Brossard—Saint-Lambert, QC — 2025 Federal Election Results Map
Brossard—Saint-Lambert — 2025 Election Results
Poll-by-poll results for Brossard—Saint-Lambert in the 2025 Canadian federal election. The Liberal candidate won this riding. Explore detailed voting data, candidate results, and turnout statistics at the poll level.
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Brossard—Saint-Lambert
Brossard—Saint-Lambert sits on Montreal's South Shore in the Montérégie region, encompassing the cities of Brossard and Saint-Lambert. Created through the 2012 redistribution, the riding has a population of roughly 115,000 and is one of the most culturally diverse constituencies on the South Shore, with one of the strongest Chinese communities in Quebec concentrated in Brossard alongside significant South Asian, Arab, and Latin American populations. The riding also has a notable anglophone community, and French, English, Mandarin, and Arabic are all commonly spoken.
Candidates
Alexandra Mendès (Liberal) — Born in Portugal, Mendès immigrated to Canada with her family in 1978 at age 15. Before entering politics, she spent 15 years at the Maison Internationale de la Rive-Sud, a settlement organization for immigrants and refugees. She first entered Parliament in 2008 as MP for Brossard—La Prairie, lost her seat in 2011, served as president of the Liberal Party's Quebec wing, and was re-elected in 2015 in the newly created Brossard—Saint-Lambert. She has served as Assistant Deputy Speaker of the House of Commons since 2019.
William Huynh-Jan (Conservative) — Born in Canada to Vietnamese and Chinese parents, Huynh-Jan is a public servant and community advocate who drew on his multicultural heritage to address issues facing families, seniors, and young professionals in the riding.
Soledad Orihuela-Bouchard (Bloc Québécois) — Orihuela-Bouchard carried the Bloc Québécois colours in Brossard—Saint-Lambert, campaigning on Quebec sovereignty and the defence of French-language rights in a riding where linguistic diversity is a defining characteristic.
Zeinab Mistou Akkaoui (NDP) — Akkaoui represented the NDP, running on the party's platform of affordable housing, pharmacare, and social justice in one of the South Shore's most diverse communities.
Gregory De Luca (Green Party) — De Luca ran for the Green Party, advocating for environmental sustainability and green infrastructure in the suburban South Shore.
Hector Huerta (People's Party) — Huerta represented the People's Party of Canada, running on reduced government spending and lower immigration levels.
About the Riding
Brossard—Saint-Lambert is a prosperous suburban riding with above-average household incomes and a well-educated population. The Champlain Bridge and the Réseau express métropolitain (REM) light-rail connection have made the riding increasingly accessible to Montreal, enhancing its appeal as a residential destination. Saint-Lambert, with its tree-lined streets and heritage homes, has a village-within-a-city character, while Brossard's Quartier DIX30 is one of the largest lifestyle shopping centres in Quebec.
The riding has been a Liberal bastion, and Mendès' strong personal brand and deep community ties have reinforced that hold. In 2025, key issues included housing affordability in a market where South Shore prices have risen alongside Montreal's, the integration of the REM into daily commuter life, immigration and settlement services for the riding's large newcomer population, and the impact of US trade tensions on the broader Montreal economy. Language politics also resonated in a riding where the balance between French, English, and heritage languages reflects the evolving demographics of suburban Quebec.





