Mississauga Centre, ON 2025 Federal Election Results Map

Mississauga Centre — 2025 Election Results

Poll-by-poll results for Mississauga Centre 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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Mississauga Centre

Mississauga Centre is a federal riding at the urban heart of Ontario's sixth-largest city, anchored by the Square One Shopping Centre, Mississauga's towering downtown condo cluster, and the Civic Centre where City Hall stands. The riding takes in neighbourhoods including City Centre, Cooksville, Creditview, and parts of Erindale and Hurontario, mixing high-rise density with older suburban pockets. Once represented by Liberal heavyweight Omar Alghabra, the seat was open in 2025 after Alghabra chose not to seek re-election, and the Liberals turned to one of the youngest candidates in the country to hold it.

Candidates

Fares Al Soud (Liberal) is a Palestinian-Canadian born in Montreal in 2000, making him one of the first Members of Parliament born in the 21st century. He graduated with a Bachelor of Science from the University of Toronto Mississauga in 2023 and worked in the office of outgoing MP Omar Alghabra before joining the Prime Minister's Office and later serving as a policy adviser to the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans. At 25, he brought a generational perspective to a riding with a large young and newcomer population.

Muhammad Ishaq (Conservative) is a small business owner, husband, and father of four who previously ran as the Conservative candidate in Mississauga Centre in 2019. He served as a National Outreach Coordinator during Pierre Poilievre's Conservative leadership campaign. His candidacy was linked to broader controversy over Conservative nomination processes in Mississauga, where allegations of irregularities frustrated local party members.

Brandon Nguyen (NDP) was born and raised in Mississauga and is pursuing a degree at Toronto Metropolitan University while working as a court reporter. Active in the local arts community as a volunteer with music groups and choirs, he campaigned on affordable housing, public healthcare, and economic fairness.

Gurdeep Wolosz (People's Party - PPC) and Zulfiqar Ali (Independent) also stood as candidates in the riding.

About the Riding

Mississauga Centre has undergone a dramatic transformation over the past decade. The area around Square One, once a car-oriented suburban mall surrounded by parking lots, has become a cluster of residential towers, with dozens of condominium buildings reshaping the skyline and drawing a younger, more urban demographic. This densification has made the riding unlike most of Mississauga's other constituencies, creating walkable streetscapes and transit demand more typical of downtown Toronto.

Housing and immigration were tightly linked issues in the 2025 campaign. The riding's condo towers and surrounding apartment buildings have become settlement hubs for thousands of newcomers, and the pressures of high rents, crowded living conditions, and limited social services were felt acutely. The Hurontario Light Rail Transit line, under construction along the riding's eastern spine, promised improved connectivity but had experienced significant delays, frustrating residents and businesses along the corridor.

The Liberal sweep of all six Mississauga ridings in 2025 was notable given the national Conservative momentum, and local observers attributed part of the outcome to disarray in the Conservative nomination process. Allegations that qualified nomination contestants were unfairly disqualified in several Mississauga ridings generated frustration among party members and may have dampened organizational capacity on the ground.

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