West Vancouver—Sunshine Coast—Sea to Sky Country, BC 2025 Federal Election Results Map

West Vancouver—Sunshine Coast—Sea to Sky Country — 2025 Election Results

📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of West Vancouver—Sunshine Coast—Sea to Sky Country was contested in the 2025 election.

🏆 Patrick Weiler, the Liberal candidate, won the riding with 38,384 votes (59.7% of the vote).

🥈 The runner-up was Keith Roy (Conservative) with 21,181 votes (33.0%), defeated by a margin of 17,203 votes.

Riding information

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West Vancouver--Sunshine Coast--Sea to Sky Country

West Vancouver--Sunshine Coast--Sea to Sky Country is a geographically dramatic federal riding stretching from one of Canada's wealthiest suburbs north and west along the Sea to Sky Highway to the mountain resort of Whistler and beyond, then across Howe Sound to the Sunshine Coast communities along the Strait of Georgia. The riding encompasses starkly different communities united by coastal and mountain geography, outdoor recreation culture, and a shared reliance on highways and ferries for connectivity. Incumbent Liberal Patrick Weiler won a decisive third consecutive term in 2025, becoming the first Liberal to win three straight elections in this riding.

Candidates

Patrick Weiler (Liberal) is the incumbent, first elected in 2019. Born and raised in West Vancouver and Sechelt, he is a former environmental and Aboriginal law lawyer who earned his Bachelor of Arts from McGill University and a Juris Doctor from the University of British Columbia. Before entering politics, he worked at the United Nations on aquatic ecosystem management and represented First Nations, municipalities, and non-profits on environmental and corporate legal matters. His mother, Beverly Tanchak, is a former Sechelt municipal councillor. In the lead-up to the 2025 election, Weiler endorsed Mark Carney in the Liberal leadership race following Trudeau's resignation announcement.

Keith Roy (Conservative) is a longtime Whistler real estate agent with a political science degree from the University of Guelph. He grew up on the Sunshine Coast and has been active in conservative politics since interning for a Canadian Alliance MP in 2001. Roy was nominated by the local Conservative association in March 2024 and campaigned on affordability, healthcare, and small business support. He lives in Whistler with his wife and young son.

Lauren Greenlaw (Green Party) is an exploration geologist and geochemist who was elected to Squamish council in 2022. She has lived in Squamish for seven years and is a mother of two. Greenlaw campaigned on climate action, ending fossil fuel subsidies, affordable housing, and local food security. Green Party co-leader Elizabeth May endorsed her candidacy.

Jager Rosenberg (NDP) was acclaimed as the NDP's candidate at 18 years old, making him one of the youngest federal candidates in the 2025 election. Born and raised in the riding, he made history in 2024 as one of the youngest candidates ever to run for public office in Canada during the BC provincial election at age 17. He serves as Diversity Director for the BC Young New Democrats Executive and sits on the BC NDP Provincial Council.

Peyman Askari (People's Party) ran as the People's Party of Canada candidate in the riding.

Gordon Jeffrey (Parti Rhinoceros Party) ran as the satirical Rhinoceros Party's candidate.

About the Riding

West Vancouver, the riding's southeastern anchor, is one of Canada's wealthiest municipalities, with waterfront properties along the North Shore overlooking Vancouver's skyline across Burrard Inlet. The Sea to Sky Highway runs north from West Vancouver through Lions Bay, Squamish, and up to Whistler and Pemberton. Squamish, once a resource town built on forestry and the BC Rail corridor, has transformed into one of British Columbia's fastest-growing communities, attracting young families and outdoor recreation enthusiasts priced out of Metro Vancouver. Whistler, site of several 2010 Winter Olympics venues, remains an internationally recognized resort community where tourism and hospitality dominate the economy.

Across Howe Sound, the Sunshine Coast communities of Gibsons, Sechelt, Pender Harbour, and Halfmoon Bay are accessible primarily by BC Ferries from Horseshoe Bay. The Sunshine Coast's economy blends tourism, retirement living, arts, and the marine sector, and its residents have long advocated for improved ferry service and healthcare access.

In 2025, housing affordability was the overriding concern across the riding's diverse communities. In Squamish and Whistler, worker housing shortages threatened the service and hospitality industries that sustain local economies. On the Sunshine Coast, limited ferry capacity constrained growth and complicated daily life for commuters. Healthcare access was a persistent issue, particularly for communities distant from major hospitals. Environmental stewardship resonated strongly in a riding whose economy and identity are closely tied to the natural landscape, and where climate-driven risks such as wildfires and flooding were increasingly felt.

Nearby Ridings