North Vancouver—Capilano, BC — 2025 Federal Election Results Map
North Vancouver—Capilano — 2025 Election Results
Poll-by-poll results for North Vancouver—Capilano 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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North Vancouver—Capilano spans the North Shore communities along Burrard Inlet, taking in the entire City of North Vancouver, the southern and western portions of the District of North Vancouver, and the easternmost section of West Vancouver including Ambleside, Sentinel Hill, and the Park Royal area. Under the 2022 redistribution, the riding gained parts of West Vancouver south of Taylor Way while losing portions of Lynn Valley and Grand Boulevard to the adjacent Burnaby North—Seymour riding. Framed by the Coast Mountains to the north and the inlet to the south, the riding encompasses Grouse Mountain, the Capilano River and reservoir, and the historic Lonsdale waterfront.
Candidates
Jonathan Wilkinson (Liberal) is the incumbent, first elected in 2015. Born in Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario, and raised in Saskatoon, Wilkinson is a Rhodes Scholar who studied at the University of Saskatchewan and the University of Oxford. Before entering politics, he spent 20 years in the private sector working with clean technology companies. He has served as Minister of Fisheries, Oceans, and the Canadian Coast Guard; Minister of Environment and Climate Change; and Minister of Energy and Natural Resources.
Stephen Curran (Conservative) is a business lawyer who resides in Central Lonsdale with his family. He practised commercial law for more than two decades, beginning his career in New York City before moving to Canada in 2010. He secured the Conservative nomination following a contested race.
Tammy Bentz (NDP) is an educator and film industry professional who works as an instructor at BCIT and as a script supervisor. She co-founded a Canadian theatre company that toured internationally and has directed short films and documentaries. She is a climate activist and member of the 2SLGBTQ+ community.
Andrew Robinson (Green Party) is a 27-year-old North Vancouver resident who has lived on the North Shore for over 22 years. He ran on a platform focused on environmental protection and community engagement.
Ehsan Arjmand (People's Party) and Oliver King (Independent) also stood as candidates.
About the Riding
North Vancouver—Capilano is one of the wealthiest and most highly educated ridings in British Columbia. The North Shore's economy blends professional services, the film industry, port-related logistics, and tourism. The Lonsdale waterfront underwent a major transformation in the years preceding the 2025 election, with shipyard redevelopment, new residential towers, and the SeaBus terminal drawing investment and foot traffic. The Capilano Suspension Bridge, Grouse Mountain, and the North Shore trail network attract millions of visitors annually.
Housing affordability, even in this high-income riding, was a significant campaign issue. The cost of entry-level housing pushed young families and service workers to other parts of Metro Vancouver, raising concerns about the demographic sustainability of North Shore communities. Transit access—particularly the absence of rapid rail to the North Shore—remained a longstanding grievance.
The riding's proximity to port and industrial lands along the inlet kept environmental and pipeline-related issues in the political conversation, while the forested mountain slopes above the communities made wildfire risk an emerging concern. Wilkinson's tenure as a senior cabinet minister in multiple portfolios made the riding one of the most high-profile Liberal holds in the province, and the 2025 result underscored the riding's continued alignment with the Liberal brand on the North Shore.





