Vancouver Granville, BC — 2025 Federal Election Results Map
Vancouver Granville — 2025 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Vancouver Granville was contested in the 2025 election.
🏆 Taleeb Noormohamed, the Liberal candidate, won the riding with 37,010 votes (62.1% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Marie Rogers (Conservative) with 17,133 votes (28.8%), defeated by a margin of 19,877 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Sukhi Singh Sahota (NDP-New Democratic Party, 8%).
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Vancouver Granville
Vancouver Granville is an urban riding on Vancouver's west side, stretching from the False Creek waterfront south through some of the city's most established residential neighbourhoods to the Fraser River. The riding includes all or portions of Fairview, South Cambie, Riley Park—Little Mountain, Oakridge, Marpole, Shaughnessy, and Kerrisdale—a mix of affluent enclaves, densifying transit corridors, and middle-class residential streets. The riding had a population of approximately 117,000 at the time of the 2021 Census.
Candidates
Taleeb Noormohamed (Liberal) is the incumbent, first elected in 2021. He holds a Bachelor of Arts from Princeton University with a concentration in International Relations and Islamic Civilizations, and a master's degree from Harvard University. A technology executive, Noormohamed has built and led global technology companies. He previously worked at the Privy Council Office and Public Safety Canada, where he directed the review of the Air India Flight 182 bombing, and served as Director of Partnerships for the 2010 Vancouver Winter Olympics. He ran unsuccessfully in North Vancouver in 2011 and Vancouver Granville in 2019 before winning the seat in 2021.
Marie Rogers (Conservative) is a former marketing and communications executive and a single mother of three following the death of her husband in 2008. She is a co-founder of the ABC Vancouver civic party and served as the party's chair, helping elect all 18 ABC candidates in the 2022 Vancouver municipal election, including Mayor Ken Sim.
Sukhi Singh Sahota (NDP) grew up in the United Kingdom and has lived and worked in Japan, Hong Kong, Australia, and New Zealand before settling in Vancouver. He works for an environmental non-governmental organization.
Jerry Kroll (Green Party) is an entrepreneur and CEO of ElectraMeccanica Vehicles Corp, which produces single-occupant electric commuter vehicles. He previously ran as a provincial Green candidate in Vancouver-Mount Pleasant.
About the Riding
Vancouver Granville spans a wide socioeconomic spectrum. Shaughnessy and parts of Kerrisdale contain some of the most expensive residential real estate in Canada, with tree-lined streets of heritage mansions set behind hedgerows. Fairview, centred on the bustling South Granville and Broadway corridors, is more mixed, with apartment buildings, medical offices anchored by Vancouver General Hospital, and the growing tech and life-sciences employment cluster around the Broadway Subway corridor. Marpole, at the riding's southern edge along the Fraser River, is a more modest, increasingly diverse neighbourhood experiencing rapid redevelopment.
The Oakridge transit hub and the Oakridge Park redevelopment—one of the largest urban development projects in Canadian history—sit within the riding and are reshaping the area's density and character. The Canada Line provides north-south rapid transit through the riding, connecting residents to the airport and downtown.
In 2025, housing affordability and the pace of densification dominated the riding's political debate. The Broadway Subway extension, under construction to connect the Millennium Line to the existing Canada Line at Broadway-City Hall, was transforming land values and development expectations along the corridor. Residents grappled with the tension between preserving neighbourhood character and accommodating the population growth the city requires. Healthcare, the cost of living, and concerns about the opioid crisis's impacts beyond the Downtown Eastside shaped voter priorities.





