That's because Canada's federal electoral map underwent a substantial redesign in Once per decade, the divisions that dictate where Canadians vote get redrawn to " reflect population shifts and growth ," meaning the map used in the election is now defunct.
The new map, which was created by 10 separate electoral boundary commissions, came into effect in , and will divide the country up into different pieces — 30 more than we had in The big map above has two layers, which can be toggled by clicking on the "Visible layers" tab.
The white lines show the new boundaries drawn in , while the darker ones in the layer below show the old ridings that were drawn in The smaller maps below break down the changes province by province, highlighting every major boundary adjustment and new riding. Click the links to jump to a specific province. Ridings in 36 42 Median riding population: , British Columbia TOP. Four of British Columbia's six new electoral districts will be bunched in the small southwest section of the province's mainland.
The old Delta—Richmond East riding will be roughly broken into two separate pieces, a new Cloverdale—Langley City riding will be added in Surrey, and a sixth Vancouver riding will pop up in the centre of the city.
Most notably, the old Burnaby—Douglas riding now extends north across the water, taking up a large part of the old North Vancouver riding. Two additional riding will also be added outside of the city — one on Vancouver Island and one in the Fraser Valley.
Ridings in 28 34 Median riding population: , Alberta TOP. Calgary area: Calgary was divided into eight ridings for the last election, but will be split into 10 when Albertans head to the polls this fall. The north section of the city used to be divided into two ridings, but will now be encompassed by three separate ridings.
Calgary—Nose Hill will retain its name, but will be shifted into the centre of the city, sandwiched between a Calgary Rocky Ridge and a Calgary Skyview riding. In the south, a riding called Calgary Midnapore will appear between what used to be Calgary Southwest and Calgary Southeast. Edmonton area: Edmonton's ridings are gravitating more towards the urban centre, with three new ridings popping up outside the perimeter of the city.
Though the city core will keep its eight ridings, those boundaries will be tightened up into a more compact space. And instead of giant, sparse spaces surrounding the city, three new ridings will encompass the Edmonton area: Edmonton—Wetaskiwin, Sturgeon River—Parkland and Sherwood Park—Fort Saskatchewan.
Ridings in 14 14 Median riding population: 68, Saskatchewan TOP. A new, exclusively urban riding in Saskatoon called Saskatoon—West is seen as a possible NDP gain in the historically Conservative region. Saskatoon—University and Saskatoon—Grasswood are also new ridings for the city. Regina—Lewvan and Regina—Wascana are also new, urban additions for Several rural ridings have been combined for this election.
Regina—Lumsden—Lake Centre has now expanded to include all of Blackstrap and most the Palliser riding. Marc Dalton. Sophie Chatel. Port Moody—Coquitlam. Bonita Zarrillo. Candice Bergen. Prince Albert. Randy Hoback. Bob Zimmer. Ted Falk. Jean-Yves Duclos. Red Deer—Lacombe. Blaine Calkins. Red Deer—Mountain View. Earl Dreeshen. Warren Steinley. Andrew Scheer. Michael Kram. Cheryl Gallant.
Richmond Centre. Wilson Miao. Richmond Hill. Majid Jowhari. Alain Rayes. Maxime Blanchette-Joncas. Luc Desilets. Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie. Alexandre Boulerice. Saanich—Gulf Islands. Elizabeth May. Darrell Samson. Saint Boniface—Saint Vital. Dan Vandal. Saint John—Rothesay. Wayne Long. Simon-Pierre Savard-Tremblay. Christine Normandin. Emmanuella Lambropoulos. Patricia Lattanzio.
Claude DeBellefeuille. Marilyn Gladu. Saskatoon West. Brad Redekopp. Kevin Waugh. Corey Tochor. Sault Ste. Terry Sheehan. Scarborough Centre. Salma Zahid. Scarborough North. Shaun Chen. Scarborough Southwest. Bill Blair. Jean Yip. John McKay. Scarborough—Rouge Park. Gary Anandasangaree. James Bezan. Sherwood Park—Fort Saskatchewan. Garnett Genuis. Simcoe North. Adam Chambers. Terry Dowdall. Skeena—Bulkley Valley. Taylor Bachrach. Souris—Moose Mountain.
Robert Kitchen. South Okanagan—West Kootenay. Richard Cannings. South Shore—St. Rick Perkins. South Surrey—White Rock. Kerry-Lynne D. Spadina—Fort York. Kevin Vuong. Michael Cooper.
Chris Bittle. John's East. Joanne Thompson. John's South—Mount Pearl. Seamus O'Regan. Steveston—Richmond East. Parm Bains. Stormont—Dundas—South Glengarry. Eric Duncan. Sturgeon River—Parkland. Dane Lloyd. Viviane Lapointe. Surrey Centre. Randeep Sarai. Sukh Dhaliwal. Jaime Battiste. Louise Chabot. Melissa Lantsman. Thunder Bay—Rainy River. Marcus Powlowski. Thunder Bay—Superior North.
Patty Hajdu. Timmins—James Bay. Charlie Angus. Richard Bragdon. Toronto Centre. Marci Ien. Julie Dabrusin. Carolyn Bennett. Chrystia Freeland. Vancouver Centre. Hedy Fry. Vancouver East. Jenny Kwan. Vancouver Granville. Taleeb Noormohamed. Vancouver Kingsway. Don Davies. Vancouver Quadra. Joyce Murray. Vancouver South.
Harjit S. Peter Schiefke. Francesco Sorbara. Laurel Collins. Marc Miller. Annie Koutrakis. Bardish Chagger. Wellington—Halton Hills. Michael D. West Nova. Chris d'Entremont. Patrick Weiler. Ryan Turnbull. Ali Ehsassi. Windsor West. Brian Masse. Irek Kusmierczyk. Winnipeg Centre. Leah Gazan. Winnipeg North. Kevin Lamoureux. Winnipeg South. Terry Duguid. Winnipeg South Centre. Jim Carr. Gerald Soroka. York Centre. Ya'ara Saks. York South—Weston. Ahmed Hussen. Scot Davidson. Cathay Wagantall. Brendan Hanley.
Paul's Ontario Bennett, Hon. The total number of seats in the House has changed over time, as have the boundaries of the constituencies, in order to reflect changes in the Canadian population. Historical information about constituencies is available on the Library of Parliament website.
Fast, Hon. Cormier, Serge. Joly, Hon. Holland, Hon. Iacono, Angelo. Hughes, Carol. Taylor Roy, Leah. McDonald, Ken. Michaud, Kristina. Richards, Blake. Brassard, John. Shipley, Doug. Kurek, Damien C. Falk, Rosemarie. Williams, Ryan. Erskine-Smith, Nathaniel. Lehoux, Richard. Desbiens, Caroline. Vignola, Julie. LeBlanc, Hon. Plamondon, Louis. Vien, Dominique. Perron, Yves. Rogers, Churence. Dubourg, Emmanuel.
Shields, Martin. Ali, Shafqat. Sidhu, Maninder. Sahota, Ruby. Sidhu, Sonia. Khera, Hon. Maguire, Larry. Brock, Larry. St-Onge, Hon. Ruff, Alex. Gould, Hon. Beech, Terry. Singh, Jagmeet. McLean, Greg. Webber, Len. Hallan, Jasraj Singh. Benzen, Bob. Kusie, Stephanie. Rempel Garner, Hon. Kelly, Pat.
Kmiec, Tom. Liepert, Ron. Chahal, George. May, Bryan. Kelloway, Mike. MacAulay, Hon. Doherty, Todd. Poilievre, Hon. Block, Kelly. Fraser, Hon. Albas, Dan. Paul-Hus, Pierre. Morantz, Marty. Casey, Sean. Shanahan, Brenda. Epp, Dave. Martel, Richard. Strahl, Mark. Ashton, Niki. Aldag, John. Small, Clifford. Bibeau, Hon. McKinnon, Ron. Johns, Gord. MacGregor, Alistair. Ellis, Stephen. Patzer, Jeremy. Fisher, Darren. Mazier, Dan. Dzerowicz, Julie. Qualtrough, Hon. Vidal, Gary.
Coteau, Michael. Dong, Han. Oliphant, Robert. Dhillon, Anju. Champoux, Martin. Seeback, Kyle. O'Toole, Hon. Boissonnault, Hon. Desjarlais, Blake. Aboultaif, Ziad. Uppal, Hon. Jeneroux, Matt. McPherson, Heather. McCauley, Kelly. Lake, Hon. Mendicino, Hon. Morrissey, Robert J. Vecchio, Karen. Blaikie, Daniel. Garrison, Randall. Lewis, Chris. Baker, Yvan. Duncan, Hon.
Maloney, James. Muys, Dan. Hardie, Ken. Barlow, John. Goodridge, Laila. Atwin, Jenica. Moore, Hon. Lebouthillier, Hon. MacKinnon, Steven.
Drouin, Francis. Warkentin, Chris. Longfield, Lloyd. Lewis, Leslyn. Schmale, Jamie. Fillmore, Andy. Pseudonyms will no longer be permitted. By submitting a comment, you accept that CBC has the right to reproduce and publish that comment in whole or in part, in any manner CBC chooses. Please note that CBC does not endorse the opinions expressed in comments. Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines.
Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time. Join the conversation Create account. Already have an account? Ontario has 17 new ridings for Toronto Ontario has 17 new ridings for Here's some things to know about the redistribution Redrawn riding boundaries can alter the balance of political power in the province.
Social Sharing. Here's a few important things to know about how we got here. What is redistribution? How many seats were added? What are the new ridings for ? Due to the additional seats, 31 existing ridings have undergone name changes.
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