Langley Township—Fraser Heights, BC — 2025 Federal Election Results Map
Langley Township—Fraser Heights — 2025 Election Results
Poll-by-poll results for Langley Township—Fraser Heights 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
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Langley Township—Fraser Heights
Langley Township—Fraser Heights is a suburban riding in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia, covering the northern half of the Township of Langley and the Fraser Heights neighbourhood of Surrey. The riding takes in the communities of Walnut Grove, Fort Langley, Murrayville, and Willoughby, as well as portions of Surrey north of the Fraser Highway. Formerly known as Langley—Aldergrove, the riding was renamed under the 2022 federal redistribution to reflect its reconfigured boundaries. Langley Township is one of the fastest-growing municipalities in Metro Vancouver, with large-scale residential development transforming formerly agricultural land into suburban neighbourhoods, particularly in the Willoughby area.
Candidates
Tako Van Popta (Conservative) is the incumbent, first elected in the riding (then called Langley—Aldergrove) in 2019. A lawyer who practised in the Fraser Valley for more than 30 years, Van Popta served as managing partner at McQuarrie Hunter LLP. Before entering federal politics, he sat on the Langley Memorial Hospital Board and served as a director of the Surrey Board of Trade. In Parliament, he was appointed Shadow Minister for Pacific Economic Development and chaired the B.C. Conservative caucus.
John Aldag (Liberal) is a former MP who represented the neighbouring riding of Cloverdale—Langley City from 2015 to 2019 and again from 2021 to 2024. He spent 32 years with Parks Canada, including a posting as administrator of Fort Langley National Historic Site, and holds an MBA from Royal Roads University. Aldag resigned his seat in 2024 to run provincially, then returned to federal politics as the Liberal candidate in Langley Township—Fraser Heights.
Holly Isaac (NDP) is a Canada Post letter carrier and spokesperson for the Canadian Union of Postal Workers in Langley, where she served as first vice-president and shop steward. Born in Surrey and raised in Langley, she has worked in retail, banking, and telecommunications in addition to her postal career.
Debora Soutar (Green Party) is a retired professional forester and former natural history interpreter for Surrey Parks and BC Parks. She has served on the boards of the Fraser Valley Watersheds Coalition and the Great Blue Heron Nature Reserve Society and has led a church-based affordable housing initiative in Chilliwack.
Alex Joehl (Libertarian) ran on a platform of individual liberty and limited government.
Sepehr Haghighat (People's Party) also stood as a candidate.
About the Riding
Langley Township—Fraser Heights sits at the intersection of suburban expansion and agricultural tradition. Roughly 75 percent of the Township of Langley falls within the Agricultural Land Reserve, and farming—including berry cultivation, poultry, dairy, and greenhouse operations—remains an important part of the local economy. At the same time, the Willoughby and Walnut Grove neighbourhoods have seen explosive residential growth, with tens of thousands of new homes built over the past decade. Fort Langley, a heritage village on the Fraser River, draws tourists year-round and anchors the riding's cultural identity.
Housing affordability and health-care access were the dominant issues heading into the 2025 election. The rapid pace of development strained local infrastructure, with residents pointing to overcrowded schools, insufficient transit service, and long wait times at area hospitals. The riding's proximity to the US border gave trade and tariff concerns a local dimension, as cross-border commerce in agriculture and goods is significant in the Fraser Valley corridor.
The riding's diverse population—including large South Asian and Korean communities—has reshaped its political dynamics in recent years, making it more competitive than many suburban Fraser Valley seats of the past. The 2025 race reflected this shift, with multiple candidates mounting serious campaigns in what has historically been considered safe Conservative territory in the Fraser Valley.





