Lac-Saint-Louis, QC — 2025 Federal Election Results Map
Lac-Saint-Louis — 2025 Election Results
Poll-by-poll results for Lac-Saint-Louis 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.Lac-Saint-Louis
Lac-Saint-Louis sits on the southwestern tip of the Island of Montreal, encompassing the affluent West Island communities of Beaconsfield, Pointe-Claire, Kirkland, Baie-d'Urfé, Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, and Senneville, along with the western portion of the borough of Pierrefonds-Roxboro. With a population of roughly 113,000, the riding is one of the most anglophone-friendly in Quebec -- English is the mother tongue of about 40 percent of residents, with French and other languages splitting the remainder -- and it has been a Liberal stronghold for decades.
Candidates
Francis Scarpaleggia (Liberal) -- First elected in 2004, Scarpaleggia has held the seat through seven consecutive elections. Educated at McGill University and Columbia University, where he earned a master's degree in economics, he worked as legislative assistant to former environment minister Clifford Lincoln before entering politics himself. He built his parliamentary career around freshwater protection, introducing bills to ban bulk-water exports and chairing studies on the oil sands' impact on watershed health. He served as chair of the House of Commons Standing Committee on Environment and Sustainable Development before seeking re-election in 2025.
Matthew Rusniak (Conservative) -- A graduate of the John Molson School of Business at Concordia University, Rusniak is a Montreal-based entrepreneur and two-time national Muay Thai champion. He campaigned on the Conservative platform of lowering taxes, restoring public safety, and empowering families and small businesses.
Tommy Fournier (Bloc Québécois) -- Fournier carried the Bloc Québécois banner in a riding where the party historically performs modestly, given the riding's significant anglophone population and federalist leanings.
Gregory Evdokias (NDP) -- Evdokias represented the NDP in Lac-Saint-Louis, running on the party's platform of pharmacare, affordable housing, and workers' rights.
Raymond Frizzell (Green Party) -- Frizzell ran for the Green Party, campaigning on environmental sustainability and climate action in a riding where proximity to Lake Saint-Louis makes water quality and environmental stewardship locally resonant issues.
Mathieu Dufort (People's Party) -- Dufort represented the People's Party of Canada, campaigning on the party's platform of reduced government spending and individual freedoms.
About the Riding
The West Island communities of Lac-Saint-Louis are among Montreal's most prosperous, with median household incomes well above the provincial average. The area is home to a mix of suburban residential neighbourhoods, corporate offices, and institutional employers. Beaconsfield and Pointe-Claire feature lakefront properties and established commercial corridors, while Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue is home to the Macdonald Campus of McGill University and the Morgan Arboretum.
The riding's bilingual and multilingual character sets it apart from most Quebec ridings. Language politics -- particularly the application of Quebec's language laws to English-speaking communities and the implications of the federal Official Languages Act -- have long been a sensitive local issue. In 2025, the campaign also focused on housing affordability, even in traditionally well-off suburbs where rising prices have squeezed younger buyers; the impact of US trade tensions on the local economy; environmental stewardship of Lake Saint-Louis and surrounding waterways; and public transit connectivity between the West Island and downtown Montreal, including the extension of the REM light-rail system.





