Laurentides—Labelle, QC — 2025 Federal Election Results Map
Laurentides—Labelle — 2025 Election Results
Poll-by-poll results for Laurentides—Labelle 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.Laurentides--Labelle
Laurentides--Labelle stretches across a vast expanse of the Quebec Laurentians, from the resort towns of Saint-Sauveur and Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts northward through Mont-Tremblant to the administrative centre of Mont-Laurier. With a population of roughly 109,000 spread across the regional county municipalities of Les Laurentides, Antoine-Labelle, and the eastern part of Les Pays-d'en-Haut, the riding encompasses ski resorts, cottage country, and more remote northern communities where forestry remains a way of life.
Candidates
Marie-Hélène Gaudreau (Bloc Québécois) -- Born in 1976 in Mont-Laurier, Gaudreau is an entrepreneur and sovereigntist politician first elected in 2019 who sought a third consecutive term. Before entering politics she sat on the board of the Caisses Desjardins in Les Hautes-Laurentides, founded Table Forêt Laurentides, and worked for the local health and social services centre (CSSS Antoine-Labelle). In Parliament she served as Bloc caucus chair from 2021 to 2025 and as the party's critic for tourism, children, and families.
Emrick Vienneau (Liberal) -- A 26-year-old native of Mont-Laurier, Vienneau earned the Governor General's Academic Medal on two occasions. He works at the Complexe environnemental de la Rouge in Rivière-Rouge as a waste management officer, where he developed a passion for environmental advocacy through community engagement. He was acclaimed as the Liberal candidate for the riding.
Daniel Paquette (Conservative) -- Paquette carried the Conservative banner in the riding, running on the party's national platform of fiscal responsibility, tax relief, and public-safety measures.
Michel Noël De Tilly (NDP) -- Noël De Tilly represented the NDP in Laurentides--Labelle, campaigning on affordable housing, pharmacare, and support for rural communities.
Michel Le Comte (Green Party) -- Le Comte ran for the Green Party, emphasizing environmental protection and sustainable development in a riding where natural resources and ecotourism are central to the local economy.
Amélie Charbonneau (People's Party) -- Charbonneau represented the People's Party of Canada, campaigning on reduced government spending and individual liberties.
About the Riding
The riding's economy is split between a tourism-driven south and a resource-dependent north. Mont-Tremblant's ski resort is one of the largest in eastern North America and anchors a four-season tourism industry that supports thousands of jobs in hospitality, retail, and outdoor recreation. Saint-Sauveur and Sainte-Agathe-des-Monts similarly depend on seasonal visitors and a growing population of telecommuters who relocated from Montreal during and after the pandemic. Farther north, Mont-Laurier and surrounding communities rely on forestry, wood products, and small-scale agriculture.
Water management is a defining environmental issue. Over half the riding's communities depend on lakes for drinking water, and development pressure from cottage construction and tourism infrastructure has raised concerns about water quality. The Conseil régional de l'environnement coordinates efforts among local governments to protect the watershed.
In 2025, the campaign focused on housing affordability -- remote-work migration from Montreal has driven prices sharply higher in towns that were once among Quebec's most affordable -- as well as healthcare access in northern communities where physician recruitment has been a chronic challenge. The impact of US trade tensions on the forestry sector, broadband connectivity in underserved areas, and support for seasonal tourism operators also featured prominently.





