Bécancour—Nicolet—Saurel—Alnôbak, QC — 2025 Federal Election Results Map
Bécancour—Nicolet—Saurel—Alnôbak — 2025 Election Results
Poll-by-poll results for Bécancour—Nicolet—Saurel—Alnôbak 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
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Bécancour—Nicolet—Saurel—Alnôbak
Bécancour—Nicolet—Saurel—Alnôbak stretches along the south shore of the St. Lawrence River opposite Trois-Rivières, straddling the Centre-du-Québec and Montérégie regions. The riding was renamed in the 2022 redistribution to include the Alnôbak reference honouring the Wôlinak and Odanak Abenaki First Nations communities within its boundaries. With a population of roughly 96,400, the riding is overwhelmingly francophone—over 97 percent of residents speak French as a mother tongue—and has a distinctly rural character punctuated by the towns of Nicolet, Bécancour, and Sorel-Tracy.
Candidates
Louis Plamondon (Bloc Québécois) — At 81, Plamondon is the dean of the House of Commons and the longest continuously serving MP in Canadian history. First elected in 1984 as a Progressive Conservative, he broke with the party in 1990 to become a founding member of the Bloc Québécois. He has won thirteen consecutive federal elections. In April 2024, Parliament honoured him for his unbroken record of service, which surpassed Sir Wilfrid Laurier's.
Pierre Tousignant (Liberal) — A 50-year-old resident of Sainte-Victoire and father of three, Tousignant has spent 30 years in emergency intervention and workplace safety, specializing in underground mining rescue. Originally from Abitibi-Témiscamingue, he comes from a political family—his father Henri Tousignant served as a federal MP.
Michel Plourde (Conservative) — Plourde carried the Conservative banner in the riding, campaigning on the party's national platform of fiscal discipline, housing affordability, and trade protections for Quebec's agricultural producers.
Tommy Gagnon (NDP) — Gagnon represented the NDP in the riding, running on the party's platform of workers' rights, pharmacare, and support for rural communities facing economic challenges.
Yanick Lapierre (Green Party) — Lapierre ran for the Green Party, advocating for environmental protections and sustainable development in a region where industrial growth and ecological stewardship have sometimes been in tension.
Lara Stillo (People's Party) — Stillo represented the People's Party of Canada, campaigning on reduced government spending, lower immigration levels, and opposition to carbon pricing.
About the Riding
The riding's economy is anchored by agriculture, manufacturing, and an emerging green-industrial sector. Bécancour's industrial park has become a focal point for Quebec's battery supply chain ambitions, with a planned Ford-EcoPro cathode materials plant representing a $1.2-billion investment that promises hundreds of jobs—though construction delays linked to the uncertain electric vehicle market have tempered expectations. Sorel-Tracy's industrial heritage includes metallurgy and steel, while the surrounding countryside supports dairy farming and crop production.
The Abenaki communities of Odanak and Wôlinak—among the oldest Indigenous settlements in Quebec—bring Indigenous rights, cultural preservation, and reconciliation into the riding's political conversation. In 2025, federal campaign issues centred on the future of the battery-plant investment amid US trade uncertainty, agricultural supply management protections, rural broadband connectivity, and healthcare access in communities distant from major hospital centres. Plamondon's extraordinary longevity as an MP gave the race a historic quality, as voters weighed his unmatched institutional experience against calls for generational change.





