Flamborough—Glanbrook—Brant North, ON — 2025 Federal Election Results Map
Flamborough—Glanbrook—Brant North — 2025 Election Results
Poll-by-poll results for Flamborough—Glanbrook—Brant North in the 2025 Canadian federal election. The Conservative candidate won this riding. Explore detailed voting data, candidate results, and turnout statistics at the poll level.
Riding information
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Flamborough--Glanbrook--Brant North is a newly configured riding on the southern and western fringes of Hamilton, created through the 2022 redistribution by expanding the former Flamborough--Glanbrook riding to include the northern portion of the County of Brant. The U-shaped riding, covering roughly 1,100 square kilometres, wraps around the east, south, and west of Hamilton and encompasses the communities of Waterdown, Rockton, Binbrook, Mount Hope, Ancaster West, and Dundas West in the Hamilton portion, along with the towns of Paris and St. George in Brant County. It is a mix of exurban, suburban, and rural landscapes, with a population drawn to the area by relatively affordable housing and proximity to Hamilton, Burlington, and the broader Greater Toronto and Hamilton Area.
Candidates
Dan Muys (Conservative)* is the incumbent, first elected in 2021 when the riding was Flamborough--Glanbrook. Born in 1970 and raised in Copetown on a small family farm, Muys graduated from Wilfrid Laurier University and completed a post-graduate program in corporate public relations at Humber College. He spent 25 years in public relations and communications, working for TransCanada Pipelines, Cargill, and Syngenta, and was part of a team that helped develop successful bids for $10 billion in energy infrastructure projects. Before running for office, he served as chief of staff to his predecessor, former MP David Sweet, from 2008 to 2020.
Chuck Phillips (Liberal) is a chartered accountant from St. George making his first run for elected office at age 66. A University of Toronto graduate, Phillips had a career as CEO of a national building products company and later served as board chair of Cambridge Memorial Hospital, helping lead the institution out of provincial supervision. He is married to Sara Nixon, whose grandfather Harry Nixon was the 13th Premier of Ontario, and whose sister Jane Stewart served as a Liberal MP for Brant County.
Peter Werhun (NDP) is a 30-year-old international trade lawyer who grew up on Hamilton Mountain. He campaigned on expanding dental care and pharmacare, building affordable housing through densification, and protecting prime agricultural land from sprawl.
Anita Payne (Green Party) and Nikita Mahood (People's Party - PPC) also stood as candidates in the riding.
About the Riding
Flamborough--Glanbrook--Brant North is a riding in transition. Waterdown, once a quiet village north of Hamilton, has become a fast-growing suburban community as GTA commuters push further west in search of affordable housing. Binbrook and Mount Hope, south of Hamilton, have experienced similar growth, with new subdivisions replacing farm fields. Paris, a picturesque town along the Grand River in Brant County, is a heritage destination that has also attracted residential development. The riding's rural areas sustain active farming operations in crops, livestock, and poultry.
The riding encompasses Hamilton's John C. Munro International Airport at Mount Hope, which serves as a cargo hub and provides some passenger service. The Flamborough area's aggregate quarries supply construction materials to the broader region. The County of Brant's northern communities contribute a blend of light manufacturing, agriculture, and small-town commercial activity.
In 2025, the cost of living and US tariff impacts were the top concerns across the riding. Rapid population growth strained infrastructure, schools, and healthcare services--Glanbrook in particular faced a shortage of family doctors, and schools across the riding were described as understaffed and underfunded. Agricultural landowners watched the tariff dispute with anxiety, given the riding's proximity to US markets and the importance of cross-border trade to Ontario's agri-food sector. Voter turnout reached 75 percent, reflecting the intensity of engagement in a riding where residents felt the pressures of growth and economic uncertainty converging.





