Ottawa·ONTARIO VOTES 2025

Ottawa elects 3 new faces including an extra Liberal MPP

A health-care worker and two experienced municipal politicians constitute a trio of new faces from Ottawa who are headed to Queen's Park after Thursday's provincial election.

Tyler Watt, Catherine McKenney and George Darouze headed to Queen's Park

Here are some of the Ottawa-area winners in the provincial election

8 hours ago
Duration 2:11
Out of the region's 16 ridings, only Nepean has changed hands: from the Progressive Conservatives to the Liberals.

Ottawans elected three new faces to the provincial legislature on Thursday, one of whom helped the Liberal Party of Ontario grab an extra seat at Queen's Park. 

When the election was called, the Liberals held only nine seats across the entire province, and four of those were held by Ottawa Liberal MPPs.  

The party retained that quartet of seats on Thursday but also secured a fifth one in the formerly Conservative riding of Nepean thanks to Tyler Watt, a health-care worker. 

Tyler Watt victory photo
Tyler Watt, the Liberal candidate for the Ottawa riding of Nepean, celebrates his victory in Thursday's provincial election. (Emma Weller/CBC)

Watt succeeds Lisa MacLeod of the Progressive Conservatives, who announced in September she wouldn't be running again in her longtime riding. 

"I was nervous going into tonight, so I'm just trying to take in how exciting this is," Watt told CBC after he was projected to win. "It's just [a] really incredible experience that I will remember for the rest of my life."

WATCH | The new Nepean MPP celebrates:

Tyler Watt takes Nepean from Conservatives

19 hours ago
Duration 1:47
Liberal Tyler Watt will replace Progressive Conservative Lisa MacLeod as the MPP for Nepean.

Familiar figures

The other two Ottawa newcomers to the Ontario Legislature are both experienced municipal politicians. 

George Darouze, the city councillor for Ottawa's Osgoode ward, reclaimed the provincial Carleton seat for the Progressive Conservatives. Goldie Ghamari had won the riding for the PCs in 2022 but turned Independent last year and didn't run again. 

A number of Darouze's cohorts on council joined him at a golf and country club to track the results. 

"I'm feeling very humble. I'm very happy," Darouze said, crediting his team for slogging through a winter campaign.

"We [had] people flipping, slipping and falling. It's amazing."

WATCH | Darouze on his victory in Carleton:

George Darouze will be the new MPP for Carleton

18 hours ago
Duration 1:30
Progressive Conservative George Darouze has won Carleton.

Catherine McKenney, the former city councillor for Ottawa's Somerset ward, won the provincial seat of Ottawa Centre for the Ontario New Democratic Party. McKenney takes on the mantle from the NDP's Joel Harden, who will run in the upcoming federal election. 

Catherine McKenney celebrates
Former Ottawa city councillor Catherine McKenney poses with a drag queen who performed at the watch party that saw McKenney elected as the MPP for Ottawa Centre. (Robyn Miller/CBC)

McKenney said they felt a lot of relief once they were declared the winner. 

"You know, you work hard. You go to the doors, day in and day out, you talk to people. It always felt good ... but you want the results in and now we have them," McKenney said. 

WATCH | McKenney keeps it in the NDP family:

Catherine McKenney wins Ottawa Centre

20 hours ago
Duration 2:38
MPP-elect Catherine McKenney spoke to CBC shortly after they won the seat in Ottawa Centre.

McCrimmon, Pasma returned to office

In Kanata-Carleton, the Liberals' Karen McCrimmon secured her second term. She was first elected to the riding in a 2023 byelection, but only by a small margin, which made her riding one to watch last night. 

"I'm grateful to the people ... who have placed their trust [in me] once again," McCrimmon said. 

"And I'm grateful for my family. They're the ones who make the sacrifices to allow me to do this. Just a whole lot of gratitude going on here."

Karen McCrimmon
Kanata-Carleton incumbent Karen McCrimmon retained the seat for the Liberals. (Natalia Goodwin/CBC)

During the last general election in 2022, Ottawa West-Nepean incumbent Chandra Pasma of the NDP also took her seat by a relatively small lead, raising the question of whether the party would hold it this time around. 

It did, with Pasma besting her opponents.

"We knocked on as many doors as we could," Pasma said. "But of course there's extra challenges when you're doing this in February, from the freezing temperatures to the ice and snow.... We dealt with some slips and falls but we were really happy to have those conversations."  

Chandra Pasma victory speech
Chandra Pasma, who kept the Ottawa West-Nepean seat for the NDP, gives her victory speech. (Francis Ferland/CBC)

After Thursday night's results, the Liberals emerged with five out of the nine ridings where Ottawa residents cast a ballot, with the PCs and the NDP each garnering two seats. 

Stephen Blais helped shore up the Liberals' local fortunes by retaining the Orléans seat, though the results for that race did not get released until after 11 p.m. 

With Watt's win in Nepean, the Liberals were the only party to pick up an additional seat.

Stephen Blais
The Liberals' Stephen Blais celebrates winning a third term in Orléans with his campaign team. (Frédéric Pepin/Radio-Canada)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Guy Quenneville

Reporter at CBC Ottawa

Guy Quenneville is a reporter at CBC Ottawa born and raised in Cornwall, Ont. He can be reached at guy.quenneville@cbc.ca

With files from Arthur-White Crummey, Emma Weller, Natalia Goodwin, Robyn Miller