll level.
Riding information
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Fundy Royal covers the rural heartland of southern New Brunswick, filling the triangle between the province's three largest cities—Fredericton, Saint John, and Moncton—without including any of them. The riding takes in the suburban town of Quispamsis (population 18,768), the historic town of Sussex, and communities including Hampton, Salisbury, Riverview (in part), and the coastal village of St. Martins along the Bay of Fundy. With a 2016 population of approximately 80,000, it is a predominantly Anglophone, rural-suburban constituency stretching from the Fundy coast to the Petitcodiac River valley.
The riding's character blends bedroom communities for Saint John commuters in the west with agricultural and resource-dependent towns in the interior. English is the dominant language; the riding has a relatively low proportion of visible minorities and immigrants compared to urban New Brunswick. The median household income tends to exceed the provincial average, particularly in Quispamsis and Hampton, which rank among New Brunswick's more affluent communities.
Candidates
Rob Moore (Conservative) Born in Gander, Newfoundland, Moore is a lawyer who graduated from the University of New Brunswick Saint John (business) and UNB Fredericton (law). First elected in 2004, he served continuously until his defeat in 2015, holding roles including Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Justice, Minister of State for Small Business and Tourism, and Minister of the Atlantic Canada Opportunities Agency. He regained the seat in 2019 and served as the Conservative Shadow Minister for Justice and Attorney General of Canada heading into the 2021 campaign.
Whitney Dykeman (Liberal) A lifelong Fundy Royal resident with nearly 40 years in the riding, Dykeman spent many years in the tourism industry as a senior manager before founding her own consulting firm. She holds a Master's degree in Information Management from Dalhousie University and later started an IT consulting business. She raised her family in Hillsborough, Albert County.
Josh Floyd (NDP) An active NDP organizer since 2014, Floyd held leadership roles including Secretary of the New Brunswick NDP and founding member of the New Brunswick Young New Democrats. He worked in customer service, including as a travel consultant.
About the Riding
Sussex, the riding's interior hub, has historically been defined by two industries: dairy farming and potash mining. Known as the "Dairy Capital" of the Maritimes, Sussex and surrounding Kings County host major dairy processing operations. Potash was discovered in vast quantities near the town—the second-largest deposit in the world after Saskatchewan—and three mines were built in the area. However, the industry has contracted sharply: the Cassidy Lake mine flooded in the late 1990s, the Potash Corporation of Saskatchewan closed its Picadilly operation in January 2016, and the Penobsquis mine followed in November 2018, eliminating hundreds of jobs.
Tourism has emerged as a growing economic force. The Fundy Trail Parkway, a scenic coastal road more than two decades in the making, completed its final connection to Fundy National Park in 2021, creating a continuous coastal driving route linking St. Martins, the Bay of Fundy, and Hopewell Rocks—home of the world's highest tides. The completion integrated four top natural attractions into the Fundy Coastal Drive, a signature tourism corridor expected to draw increased visitor spending to the region.
Flooding has been a persistent local concern, particularly in Sussex and the Kennebecasis River valley. Federal funding under the National Disaster Mitigation Program supported planning and prevention efforts. The riding also faced broader rural challenges common across New Brunswick: strained health care services, limited public transit connecting small towns, and difficulty attracting physicians and specialists to rural communities. Housing affordability, while less acute than in urban centres, was emerging as a concern in rapidly growing suburban areas like Quispamsis, where proximity to Saint John drives demand.





