Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

17 Indo-Canadians elected MPs as Trudeau fails to win majority

Darpan News Desk IANS, 21 Sep, 2021 11:35 AM
  • 17 Indo-Canadians elected MPs as Trudeau fails to win majority

Toronto, Sep 21 (IANS) Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeaus gamble to seek a majority by calling a snap election has not paid off even as 17 Indo-Canadians were elected as MPs.

In the elections held on Monday, Trudeau's ruling Liberal Party again ended up 14 seats short of the 170-mark in the 338-member House of Commons.

The Jagmeet Singh-led New Democratic Party (NDP) will again hold the balance of power as it increased its tally from 24 to 27.

The main opposition Conservative Party ended up with a tally of 122 seats � one up from the dissolved House.

Among the 17 Indo-Canadian winners are Jagmeet Singh, former Minister Tim Uppal and three current Cabinet Ministers Harjit Singh Sajjan, Bardish Chagger and Anita Anand.

Defence Minister Harjit Singh Sajjan again won from Vancouver South by beating Sukhbir Gill of the Conservative Party.

Chagger, Minister of Diversity, too retained her Waterloo seat as did Public Service Minister Anand her Oakville seat.

NDP leader Jagmeet Singh also retained his Burnaby South seat in British Columbia.

In British Columbia, three-time Liberal Party MP Sukh Dhaliwal retained his Surrey-Newton seat by beating fellow Punjabi Avneet Johal of the NDP.

Two-time Liberal Party MP Randeep Singh Sarai also won the Surrey Centre seat by beating Sonia Andhi of the NDP.

In Quebec, the sitting Indo-Canadian Anju Dhillon retained her Dorval�Lachine�LaSalle seat.

In Alberta, Jasraj Singh Hallan retained the Calgary Forest Lawn seat, but his fellow Conservative MP Jag Sahota lost to fellow Sikh George Chahal of the Liberal Party.

Uppal is back once again after retaining the Edmonton Mill Woods seat for the Conservative party.

He is the brother-in-law of Congress MLA from Jalandhar Cantt, Pargat Singh.

In Ontario, the Punjabi-dominated city of Brampton again re-elected all the four sitting Indo-Canadian MPs � Maninder Sidhu, Ruby Sahota, Sonia Sidhu and Kamal Khera � against fellow Indo-Canadians Naval Bajaj, Medha Joshi, Ramandeep Brar and Gurprit Gill, respectively.

The winners belong to Trudeau's Liberal Party.

Chandra Arya too retained the Napean seat in Ontario.

Lawyer Iqwinder Gaheer, who won the Mississauga-Malton seat for the Liberal Party, will be one of the youngest MPs to go the House of Commons in Ottawa.

Sitting Conservative Party MP Bob Saroya was another known Indo-Canadian face to lose on Monday.

MORE National ARTICLES

Liberals set 2035 goal for electric vehicle sales

Liberals set 2035 goal for electric vehicle sales
The Liberal government is speeding up its goal for when it wants to see all light-duty vehicles sold in Canada to be electric. Transport Minister Omar Alghabra announced Tuesday that by 2035 all new cars and light-duty trucks sold in the country will be zero-emission vehicles. 

Liberals set 2035 goal for electric vehicle sales

Burnaby RCMP respond to 25 sudden death calls in just 24 hours due to heatwave

Burnaby RCMP respond to 25 sudden death calls in just 24 hours due to heatwave
Temperatures in the Vancouver area reached just under 32 C Monday, but the humidity made it feel close to 40 C in areas that aren't near water, Environment Canada said.

Burnaby RCMP respond to 25 sudden death calls in just 24 hours due to heatwave

COVID-19 deaths may be twice that reported: Study

COVID-19 deaths may be twice that reported: Study
A new study suggests Canada has vastly underestimated how many people have died from COVID-19 and says the number could be two times higher than reported.

COVID-19 deaths may be twice that reported: Study

Heat records tumble as heat wave grips the West

Heat records tumble as heat wave grips the West
A record-breaking heat wave could ease over parts of British Columbia, Yukon and Northwest Territories by Wednesday but any reprieve for the Prairie provinces is further off.

Heat records tumble as heat wave grips the West

PBO: gun buyback could cost up to $756M

PBO: gun buyback could cost up to $756M
The high-end buyback figure is the budget officer's estimate for how much it would cost for the government to buy back every gun that the industry estimates is owned across Canada.

PBO: gun buyback could cost up to $756M

New drug-pricing regulations delayed a third time

New drug-pricing regulations delayed a third time
Health Minister Patty Hajdu is delaying the first big overhaul of Canada's patented-medicines pricing system for a third time. The regulations changing how the Patented Medicine Pricing Review Board ensures price fairness on new drugs now won't take effect until next January, so that pharmaceutical companies have more time to prepare.

New drug-pricing regulations delayed a third time