Winnipeg North, MB — 2025 Federal Election Results Map
Winnipeg North — 2025 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Winnipeg North was contested in the 2025 election.
🏆 Kevin Lamoureux, the Liberal candidate, won the riding with 19,792 votes (57.9% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Rachel Punzalan (Conservative) with 11,740 votes (34.4%), defeated by a margin of 8,052 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Adebayo Akinrogunde (NDP-New Democratic Party, 6%).
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Winnipeg North
Winnipeg North covers the northern tier of the city of Winnipeg, taking in a patchwork of established working-class and middle-class neighbourhoods stretching from the North End's edges through Garden City, the Maples, Tyndall Park, Inkster, and the Seven Oaks area. The riding is one of the most ethnically diverse constituencies in western Canada: the 2021 census recorded Tagalog as the mother tongue of roughly 18 percent of residents, Punjabi at nearly 13 percent, and English at about 49 percent, reflecting decades of immigration from the Philippines, South Asia, and more recently West Africa. The median individual income sits well below the Winnipeg average, and the riding's housing stock ranges from postwar bungalows in Garden City to newer suburban development in the Maples.
Candidates
Kevin Lamoureux (Liberal) is the incumbent, first elected in a 2010 by-election and serving his fifth consecutive term. Before entering federal politics, Lamoureux served in the Canadian Armed Forces Air Command for three years and then spent more than two decades in provincial politics as a Manitoba Liberal MLA for Inkster, first elected in 1988. He twice sought the Manitoba Liberal leadership without success. In Ottawa, he has served as Parliamentary Secretary to the Leader of the Government in the House of Commons since 2015, becoming one of the longest-serving parliamentary secretaries in recent memory and known for his prolific speaking record in the House.
Rachel Punzalan (Conservative) is a lawyer and small business owner who founded Punzalan Law in 2016. Originally from the Philippines, she earned her law degrees from the Ateneo de Manila University before building her legal career in Manitoba. A mother of four, Punzalan has organized legal seminars and benefit concerts for underprivileged students in the community.
Adebayo Akinrogunde (NDP) moved to Winnipeg from Nigeria in 2017. He holds a Doctor of Pharmacy from the University of Benin and a Master of Pharmacy Practice from North-West University in South Africa, and has worked in hospitals, public health, and clinical research.
Jessica Bailon (People's Party) ran on the People's Party platform.
Angela Brydges (Green Party) stood as the Green Party candidate.
About the Riding
Winnipeg North's identity is inseparable from its immigrant communities. Filipino Canadians are the single largest visible minority group and have reshaped the riding's commercial strips, cultural institutions, and religious congregations. The Sikh community, centered around several gurdwaras in the Seven Oaks and Maples areas, has also grown substantially. Newcomer settlement services, language training, and credential recognition are perennial policy priorities.
The riding's economy is largely service-based, with employment in healthcare, retail, food processing, and light manufacturing. Garden City Shopping Centre and the commercial corridors along McPhillips Street and Main Street serve as local economic anchors. Many residents commute to jobs elsewhere in the city, making transit access and infrastructure important local concerns.
In 2025, affordability was the overriding issue. Housing costs rose across the riding even as household incomes lagged behind the city average. Immigration policy attracted particular attention given the riding's demographics—residents held strong and sometimes divergent views on intake levels, family reunification timelines, and supports for newcomers. Healthcare access, including family physician shortages and emergency room wait times, rounded out the slate of concerns that animated the campaign in one of the Liberals' most durable western strongholds.





