Two of the leading leaders of the party could not retain their seats on Monday, with Pierre Poilievre of the conservatives and Jagmeet Singh of NDP falling to liberal challengers.
Singh placed a distant third in Central Burnaby. But Pailievre’s result was a shocking discomfort, losing Carleton’s driving in the Ottawa area after holding it for two decades.
But beyond those two leaders, several other notable headlines also lost their seats. Here is a breakdown of some of the greatest names that will not return to the Chamber of the Commons.
Niki Ashton
Beyond Singh, Niki Ashton is one of the most notable candidates of the NDP who loses his seat.
Ashton had been deputy since 2008 when she won the driving of Manitoba by Churchill-Kewatinook Aski for the NDP.
He ran for the leadership of the party in 2017, ending third in the contest that Singh finally won.
Rebecca Chartrand, who identifies as Anishinaabe, Inninew, Dakota and Mécis of Pine Creek First Nation, expelled Ashton after 17 years as a deputy.
Peter Julian
Peter Julian is a loss that will potentially feed the leadership vacuum in the NDP after Singh’s resignation.
As leader of the NDP house, Julian could have been an easy choice as an interim leader of the party, assuming that he had no aspirations for the permanent concert.
Julian had been the deputy of New Westminster-Burnaby for two decades, winning for the first time the seat in 2004.
The liberal Jake Sawatzky unleashed Julian in the driving of New Westminster-Burnaby-Mailardville.
Kamal Khera

The liberals were able to collect a good amount of seats in Quebec, but lost some land in Ontario, especially in the 905 region that surrounds Toronto.
Kamal Khera had celebrated driving for Brampton West since 2015, but lost to the conservative candidate Amarjeet Gill.
A training nurse, Khera had been a cabinet minister under Mark Carney and Justin Trudeau. Before obtaining his first cabinet position in 2021, Khera was a parliamentary secretary.
YA’ARA SAKS
Ya’ara Saks is another former cabinet minister of the region to fall to a conservative.
Saks won his seat in a paralyzed selection of 2020 and swore as Minister of Mental Health and addictions during a cabinet in 2023. But Carney did not include it in her cabinet when she won the leadership.
Roman Baber, who was expelled from the Progressive Conservative Caucus of Ontario and then run for federal leadership, won the center of York in Saks.
Chad Collins

Although Chad Collins had only been a deputy since 2021 and largely served as Backbenter, his loss in Hamilton East-Stoney Creek stands out for different reasons.
Since 2004, driving has been largely a three -way race, but has gone to the liberals or PND. That changed on Monday, with conservative Ned Kuruc surpassing Collins for just under 1,500 votes. The NDP placed a distant third.
The driving would have been a seat that the liberals needed to sustain to enter the majority territory.
Collins was one of the liberal backbenchers who publicly asked Trudeau to resign before the former prime minister decided to leave, but voters seem not to have rewarded Collins for speaking.
Stephen Ellis

In general, the conservatives had a good choice, increasing both their part of the seats and the popular vote. But the losses of the party extend beyond their leader.
Although Stephen Ellis lost his seat after just one mandate, the family doctor was considered a star candidate for conservatives in the 2021 pandemic elections.
Ellis won the Cumberland-Colchester driving of the Cumberland liberals, who occupied the seat since 2015. He served as Poilievre’s health critic in the last Parliament.
Liberal Alana Hirtle defeated Ellis for almost 1,300 votes.
TRcy Gray
Dozens of seats were still too close to call when the Canada elections arrested the count at 4:30 am et on Tuesday. Which included Kelowna, BC
The CBC decision table called the race for Liberal Stephen Fuhr on Tuesday afternoon. He beat the conservative headline Tracy Gray for just over 200 votes.
Gray was another member of the Pailievre front bank, serving as a job critic.
A former city councilor, Gray won Fuhr’s seat in 2018.
Michelle Ferreri
The conservative Michelle Ferreri will not return home, having lost her seat in Peterborough, Ontario.
Ferreri’s Riding, previously Peterborough-Kawartha, has become between liberals and conservatives in recent decades.
Ferreri won the leadership of the former Liberal Cabinet Minister Maryam Monsef in 2021. As a conservative critic for families and social development, he was an extremely vocal member of the opposition, and occasionally He made extravagant claims.
Emma Harrison, a farmer and owner of a small business, won the liberal seat.
Alain Theerrien
The loss of Alain Theerrien in the Prairie-Atateken was only one of a dozen seats, the block that Qécois dropped these elections.
But Therrien was a remarkable member of Caucus Bloc, which serves as the leader of the party chamber. When the Yves-François Blanchet leader was absent from the question period, this was generally roasting the government.
Speaking to journalists on Tuesday morning, Blanchet himself pointed out the loss of Therrien as especially difficult.
“You can’t have an older warrior than Alain. All other candidates, all the other friends I have lost … Alain had a special closeness,” he said in French.
The former Quebec MNA lost his seat to Jacques Liberal Ramsay, a family doctor from the southern coast of Montreal.
Diane Lebouthillier
While the liberals could collect seats from the block, the sovereign game was able to take away a seat of a key liberal player.
The former Cabinet Minister, Diane Lebouthillier, lost her seat in the most eastern Quebec driving of Gaspésie-Lles-de-La-Madeleine-Listuguj.
Lebouthillier had been a member of the Trudeau front bank since the liberals won their first choice under the former leader in 2015, although Carney did not include her in her cabinet.
Bloc Québécois candidate Alexis Deschênes, had previously run provincially, but had more luck in this federal career. It probably benefited from a drafted driving and a Blanchet campaign visit.
Brian Mass
For the first time since 2002, a new deputy was elected in Windsor West. Brian Masse of the NDP arrived in third place behind Richard Pollock and the conservative Harb Gill, who was chosen.
The conservatives were able to overcome the surveys in Ontario in part by obtaining blue neck votes in the southwest region of the province.
An excellent example: Brian Masse lost his seat after representing Windsor-We since 2002.
Masse celebrated several critical wallets for the NDP, including the border relations of Canada-United States, one of the key problems in this election. His Windsor conduction is also on the first line of the United States Trade War.
Harb Gill, a retired police officer, pushed a Change message In his successful attempt to disapprove Masse.
Lindsay Mathyssen
The former NDP deputy Lindsay Mathyssen lost to the conservative candidate Kurt Holman in the 2025 federal elections in London-Fanshawe. Mathyssen was first chosen to drive in 2019, following in the footsteps of his mother, who was a deputy for driving for 13 years. Mathyssen spoke with CBC News on the night of the elections.
Lindsay Mathyssen dropping his London-Fanshawe seat is another example of conservatives by collecting NDP seats in southwest Ontario.
Mathyssen had represented driving since 2019. Before that, his mother, Irene Mathyssen, occupied the same 2006 seat.
Kurt Holman will be the first conservative to represent driving in more than two decades.
Mike Morrice
With the loss of Mike Morrice, the Caucus of the Green Party has been cut in half.
While the co-leader Elizabeth May occupied her BC seat, Morrice found the conservative Kelly derived in the Kitchener center of Ontario.
Morrice won the riding in 2021, although the liberal candidate in those elections had abandoned the race.
This time, Morrice seems to have divided the vote with the new liberal candidate Brian Adeba.