Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Advance poll turnout breaks record with 7.3M ballots cast, Elections Canada says

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Apr, 2025 10:47 AM
  • Advance poll turnout breaks record with 7.3M ballots cast, Elections Canada says

The waning days of the federal election campaign saw voters turn out in record numbers for advance polls and party leaders attempt to poke holes in each others' platforms.

Elections Canada said in a news release Tuesday that the four days of advance polling between Friday and Monday set a new record for turnout, with 7.3 million people casting ballotsearly.

That's up 25 per cent from the 5.8 million people who took part in advance voting in the 2021 federal election.

Elections Canada said it made adjustments to deal with long lineups at polling stations in the early part of the long weekend.

Voters can still cast a ballot early at an Elections Canada office until 6 p.m. on Tuesday.

With less than a week to go until election day on April 28, federal leaders were making their closing pitches Tuesday to voters across the country, 

The Conservative campaign released its costed election platform a day after the end of advance voting. The Liberals and NDP both released their platforms on Saturday, the second day of advance polls.

The Conservative party platform forecasts $100 billion in deficits over the next four years, along with billions of dollars in tax cuts and new revenues.

That document also clarifies some earlier Conservative pledges — such as the plan to slash the bottom income tax rate in Canada to 12.75 per cent from 15 per cent, a measure that the platform now shows would be phased in over four years.

Conservative Leader Poilievre said at a campaign event in Vaughan, Ont., on Tuesday that his plan would cut bureaucracy, government consulting and some foreign aid and "unleash a half-trillion dollars of economic growth" in the resource development and housing sectors.

Both Liberal Leader Mark Carney and NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh attacked the Conservatives' numbers on Tuesday.

"If you look at what they're proposing, the numbers are not based in any reality," Singh said at an event in Vancouver.

The NDP leader said he would push back against cuts in the Liberal and Conservative platforms.

Poilievre, meanwhile, is charging the Liberal platform was authored for former prime minister Justin Trudeau -- an accusation the party says is categorically false.

The Liberal platform promises $28 billion in savings over four years through "increased government productivity."

The Liberals would add roughly $129 billion worth of new measures, including a one percentage-point tax cut to the lowest income bracket that would add to the deficit over the next four years.

Carney also has pledged to separate the budget into operating and capital streams, and to balance the operating side by 2028-2029. But he would still run a $48 billion deficit on the capital side for that fiscal year.

The Conservative platform projects a $14 billion deficit by 2028.

The Conservatives' figures include forecasts of billions of dollars in boosted revenue from building additional homes, scrapping the industrial carbon price and cracking down on tax evasion, among other sources.

But Carney claimed at an event in Trois-Rivières, Que., on Tuesday that his own party's plan would project a budget surplus in five years' time if it used the same growth assumptions informing the Conservatives' platform.

Carney said his platform does not "rely" on rosy predictions in a global climate of economic uncertainty tied to the United States' trade war.

"We are in a crisis. In a crisis, you always plan for the worst, you don't hope for the best, and you don't make those types of assumptions," he said.

"The Conservatives, who have no experience managing crises ... they don't know what they're doing, so they make those assumptions."

The Liberal platform is based on real gross domestic product projections the parliamentary budget officer released in March that forecast growth of 1.7 per cent of GDP this year and 1.5 per cent in 2026.

The Conservative campaign did not respond to a request for clarity on GDP estimates underpinning the platform.

The International Monetary Fund released an updated World Economic Outlook on Tuesday that projected scaled-down growth of 1.4 per cent for Canada this year and 1.6 per cent in 2026. Those figures are down 0.6 percentage points and 0.4 points, respectively, from the IMF's previous forecasts in January.

The report said global economic risks are tilted towards the worse outcomes due to trade uncertainty and market volatility.

Carney toured through Quebec on Tuesday promising to protect residents of the province from U.S. President Donald Trump. He laid out plans to maintain supply management for farmers, increase funding for CBC/Radio-Canada and move forward with major nation-building projects through Quebec.

Singh was campaigning in Metro Vancouver and his home riding of Burnaby Central on Tuesday before he headed to Edmonton for a rally with Alberta's former NDP premier Rachel Notley.

with files from Kyle Duggan and Sarah Ritchie in Ottawa and Nick Murray in Vaughan, Ont.

MORE National ARTICLES

Fire-ravaged Lytton getting 'community hub' with museum, pool, market space

Fire-ravaged Lytton getting 'community hub' with museum, pool, market space
The federal government is promising more than $25 million to help build a new "community hub" in the Village of Lytton years after much of the B.C. town was wiped out by fire. A statement from the Ministry of Housing, Infrastructure and Communities says the new building is expected to include a community-sized pool and fire reservoir, a museum, a market space, multi-purpose rooms and accessible washrooms.

Fire-ravaged Lytton getting 'community hub' with museum, pool, market space

Investigation into plane crash at Pearson airport continues as crews handle wreckage

Investigation into plane crash at Pearson airport continues as crews handle wreckage
Two of Pearson's five runways, including the "busiest" in Canada, remain closed, said the airport's duty manager Jake Keating. The airport had capped departures throughout the day and a similar step had been taken to manage arrivals. 

Investigation into plane crash at Pearson airport continues as crews handle wreckage

Liberal leadership candidate Mark Carney plans 'small' deficits for capital projects

Liberal leadership candidate Mark Carney plans 'small' deficits for capital projects
Liberal leadership candidate Mark Carney is vowing to split the federal budget between capital and operating spending, and to balance the operating side while running small capital deficits. Carney made the comments at a press conference in Scarborough, Ont., where he also promised he would reduce the debt-to-GDP ratio over time.

Liberal leadership candidate Mark Carney plans 'small' deficits for capital projects

B.C. legislative assembly re-elects Raj Chouhan as its Speaker ahead of throne speech

B.C. legislative assembly re-elects Raj Chouhan as its Speaker ahead of throne speech
British Columbia's legislative session opens today amid what Premier David Eby describes as a time of "extraordinary change and uncertainty." Lt.-Gov. Wendy Cocchia is scheduled to deliver the speech from the throne this afternoon, laying out the B.C. government's plan as looming U.S. tariffs threaten the Canadian economy.

B.C. legislative assembly re-elects Raj Chouhan as its Speaker ahead of throne speech

Most of the injured in Pearson plane crash released from hospital as probe continues

Most of the injured in Pearson plane crash released from hospital as probe continues
Delta said in a social media post that 19 out of 21 passengers initially taken to Toronto-area hospitals have been released as the investigation continues. Delta flight 4819 from Minneapolis to Toronto, operated by subsidiary Endeavor Air, crashed on landing around 2:30 p.m. Monday. Flint said authorities will not speculate about a possible cause until a thorough investigation is complete. 

Most of the injured in Pearson plane crash released from hospital as probe continues

Seven male suspects sought in B.C. theft of more than $2,400 in fragrances

Seven male suspects sought in B.C. theft of more than $2,400 in fragrances
Police in Richmond are searching for seven suspects in an alleged retail theft of fragrances worth more than $2,400. RCMP say the theft took place on Nov. 11 of last year, when the seven men reportedly entered a store in the 3800 block of Steveston Highway.

Seven male suspects sought in B.C. theft of more than $2,400 in fragrances