Brampton North—Caledon, ON — 2025 Federal Election Results Map
Brampton North—Caledon — 2025 Election Results
Poll-by-poll results for Brampton North—Caledon 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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Brampton North--Caledon is a newly created federal riding born from the 2022 redistribution, merging the northern reaches of Brampton with a portion of the Town of Caledon to the north. The riding brings together two communities with very different characters: the dense suburban subdivisions of north Brampton, with their large South Asian population and young families, and the more rural, small-town landscape of southern Caledon, with its farms, estates, and villages. With a population of approximately 107,000, the riding was a closely watched contest in 2025.
Candidates
Ruby Sahota (Liberal)* is the incumbent, first elected in 2015 to represent the predecessor riding of Brampton North and re-elected in 2019 and 2021. Born in Toronto to parents who arrived from Punjab, India, in the late 1970s, Sahota was raised in Brampton and attended Central Peel Secondary School. She holds an honours bachelor's degree in political science and peace studies from McMaster University and a Juris Doctor from Western Michigan University Cooley Law School. Before entering politics, she practiced commercial litigation and international trade law. Over her parliamentary career, she served as Chief Government Whip and Minister of Democratic Institutions, and was also responsible for the Federal Economic Development Agency for Southern Ontario.
Amandeep Judge (Conservative) is an entrepreneur who ran a closely fought campaign in the new riding, finishing just behind Sahota in a contest decided by a few hundred votes.
Ruby Zaman (NDP) is a single mother of three who works as an over-the-road truck driver. She brought firsthand experience with Ontario's support systems for children with special needs and ran in both the provincial and federal elections in 2025.
Sat Anand (People's Party) also stood as a candidate in the riding.
About the Riding
The creation of Brampton North--Caledon generated some tension between its two constituent communities. Caledon residents expressed concern that their rural identity and distinct municipal interests would be overwhelmed by Brampton's larger population, with some fearing that the elected representative would focus primarily on urban Brampton issues. Brampton's northern neighbourhoods, meanwhile, face the same pressures as the rest of the city: rapid growth, healthcare access gaps, housing affordability challenges, and transit deficits.
Caledon's portion of the riding is characterized by agricultural land, the Niagara Escarpment, and smaller settlement areas experiencing development pressure from the GTA's northward sprawl. The tension between preserving Caledon's rural character and accommodating new growth was a live issue in the campaign. Across both halves of the riding, the US trade dispute, immigration policy, and the cost of living dominated voter concerns in 2025.





