Drummond, QC — 2025 Federal Election Results Map
Drummond — 2025 Election Results
Poll-by-poll results for Drummond 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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Centred on the city of Drummondville in the Centre-du-Quebec region, this riding straddles the south shore of the Saint Lawrence River roughly halfway between Montreal and Quebec City. Drummondville itself is a mid-sized manufacturing hub at the intersection of Autoroutes 20 and 55, while the surrounding territory takes in the smaller municipalities of the MRC de Drummond. The riding has grown steadily in recent years, propelled by its strategic location and relatively affordable housing compared to Quebec's two largest cities.
Candidates
Martin Champoux (Bloc Quebecois) -- A communications specialist who became a familiar face in Quebec media over the course of a 30-year career, Champoux is best known as the host of the culinary television show "Qu'est-ce qui mijote?" on TVA. In Drummondville, he worked as director of communications, marketing, and development for the Village quebecois d'antan, a heritage attraction, and was involved in organizing charitable events for the Fondation Sainte-Croix/Heriot to support local healthcare. First elected in 2019, he was returned for a third consecutive term in 2025 and was subsequently named president of the Bloc Quebecois national caucus.
Ghada Jerbi (Liberal) -- Originally from Tunisia, Jerbi holds a degree in biomedical sciences from the Universite de Montreal with a specialization in experimental medicine. She works as a medical physicist for Sante Quebec and chairs the radiation protection committee of the Association of Physicists and Biomedical Engineers of Quebec. She previously served as president of the Women's Commission of the Liberal Party of Canada in Quebec and is an advocate for women's leadership and human rights.
Francois Frechette (Conservative) -- The Conservative candidate in the riding, Frechette ran on the party's platform of tax relief, housing construction, and economic competitiveness.
Francois Choquette (NDP) -- A former MP who represented Drummond from 2011 to 2019, Choquette was swept into office during the NDP's Orange Wave in 2011 and re-elected in 2015. A teacher by profession, he holds a bachelor's degree in secondary education in French and history and a master's degree in literature. He served as the NDP's critic for Official Languages and was active in the community through the Val-Maska Teachers' Union, the Knights of Columbus, and the Societe Saint-Jean-Baptiste. His 2025 campaign marked a return bid after six years away from Parliament.
William Trottier (People's Party) -- Running for the People's Party, Trottier campaigned on reduced government spending, lower immigration, and elimination of supply management.
About the Riding
Drummond has a population of approximately 115,000, with Drummondville itself home to roughly 85,000 residents. The city has long been known as a manufacturing centre -- its industrial parks host hundreds of small and mid-sized companies producing everything from textiles and furniture to plastics and metal products. More recently, Drummondville has attracted food-processing, logistics, and distribution operations drawn by its central location on Quebec's highway network. The Village quebecois d'antan and the Mondial des Cultures festival are cultural landmarks that draw visitors from across the province.
The riding is overwhelmingly francophone and has a largely working-class and middle-class character. In 2025, the campaign was shaped by concerns over the impact of U.S. tariffs on the manufacturing sector, which employs a large share of the local workforce. Unemployment has been a recurring challenge, and the reliance on temporary foreign workers in some sectors became a campaign flashpoint. Housing affordability -- once one of the riding's advantages -- has eroded as prices have climbed, and healthcare access, including the availability of family physicians, was a persistent concern. Champoux, leveraging his media profile and constituency service record, maintained a comfortable lead throughout the campaign and secured his third mandate with a margin of roughly 8,000 votes over his nearest competitor.





