Sudbury, ON 2025 Federal Election Results Map

Sudbury — 2025 Election Results

📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Sudbury was contested in the 2025 election.

🏆 Viviane Lapointe, the Liberal candidate, won the riding with 31,551 votes (51.9% of the vote).

🥈 The runner-up was Ian Symington (Conservative) with 23,835 votes (39.2%), defeated by a margin of 7,716 votes.

📊 Other notable candidates: Nadia Verrelli (NDP-New Democratic Party, 8%).

Riding information

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Sudbury

Sudbury is a federal riding centred on the urban core of Greater Sudbury, the largest city in northern Ontario. The riding covers the central and southern portions of the city, including the downtown, the commercial corridors along Paris Street and Regent Street, and residential neighbourhoods such as New Sudbury, Minnow Lake, and Flour Mill. Greater Sudbury is built on the Canadian Shield at the edge of the Sudbury Basin, one of the world's richest mineral deposits, and the city's identity has been shaped by more than a century of nickel, copper, and platinum-group mining.

Candidates

Viviane Lapointe (Liberal) is the incumbent, first elected in 2021 and re-elected in 2025 for a second term. Born in Elliot Lake, where her father was a miner, she grew up in New Sudbury. Lapointe built a career in communications and community engagement, working with the Canadian Olympic Association, Science North, the Ministry of Northern Development and Mines, and Health Sciences North, where she served as head of communications and community engagement. She later served as executive director of Community Living Greater Sudbury, an organization providing supports and services to people with disabilities.

Ian Symington (Conservative) is a physician who grew up in Copper Cliff, the historic smelter town at the edge of Sudbury. Before entering medicine, he worked as a secondary school teacher in the region. He has practised at the Copper Cliff Medical Centre for several years and previously worked with the family health team at Pioneer Manor, Sudbury's long-term care home.

Nadia Verrelli (NDP) is an academic and activist who earned her PhD at Carleton University. She is a law and justice professor at Laurentian University and serves as associate director at the Institute of Intergovernmental Relations at Queen's University. She previously ran for the NDP in Sudbury in 2021, placing second behind Lapointe.

Nicholas Bonderoff (People's Party) also stood as a candidate in the riding.

About the Riding

Sudbury's economy has been defined by mining for over a century. Vale and Glencore, the two multinational mining companies that operate in the Sudbury Basin, remain the city's largest private-sector employers, extracting nickel, copper, cobalt, and platinum-group metals from some of the deepest mines in North America. The city has leveraged this mining heritage to build a significant cluster of mining supply and services companies, making Greater Sudbury a global hub for mining innovation and technology.

Beyond mining, the city's economy rests on healthcare, education, and government services. Health Sciences North is the regional hospital and a major employer. Laurentian University, which emerged from insolvency protection in 2022 after a financial crisis that saw dozens of programs and faculty positions cut, remains a critical institution for the region but continues to rebuild. Science North, an interactive science museum on the shore of Lake Ramsey, is both a tourist attraction and a significant local employer.

In 2025, Sudbury's voters weighed the city's economic future against persistent concerns about affordability and healthcare. The critical minerals agenda, driven by global demand for battery metals and the energy transition, positioned Sudbury as a strategic asset, but residents sought assurances that federal investment would translate into local jobs and community benefits. The US trade dispute added uncertainty to the mining sector's cross-border supply chains. Healthcare access, including family physician shortages and hospital wait times, was a dominant concern. The Laurentian University crisis and its impact on post-secondary education in the north remained an emotional issue for many voters.

Nearby Ridings