Beauharnois—Salaberry—Soulanges—Huntingdon, QC 2025 Federal Election Results Map

Beauharnois—Salaberry—Soulanges—Huntingdon — 2025 Election Results

Poll-by-poll results for Beauharnois—Salaberry—Soulanges—Huntingdon in the 2025 Canadian federal election. The Bloc Québécois candidate won this riding. Explore detailed voting data, candidate results, and turnout statistics at the poll level.

Riding information

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Beauharnois--Salaberry--Soulanges--Huntingdon

Beauharnois--Salaberry--Soulanges--Huntingdon is a sprawling riding southwest of Montreal, covering a patchwork of small cities, farming communities, and commuter suburbs between the St. Lawrence River and the US border. The riding takes in Salaberry-de-Valleyfield, Beauharnois, and parts of the Vaudreuil-Soulanges region including Coteau-du-Lac and Les Cedres, as well as the town of Huntingdon and surrounding municipalities in the Haut-Saint-Laurent. With a population of approximately 118,000, the riding is overwhelmingly francophone in its northern sections, while the southern Huntingdon area has a significant anglophone minority.

Candidates

Claude DeBellefeuille (Bloc Quebecois) is the incumbent, now serving her fifth term in the House of Commons. Born in Salaberry-de-Valleyfield in 1963, she worked as a social worker before entering politics. DeBellefeuille was first elected in the riding of Beauharnois--Salaberry in 2006, re-elected in 2008, then lost her seat in the 2011 NDP wave. She returned to Parliament in 2019 in the reconfigured riding and has served as Chief Whip of the Bloc Quebecois since 2021.

Miguel Perras (Liberal) is among the youngest candidates in the 2025 election, at 21 years old. A resident of Saint-Stanislas-de-Kostka, he is a mechanical engineering student at Polytechnique Montreal and an experienced debater who helped organize the school's debate club.

Priska St-Pierre (Conservative) ran as the Conservative candidate, seeking to build on the party's growing support in suburban Quebec ridings.

Tyler Jones (NDP) represented the New Democratic Party.

Kristian Solarik (Green Party) carried the Green Party banner.

Martin Levesque (People's Party - PPC) ran under the People's Party of Canada.

About the Riding

The riding straddles two distinct economic zones. The northern portion, centred on Salaberry-de-Valleyfield and Beauharnois, is shaped by the St. Lawrence Seaway and Beauharnois hydroelectric canal, which have supported industrial development since the early twentieth century. Manufacturing, logistics, and distribution operations benefit from proximity to the US border crossing at Dundee and to Montreal's highway network. The Soulanges section, closer to the western tip of the island of Montreal, has experienced significant suburban growth as commuters seek more affordable housing outside the city.

The southern Huntingdon area is predominantly agricultural, with dairy farming, cash crops, and market gardening sustaining a rural economy. The anglophone community in Huntingdon and surrounding townships gives this section of the riding a different cultural character from the francophone north, creating a constituency where language and identity politics carry particular nuance.

In 2025, the Bloc Quebecois maintained its dominance in the riding, though the Liberal share of the vote grew compared to 2021, reflecting the national Liberal surge under Mark Carney's leadership. Trade uncertainty was a significant concern for local manufacturers and farmers whose supply chains cross the US border. Housing affordability pressures, particularly in the fast-growing Soulanges corridor, health-care access, and the cost of living were the issues that dominated doorstep conversations across the riding.

Nearby Ridings