In a tightly contested federal election, Prime Minister Mark Carney’s Liberal Party has emerged victorious but failed to secure a majority, triggering political fragmentation, party infighting, and market turbulence as Canada prepares for what many analysts are calling a short-lived Parliament.
With 343 of 343 seats reporting, the Liberals secured 168 seats, falling 4 short of the 172 needed for a majority. The Conservatives surged to 144 seats, significantly outperforming pre-election expectations. Meanwhile, Bloc Québécois (23), NDP (7), and the Green Party (1) now hold the balance of power in a deeply divided House of Commons.
The popular vote reflected this narrow divide, with the Liberals garnering roughly 43.5% and the Conservatives following closely with just over 41.4%. The NDP trailed distantly at around 6.3%, while the Bloc Québécois polled near 6.4%.
Despite the loss, the Conservatives claimed a psychological victory. They entered the race expecting 124 seats and came out with 144.
In his concession speech, Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre emphasized the strategic victory within the defeat, highlighting the success in preventing the Liberals and NDP from forming an easy coalition.
“Canadians have opted for a razor-thin minority government,” Poilievre said. “We’ve gained well over 20 seats. We got the highest share of vote our party has received since 1988.”
Does the math somehow not pencil out, maybe the statistics allow networks to call a winner so early… but is it not closer than it seems? pic.twitter.com/NgIZmfprm1
— Mortimer (@mortimer_1) April 29, 2025
Conservatives walked into tonight expecting to win 124 seats, they are projected to win over 140. They pushed the liberals into a minority. Tonight is a win given the last few weeks. New election in 2 years.
— SmallCapSteve (@smallcapsteve) April 29, 2025
Tonight's biggest loser, without a doubt, is 338Canada.
— The Deep Dive (@TheDeepDive_ca) April 29, 2025
The election caught prediction markets off guard. On Kalshi, traders priced an 81% chance for a Liberal victory just hours before polls closed, far from the initial bets.
Okay looks like that conservative spike was kinda looney:
— Conor Sen (@conorsen.bsky.social) 2025-04-29T01:13:29.789Z
The Conservatives: The long game
While the Conservatives failed to seize government, their electoral gains were undeniable. They increased their seat count by more than twenty compared to 2021 and reestablished themselves as a dominant political force capable of competing nationally. Their success extended beyond traditional strongholds, making inroads into suburban Ontario, parts of the Maritimes, and even liberal urban centers that had once seemed invulnerable.
Poilievre’s post-election remarks carefully positioned the outcome as a win, emphasizing that his party had redrawn the electoral map and set the stage for what many strategists now predict will be a new election within the next twelve to twenty-four months.
This is going to be most likely a small minority government for the Liberals.
— Jean Philippe Fournier (@JeanPFournier) April 29, 2025
The Conservatives have overperformed the polls with almost 41% and have redrawn the map with a new voter coalition.
Pierre Poilievre must stay on – we could be in an election again in 12 months
CTV projecting a Liberal minority.
— SmallCapSteve (@smallcapsteve) April 29, 2025
A win for the CPC.
Election in 2 years? Might be up to the NDP.
The 45th Parliament of Canada looks likely to be short lived.
— Philippe Lagassé (@LagasseSubstack) April 29, 2025
Anyone who thought the CPC would turf Pierre after this election should really understand two things. The CPC have the best popular vote since Mulroney and we will go to another election within a year. Pierre is safe.
— Kristin Raworth 🇨🇦 (@KristinRaworth) April 29, 2025
This is the best result of the Conservative Party of Canada in 14 years, since Harper's majority in 2011.
— Karl Bélanger ✖ (@KarlBelanger) April 29, 2025
Despite the outward momentum, the Conservative Party is already consumed by internal conflict. Within minutes of the election results being broadcast, prominent Conservative figures and grassroots supporters launched public attacks against Ontario Premier Doug Ford, accusing him of undermining Poilievre’s campaign.
Ezra Levant, founder of Rebel News, publicly vowed to do everything possible to prevent Ford from becoming federal Conservative leader. Jamil Jivani, a media personality aligned with the party’s populist wing, unleashed scathing criticism against Ford’s centrism, a move political columnist Bruce Arthur likened to bringing a flamethrower to the Conservative leadership struggle.
The war begins pic.twitter.com/LoQmX0RGby
— Bruce Arthur (@bruce_arthur) April 29, 2025
Fuck Doug Ford and Tim Houston.
— Tablesalt 🇨🇦 (@Tablesalt13) April 29, 2025
Never forget their betrayal when Poilievre was down.
NDP collapse
Reduced to just 7 seats, the NDP suffered a historic setback, prompting leader Jagmeet Singh to announce his resignation immediately following the results. Once seen as a potential kingmaker, the NDP was punished by voters for its perceived complicity in propping up the Liberal government during the previous parliament.
In contrast, the Bloc Québécois emerged revitalized at first. Initially forecast to win 25 seats, despite losing seats it appeared that they would become kingmaker before further Liberal gains were announced, while the Bloc’s count was reduced to 23.
So looks to me like voters punished the NDP for their shitty job propping up The Liberals and rewarded The Liberals for their shitty job running the country.
— Duke Canuck 🤙 (@duke_canuck) April 29, 2025
Too fast, too surge?
Financial markets responded immediately and harshly to the fractured political outcome. Gold priced in Canadian dollars spiked to an all-time high of 4,602.94, up more than 75% from two years ago.
The energy sector, particularly in Alberta, reacted with alarm. With anticipation that the new government may reject all key demands from the oil and gas sector, fears of federal hostility toward Western Canada have reignited discussions of separatism and economic alienation.
Fine by me if Liberals win. I have financial insurance. See below. I was hoping for a robust natural resources sector turn-around stoy….but we may not see that now, with another 4 years of virtue signalling policies on the way.#CanadaElections2025 pic.twitter.com/BCHuyDeWPm
— FibSixOne8 (@FibSixOne8) April 29, 2025
A CTV panelist said Alberta will have a serious issue if we end up with a Liberal Majority as Mark Carney has rejected all demanded from O&G sector.
— govt.exe is corrupt (@govt_corrupt) April 28, 2025
I agree. A Liberal Majority will lead to Western separation. pic.twitter.com/vxoDjp2SXX
The irony is that Trump is winner in this Canadian election. The country will be more divided than ever as Carney goes after Western Canada. Our debt levels will explode higher with massive deficits. Doubling down on policies that got us here.
— Martin Pelletier (@MPelletierCIO) April 29, 2025
Criticism erupted not only about the results but also about the speed with which the election was called by media outlets. Several commentators and political operatives accused CBC and CTV of declaring a Liberal victory too early, despite many tight races across the country.
Did they call this election way too soon?
— Golden Fleece (@Mintgecko) April 29, 2025
There are A LOT of tight ridings. I felt it was called too fast.
— Terry Newman (@TLNewmanMTL) April 29, 2025
Some online voices compared the situation to a national act of assisted suicide, with phrases like “Canada just chose to MAID itself”, referencing the controversial Medical Assistance In Dying policy as a metaphor for national decline.
Canada just chose to MAID itself.
— Tom Quiggin (@TomTSEC) April 29, 2025
We’ve just witnessed the end of Canada. Carney will finish the job Trudeau started. pic.twitter.com/YITFB6og1X
— Mike (@midnightriderV2) April 29, 2025
Canada is fucked.
— EconomicWoes 🦁 (@ManyBeenRinsed) April 29, 2025
Carney will have you begging for Jagmeet once inflation rips and roars to higher highs.
Information for this briefing was found via Al Jazeera and the sources mentioned. The author has no securities or affiliations related to this organization. Not a recommendation to buy or sell. Always do additional research and consult a professional before purchasing a security. The author holds no licenses.