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With boundary re-alignments, a 20-year Conservative MP retiring, a 30-year MLA running as an independent, could this perpetually blue region see change?

Monday morning's vote projections for Canada's federal election from 338Canada.com show no change in the popular vote projection with the Liberals at 44 per cent and Conservatives at 38 per cent.

However, on April 7, 2025, the polling aggregator shows a six-seat drop for the Liberals projected from 198 as of April 4 down to 192, with the Conservatives picking up four and the NDP two. A majority government is formed in the 343-seat Parliament with 172 seats.

Canada's 45th federal election is set for April 28, 2025, after Liberal leader and Prime Minister Mark Carney met with Gov.-Gen. Mary Simon on March 23, to ask her to dissolve parliament.

There are 343 electoral districts in Canada, up from 338 seats due to population growth and boundary revisions. At dissolution, the 338-seat House of Commons had 152 Liberals, 120 Conservatives, 33 Bloc Quebecois, 24 NDP, two Green Party members, three Independents, and four vacant seats.

In British Columbia, both the Liberals and Conservatives currently have 14 seats, and the NDP won 12 of the 42 seats in the province in the last election in 2021, including party leader Jagmeet Singh in Burnaby South. The Green Party has one MP in B.C., party co-leader Elizabeth May. One B.C. seat is currently vacant.

Projections on 338Canada.com show big jumps for the Liberals and Conservatives to 22 and 20 seats respectively with the NDP being decimated dropping to between zero and three seats, and the Greens being shut out.

The Eastern Fraser Valley has been consistently blue for most of our lifetimes, and all three major parties now have candidates in Chilliwack-Hope, Abbotsford-South Langley, and Mission-Matsqui-Abbotsford.

Boundary adjustments in 2022 after the last federal election changed the shape, size and demographics of all three ridings.

Here's a look at each of them with maps, descriptions, and a list of the candidates.

Chilliwack-Hope

Chilliwack-Hope was first created in 2012 with the federal electoral boundaries redistribution, and was first contested in 2015. That incarnation of the riding that includes Chilliwack made it its smallest size ever, created out of 76 per cent of the electoral district of the former Chilliwack-Fraser Canyon, which went all the way from the Vedder Canal up to Cache Creek. That Fraser Canyon and north moved in 2012 to the Mission-Matsqui riding. Now with the 2022 adjustments, the Canyon is back with Chilliwack and Hope, along with the rural areas in between and some stretches north and east.

Candidates:

Conservative Party – Mark Strahl (incumbent - 2011-2025)
This has been a riding for the Conservatives as close to a sure-thing as there is. Even the candidate becoming the candidate was a sure thing as daddy Chuck was MP for 18 years, resigned in 2011 and handed the riding to Mark. Other wannabe candidates in Chilliwack for the Conservatives were frustrated because they weren't even given a chance to go up against Prince Mark.

Liberal Party – Zeeshan Khan (new candidate)
Zeeshan Khan is the candidate for the Liberals in Chilliwack-Hope announced on April 2. Khan is a newcomer to Canada who has become a prominent community activist. Khan immigrated to Canada with his wife 13 years ago from Pakistan where he was a dental surgeon and she was a dentist.

New Democratic Party – Teri Westerby (new candidate)
Teri Westerby announced on March 24 he is running for the NDP in Chilliwack-Hope. Westerby is currently a trustee with the Chilliwack School Board elected in 2022 making history as B.C.’s first openly transgender man elected to public office. He is a marketing professional, small business owner, and longtime community advocate.

Green Party – Salina Derish (new candidate)
Salina Derish owns PickEco Refills in Chilliwack, the Fraser Valley’s first zero-waste grocery store she launched in 2018, and she is one of the founding directors of the Downtown Chilliwack Market Society. 

People's Party of Canada – Jeff Galbraith (new candidate)
Jeff Galbraith works at IMW Industries in Chilliwack, and his biography on the PPC website describes him as a semi-retired pensioner and Royal Canadian Navy veteran. 

All-candidates meeting

The Chilliwack Chamber of Commerce and the Downtown Chilliwack Business Improvement Association are hosting a virtual all-candidates forum live on YouTube on Thursday, April 10 from 6 to 8 p.m.

The meeting will be livestreamed here as well.

Last election results:

2021 election results in Chilliwack-Hope.

Abbotsford-South Langley

The electoral district of Abbotsford-South Langley is the new riding created out of Abbotsford and portions of Langley with the 2022 federal electoral boundaries redistribution, and comes into effect as of March 23, 2025, with the election call. The riding includes most of the City of Abbotsford along with portions of the Township of Langley and the City of Langley.

Most interestingly here is that 30-year MLA Michael De Jong wanted to be the Conservative candidate for Abbotsford-South Langley but the party decided he wasn't experienced enough, so de Jong is running as an independent.

Candidates:

Conservative Party – Sukhman Singh Gill (new)
Sukhman Singh Gill is the Conservative candidate in Abbotsford-South Langley after winning the nomination on March 8. Gill announced in January that he was seeking the nomination, and said he is a lifelong resident of the area and has roots in farming. After De Jong's bid to run was rejected, he appealed but that was rejected so he's running as an independent. Retiring Ed Fast served as MP for the riding of Abbotsford from 2004 to 2025.

Independent – Mike De Jong (30-year MLA rejected by Conservatives)
Mike De Jong has been a Member of the Legislative Assembly in B.C. since 1994 but he was told by the Conservatives he was "unqualified" to be the candidate. De Jong served as a cabinet minister under two premiers, including as Attorney General, Minister of Labour and Citizens' Services, Minister of Aboriginal Affairs and Reconciliation, Minister of Public Safety and Solicitor General, Minister of Health, Minister Responsible for Multiculturalism, and Minister of Finance where, from 2013 to 2017, he tabled five consecutive balanced budgets.

Liberal Party – Kevin Gillies (new)
Kevin Gillies was announced as the candidate on March 31. Gillies is an Abbotsford realtor who used to be a journalist at the Abbotsford-Mission Times from 1995 until 2003.

New Democratic Party – Dharmasena Yakandawela (candidate in Abbotsford in 2021 election)
Yakandawela is a first-generation immigrant, a former judge in Sri Lanka, and is a practising immigration lawyer with a firm that focuses on providing pro-bono support to individuals. Yakandawela finished third in the 2021 election in Abbotsford with 17 per cent of the vote, spending $2.3 million or one-fifth of the fourth place PPC candidate, one-25th of the Liberal, and one-33rd of Fast.

Green Party – Melissa Snazell (ran for Greens in 2024 provincial election)
Melissa Snazell is a pharmacy technician, a mother of an 18-year-old son, and ran as a candidate in the 2024 provincial election for the B.C. Green Party. She says she has lived in the Fraser Valley for 25 years and have been in Aldergrove for the past 12 years.

People's Party of Canada – Aeriol Alderking (2019 Christian Heritage candidate)
Aeriol Alderking is now the candidate with zero personal information listed on the PPC site other than that she is "a proud supporter of the People’s Party of Canada" who "stands for the core values of freedom, personal responsibility, respect, and fairness." Sh e also believes "that Canada can restore its prosperity and empower the people through bold convictions." Alderking also ran for the Christian Heritage Party in the 2019 election in Abbotsford finishing sixth out of six with 270 votes.


Mission-Matsqui-Abbotsford

Now the weirdest electoral district in the Lower Mainland, this riding encompasses the farmlands of north Abbotsford, Harrison Hot Springs, half of the District of Kent (but not Agassiz proper) and north to just shy of Lillooet and Cache Creek, which mercifully moved to Kamloops-Thompson-Nicola.

Candidates:

Conservative Party – Brad Vis (incumbent in Mission-Matsqui-Fraser Canyon elected in 2019 and re-elected in 2021)
Vis is off to an interesting start. A month ago, he presented a petition in Parliament to "implement a comprehensive Anti-Spam Strategy and stop the harassment of unsolicited and fraudulent phone calls and text messages to Canadian consumers." Early on in the election his team sent out a robocall. Oops. Vis claimed it was unauthorized.

Liberal Party – Jeff Howe (new)
Jeff Howe lives in his hometown of Abbotsford with his wife Tina, and their three children. He's a member of the Law Society of Saskatchewan, and the Law Society of Ontario, and he maintains a law practice focused on Canadian Aboriginal law, according to the party's website.

New Democratic Party – Jules Côté (new)
Jules Côté is a University of the Fraser Valley student, a member of the National Farmers Union, and a community volunteer.

Green Party – John Kidder (new)
John Kidder describes himself as someone who has made a living as a cowboy, a farmer, a range manager, a miner, a fish worker and a warehouseman. He was an environmental economist, an early computer adopter and an entrepreneur in electronic music, software and fibre optics. He's also clearly a realist, maybe to a fault as he describes the incumbent as the "sure winner" but "I want to finish second, with enough votes to fairly reflect your feelings."

People's Party of Canada – Kevin Sinclair (ran in Abbotsford 2021)
Kevin Sinclair is a truck driver and "devoted family man," according to his PPC page. He ran in Abbotsford in the 2021 election finishing fourth, bumping the Green candidate to fifth.

All-candidates meeting

The Mission Chamber of Commerce is hosting an all-candidates meeting for Mission-Matsqui-Abbotsford candidates on Tuesday, April 8 at the Best Western Conference Centre in Mission. Doors open at 6 p.m., forum starts at 7 p.m. The event will be livestreamed on the chamber’s YouTube channel. Residents in Agassiz and Harrison will be able to attend a simultaneous in-person stream of the meeting; details on that event are not yet available.

Last election results:

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Paul J. Henderson
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