Pitt Meadows—Maple Ridge, BC — 2025 Federal Election Results Map
Pitt Meadows—Maple Ridge — 2025 Election Results
Poll-by-poll results for Pitt Meadows—Maple Ridge 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
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Pitt Meadows—Maple Ridge is a suburban riding on the northeastern fringe of Metro Vancouver, covering the City of Pitt Meadows and the City of Maple Ridge. Situated on the north bank of the Fraser River between the Pitt River to the west and the Golden Ears Mountains to the north and east, the riding occupies a transitional zone between the urban density of the Tri-Cities and the rural character of the upper Fraser Valley. Maple Ridge, with a population of approximately 90,000, is the larger of the two communities, while Pitt Meadows (population roughly 19,000) retains a more agricultural identity, with 78 percent of its land held within the Agricultural Land Reserve.
Candidates
Marc Dalton (Conservative) is the incumbent, first elected federally in 2019. Raised in a Royal Canadian Air Force family, Dalton has lived in Pitt Meadows and Maple Ridge for over 30 years. He served as a Canadian Forces reservist, worked as a pastor, and later taught at Pitt Meadows Secondary and Elementary after graduating from Simon Fraser University. He served as the provincial MLA for Maple Ridge—Mission for eight years before entering federal politics.
Angie Rowell (Liberal) was born and raised in Maple Ridge, where she built a 38-year career in financial services, working locally and internationally in sales and management. She began her career at the Bank of BC and the Maple Ridge Community Credit Union. A part-time foster parent for 13 years, she has served as a local Parks Commissioner and volunteered with Big Brothers Big Sisters.
Daniel Heydenrych (NDP) grew up in South Africa and served in the British Army, including a UN peacekeeping deployment to Cyprus and a civilian-military cooperation assignment in southern Iraq. He continues to serve in the Canadian Army Reserves as an officer with the Royal Canadian Artillery and focused his campaign on health care, housing, and Canadian sovereignty.
Chris Lehner (People's Party) ran on the PPC platform of reduced government spending and individual freedoms.
Peter Buddle (Parti Rhinocéros Party) also stood as a candidate.
About the Riding
Pitt Meadows—Maple Ridge's economy reflects its position as a bedroom community for Metro Vancouver. Many residents commute westward to workplaces in Coquitlam, Burnaby, and Vancouver, making transportation infrastructure—particularly the Lougheed Highway, the Golden Ears Bridge, and the West Coast Express commuter rail—a persistent political issue. Traffic congestion on the Lougheed Highway corridor and the reliability of transit connections to the SkyTrain system are longstanding concerns.
Agriculture plays a significant role, particularly in Pitt Meadows, where blueberry, cranberry, and other berry operations occupy the flat river-bottom farmland. Maple Ridge's economy is more diversified, with retail, construction, and small manufacturing supplementing the commuter-driven service sector. Golden Ears Provincial Park, at the riding's northern edge, draws hikers and campers and anchors a modest outdoor recreation economy.
The 2025 race was among the tightest in British Columbia, with housing affordability and health-care access at the forefront. Maple Ridge experienced a visible homelessness crisis in the years before the election, with encampments and the siting of temporary modular housing generating intense community debate. The cost of living—including commuting costs for the riding's large workforce of daily commuters—was a defining theme, as was the strain on local hospital and mental health services.





