Data is the percentage of voters in each riding who turned out to vote at Advance Polls, April 18-21. This does not include votes by mail or special ballot. Election Day will be on Monday, April 28, 2025.
My percentage is based on number of voters in the riding, not general population. Population numbers include non-voters, like those under 18 and non-citizens.
I know who I voted for, but goddamn, what I would give to keep the level of voter engagement we’re currently seeing.
It shouldn’t take an existential threat to get people out to the polls like this.
Correlation of population density and participation is notable….
I’m definitely noting it
This is such an important election for our country
It’s a bit confusing because the colours used here are similar to the colours associated with the political parties. Would be more informative at a glance (and easier on the eyes) to use a colour gradient.
Wow – just downloaded your CSV. 41% of voters in Poilievre’s riding of Carleton have already voted. That’s pretty incredible.
There will be more people doing advanced voting as more people are aware of it. Is there a way to tell if the increase is more than what is expected. How can you tell there will be high turnout on election day? How does it compare to previous elections?
Probably not a great sign for the CPC if most of the massive turn out numbers is coming from city centers.
If PP loses, this will be the biggest come back for a political party in the last 100 years. Not since 1890.
My riding (Saanich and Gulf Islands) is going to be really interesting. It’s Elizabeth May’s riding, and she’s a very entrenched candidate, but the CPC candidate has been marketing pretty aggressively, to the point where her and her daughter actually came door knocking at my house yesterday. It’s also in the top percentile of early voters-although that’s not surprising, since the area is predominately upper middle class older couples and families.
I’m confident that May will carry it, the Liberal and NDP candidates are on the ballot but have spent almost no effort competiting here, but it’ll be very interesting to see where things land on the 28th.
I am a poll worker for Monday’s election day. They told us to expect it to be very busy compared to past years.
Do urban areas have better access to advanced polling?
Amazing work! This is super interesting.
I’m surprised by the number of reds and yellows, even in Calgary where I saw a lot of people voting by special ballot at my local EC office on Tuesday evening. Once all of this is over, it’ll be interesting to see the breakdown.
I wonder if this election was already won before we even got to election day?
Please tell me that the party who is most tangled in Trump’s policies are the ones most in danger in Canada. I wish I knew more about how Canadian politics work, and I want them to stick it to Agent Orange.
I like seeing all those people go vote, but it’s crazy that so many people voted before the budgets were revealed. Economics is often rated as a top priority by voters in polls so why?
Freeland ditched Trudeau because of his 60-something billions deficit plan, but this 225B deficit plan is somehow right? Did she say anything about it? Our credit has been rated down too.
I hate Trump (and his team) and want to him to go die in a fire, but Jesus does the guy that supposedly knows how to count seems bad at it.
The debates were weak as hell too. Boring topics, boring replies… why the hell was the response time so short in the french debate vs english?
NPD is down the gutter. Bloc is a non-party.
For a critical election, we have among the weakest leaders in a long time. I might just give my vote to my local guy who has done a very good job locally for several years.
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Data is the percentage of voters in each riding who turned out to vote at Advance Polls, April 18-21. This does not include votes by mail or special ballot. Election Day will be on Monday, April 28, 2025.
Source: Elections Canada Advance Poll data: [https://elections.ca/content.aspx?section=med&document=ge45_advpol&lang=e](https://elections.ca/content.aspx?section=med&document=ge45_advpol&lang=e)
Had to manually get the number of electors on Election Canada’s list from each individual riding profile. For example, Calgary Centre: [https://www.elections.ca/Scripts/vis/Profile?L=e&ED=48004&EV=62&EV_TYPE=1&PROV=AB&PROVID=48&QID=-1&PAGEID=29](https://www.elections.ca/Scripts/vis/Profile?L=e&ED=48004&EV=62&EV_TYPE=1&PROV=AB&PROVID=48&QID=-1&PAGEID=29)
Tool: Made with Mapchart.
My percentage is based on number of voters in the riding, not general population. Population numbers include non-voters, like those under 18 and non-citizens.
Edit: [Here is the CSV with my data](https://limewire.com/d/Emylw#bHz3T2Jb84) – have fun!
I know who I voted for, but goddamn, what I would give to keep the level of voter engagement we’re currently seeing.
It shouldn’t take an existential threat to get people out to the polls like this.
Correlation of population density and participation is notable….
I’m definitely noting it
This is such an important election for our country
It’s a bit confusing because the colours used here are similar to the colours associated with the political parties. Would be more informative at a glance (and easier on the eyes) to use a colour gradient.
Wow – just downloaded your CSV. 41% of voters in Poilievre’s riding of Carleton have already voted. That’s pretty incredible.
There will be more people doing advanced voting as more people are aware of it. Is there a way to tell if the increase is more than what is expected. How can you tell there will be high turnout on election day? How does it compare to previous elections?
Probably not a great sign for the CPC if most of the massive turn out numbers is coming from city centers.
If PP loses, this will be the biggest come back for a political party in the last 100 years. Not since 1890.
My riding (Saanich and Gulf Islands) is going to be really interesting. It’s Elizabeth May’s riding, and she’s a very entrenched candidate, but the CPC candidate has been marketing pretty aggressively, to the point where her and her daughter actually came door knocking at my house yesterday. It’s also in the top percentile of early voters-although that’s not surprising, since the area is predominately upper middle class older couples and families.
I’m confident that May will carry it, the Liberal and NDP candidates are on the ballot but have spent almost no effort competiting here, but it’ll be very interesting to see where things land on the 28th.
I am a poll worker for Monday’s election day. They told us to expect it to be very busy compared to past years.
Do urban areas have better access to advanced polling?
Amazing work! This is super interesting.
I’m surprised by the number of reds and yellows, even in Calgary where I saw a lot of people voting by special ballot at my local EC office on Tuesday evening. Once all of this is over, it’ll be interesting to see the breakdown.
I wonder if this election was already won before we even got to election day?
Please tell me that the party who is most tangled in Trump’s policies are the ones most in danger in Canada. I wish I knew more about how Canadian politics work, and I want them to stick it to Agent Orange.
I like seeing all those people go vote, but it’s crazy that so many people voted before the budgets were revealed. Economics is often rated as a top priority by voters in polls so why?
Freeland ditched Trudeau because of his 60-something billions deficit plan, but this 225B deficit plan is somehow right? Did she say anything about it? Our credit has been rated down too.
I hate Trump (and his team) and want to him to go die in a fire, but Jesus does the guy that supposedly knows how to count seems bad at it.
The debates were weak as hell too. Boring topics, boring replies… why the hell was the response time so short in the french debate vs english?
NPD is down the gutter. Bloc is a non-party.
For a critical election, we have among the weakest leaders in a long time. I might just give my vote to my local guy who has done a very good job locally for several years.
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