Jenna Sudds was cruising to re-election for the Liberals in the federal riding of Kanata on Monday night. With about 55 per cent of polls reporting, the former Ottawa city councillor had 11,749 votes compared to 7,794 for Conservative Greg Kung. The NDP’s Melissa Simon ranked a distant third with 641.
The first cheers from Sudds supporters rippled through her election night rally at The Marshes Golf Club shortly after 10 p.m. as the Liberals were projected to form the next government.
The mostly red-clad crowd cheered again around 10:30 when the neighbouring Nepean riding showed Liberal Leader Mark Carney with a healthy lead in his own riding, and cheers grew even louder when CBC News reported that Carleton Liberal challenger Bruce Fanjoy enjoyed a slim early lead over Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre in the Carleton riding. The mood among the crowd became considerably more muted, however, as the Conservatives narrowed the gap with gains throughout western Canada. The crowd erupted as Sudds walked into the golf club’s restaurant around 11:30 p.
m. to thank her family and team of volunteers. “What a night!” she exclaimed.
“What an incredible team we’ve had helping to make this win happen. “We all realize how important this election felt. For our country, for our community .
.. Let’s be real.
We had a great night, great success here, but the hard work starts now.” “We know there are challenges on the horizon and we need to rise to the occasion,” Sudds added. “The hard work continues.
We’ve got challenges in front of us and it’s incumbent on all of us to rise to the occasion.” In her remarks, Sudds also referenced United States President Donald Trump and the challenges that Trump’s import tariffs “will pose on our economy.” “Thank you for trusting me with your vote and your support.
And I can’t wait to get to work. Sudds first vaulted from municipal politics to the federal stage in 2021, winning her Kanata-Carleton seat in a hotly-contested 2021 federal election. She won the riding by just 1,921 votes four years ago, based on a 73.
4 per cent turnout of 86,505 eligible voters, prevailing over Conservative candidate Jennifer McAndrew, who received 38.6 per cent of the vote, while Sudds received 41.8 per cent.
Before Sudds won in 2021, the former Kanata-Carleton riding had been held by Liberal Karen McCrimmon, who won comfortably in 2015 and again in 2019. McCrimmon declined to run federally in 2021, but has since made the move to Queen’s Park, winning a July 2023 by-election for the Kanata-Carleton provincial riding and winning re-election in the provincial general election in February. Sudds, a former federal government economist and executive director of two business associations, served in former prime minister Justin Trudeau’s cabinet as the minister of families, children and social development until the March 14 cabinet shuffle that followed Mark Carney’s swearing-in as Trudeau’s successor.
A West-Carleton resident and full-time paramedic serving the Ottawa Valley, Kung was also a senior advisor to former Conservative finance ministers Jim Flaherty and Joe Oliver. Kung has been on the boards of Western Ottawa Community Resource Centre, the Youth Services Bureau of Ottawa Foundation and the Ontario Paramedic Association. The NDP finished a distant third in the riding in the 2021 federal election with 14 per cent of the vote.
A former technical writer for a Kanata tech company until she was recently laid off, Simon has lived in Kanata for more than two decades and has a bachelor’s degree in social work from Carleton University. She is completing a law degree at Carleton. Green Party candidate Jennifer Purdy collected 1,709 votes (2.
7 per cent) in 2021 and ran again for the Greens in 2025. A Kanata-raised physician and mother of young triplets, Purdy served in the Canadian Armed Forces for more than 23 years and was posted as a family physician in Trenton, Petawawa and Ottawa before opening a medical clinic in Kanata. She has run twice federally for the Green Party and also ran for the party in the most recent provincial election.
Moinuddin Siddiqui ran for the Centrist Party of Canada The Kanata riding, formerly Kanata-Carleton, was realigned in 2024. It includes much of the former city of Kanata, along with Bells Corners, which was previously in the neighbouring riding of Nepean. The riding’s western boundary also changed in the 2024 redistribution, with several rural communities shifting to the Carleton riding, including Dunrobin, Constance Bay, Kinburn and Fitzroy Harbour.
The redistribution added about 4,800 residents to the new Kanata riding, leaving it with approximately 90,000 eligible voters. [email protected] SEE MORE OTTAWA-AREA RESULTS Please check back as we update results live.
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Federal election 2025: Liberal Jenna Sudds wins re-election in Kanata

The former Ottawa city councillor was first elected in the riding in 2021.