Surrey Newton, BC — 2025 Federal Election Results Map
Surrey Newton — 2025 Election Results
Poll-by-poll results for Surrey Newton 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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Surrey Newton is a large, predominantly suburban federal riding in the southern portion of the City of Surrey. The riding encompasses Newton, the most populous of Surrey's six town centres, with a land area of roughly 49 square kilometres stretching from the communities of Whalley and Fleetwood to the north down to Mud Bay and South Surrey to the south. With the highest concentration of South Asian residents of any federal riding in Canada—roughly two-thirds of the population—it is the demographic and cultural heart of the Lower Mainland's Punjabi community.
Candidates
Sukh Dhaliwal (Liberal) is the incumbent, having served as Member of Parliament for Surrey Newton since 2015, following an earlier term representing Newton—North Delta from 2006 to 2011. Born in Sujapur, Punjab, India, Dhaliwal emigrated to Canada in 1999 and became a citizen in 2002. He is a professional engineer and Fellow of Engineers Canada, a land surveyor, and co-founder of a land surveying company. He has served on the boards of several community organizations including SEEDS and the Surrey Memorial Hospital Foundation.
Harjit Singh Gill (Conservative) is a community organizer who spent eleven months knocking on approximately 16,000 doors after securing his nomination. He campaigned on affordability and public safety.
Raj Singh Toor (NDP) was born in Punjab, India, and came to Canada in 1983. He worked in mills and canneries in the Fraser Valley, serving as vice-chairman of the union plant committee. His grandfather was a passenger on the Komagata Maru, and Toor founded the Descendants of the Komagata Maru Society, led the renaming of a Surrey street to Komagata Maru Way, and helped install a commemorative storyboard in R.A. Nicholson Park.
Salman Zafar (Communist) also stood as a candidate in the riding.
About the Riding
Newton is the largest of Surrey's town centres by population, and its commercial corridors along 72nd Avenue and King George Boulevard form the economic spine of the community. The neighbourhood is home to the Lower Mainland's largest concentration of South Asian businesses, restaurants, and cultural institutions. Surrey's annual Vaisakhi parade—the largest outside India—takes place in Newton, drawing an estimated attendance of over 500,000.
The riding is primarily residential, with single-family homes and townhouse complexes predominating, though medium-density development has accelerated around transit corridors. Agriculture still plays a role in the riding's southern reaches, where farmland extends toward the Serpentine and Nicomekl river floodplains and Mud Bay.
In 2025, the riding's political conversation centred on affordability, public safety, and healthcare access. Newton's residents—many of whom work in trades, transportation, logistics, and small business—felt the squeeze of rising housing costs acutely. Gang violence and property crime remained persistent community concerns. The opioid crisis and pressure on Surrey Memorial Hospital, which serves a rapidly growing population, added urgency to calls for expanded healthcare infrastructure and addiction services.





