Vimy, QC 2025 Federal Election Results Map

Vimy — 2025 Election Results

Poll-by-poll results for Vimy 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

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Vimy

Vimy is one of four federal ridings covering the city of Laval, the third-largest city in Quebec, situated on Ile Jesus between the Riviere des Prairies and the Riviere des Mille-Iles. The riding takes in the Laval neighbourhoods of Chomedey, Laval-des-Rapides, Sainte-Rose, Fabreville, and parts of Pont-Viau and Auteuil. Created through the 2012 redistribution and first contested in 2015, Vimy has a population of approximately 113,000 and is one of the most ethnically diverse ridings in the greater Montreal area, with significant Greek, Armenian, Lebanese, North African, and Haitian communities alongside a francophone majority.

Candidates

Annie Koutrakis (Liberal) -- Born in 1960, Koutrakis worked for 30 years in the investment industry as an investment counsellor and business administrator before entering politics. Fluently trilingual in French, English, and Greek, she made history as the first woman elected president of the Hellenic Community of Greater Montreal before winning the riding in 2019. She was re-elected in 2021 and served as parliamentary secretary to the minister of tourism and minister responsible for the Economic Development Agency of Canada for the Regions of Quebec.

Grace Daou (Conservative) -- Born in Lebanon, Daou came to Canada with her parents at age 11 and grew up in Laval. She holds a master's degree in science from the Centre hospitalier de l'Universite de Montreal and a bachelor's degree in biochemistry, and has published several scientific articles. After working in academia, education, and the corporate sector, she transitioned into property management. She sits on several local community committees.

Alicia Parenteau-Malakhanian (Bloc Quebecois) -- A Laval resident who works as a beautician, Parenteau-Malakhanian carried the Bloc Quebecois banner in Vimy.

Cindy Mercer (NDP) -- Mercer represented the NDP in the riding, running on the party's national platform of pharmacare, affordable housing, and workers' rights.

About the Riding

Vimy captures Laval's transformation from a bedroom community into a diversified city with its own economic identity. Chomedey, the riding's most populous neighbourhood, is a commercial and residential hub that has become one of the most multicultural communities in Quebec. Laval-des-Rapides has seen significant condo development along the metro line, while Sainte-Rose and Fabreville retain a more suburban, family-oriented character in the riding's northern sections. The riding is served by two metro stations -- Montmorency and De la Concorde -- which connect it directly to downtown Montreal.

The riding's diversity makes it a microcosm of federal debates over immigration, integration, and multiculturalism. In 2025, housing affordability dominated the campaign, as Laval's condo and rental markets have tightened sharply alongside Montreal's. Healthcare access, including wait times for family physicians, was a persistent concern. The riding's ethnic communities brought international issues into the campaign, including the conflicts in Lebanon and the broader Middle East. Cost of living, federal support for public transit expansion in Laval, and the impact of US tariffs on Quebec's manufacturing sector were also salient themes. Koutrakis's deep roots in the riding's Greek community and her incumbency advantage made Vimy one of the safest Liberal seats in the greater Montreal area.

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