Four things to watch for in the Newfoundland and Labrador election today
Voters choose a new government after a year of multiple elections with Liberals seeking a fourth term amid competition over economic and social policy promises.
- On Tuesday, Oct. 14, 2025, Newfoundland and Labrador voters will decide between Liberal, Progressive Conservative, and NDP leaders, with Hogan seeking a fourth term.
- The 28-day campaign featured each leader's first trail as party head and is the province's third scheduled election in 2025, with the Liberals holding 19 of 40 seats last month.
- Liberal Leader John Hogan hopes his party will be elected to form another majority government, amid debate over a deal promising financial returns for health care, education, and debt reduction.
- Some see the outcome as a referendum on the Quebec hydro memorandum, while Former premier Danny Williams has funded signs opposing the tentative partnership.
- Voting runs from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. NT today, CBC Newfoundland and Labrador will carry full results coverage Tuesday evening, and the 2021 voter turnout was 51 per cent.
39 Articles
39 Articles
Newfoundland and Labrador election: Liberals with small lead in close race
ST. JOHN'S — Newfoundland and Labrador’s Liberals were pulling ahead of the Progressive Conservatives on Tuesday night in the ballot count after an election campaign largely focused on a proposed multibillion-dollar energy deal with Quebec.
2025 Newfoundland & Labrador Election Preview & Liveblog
Today, voters in the Canadian province of Newfoundland and Labrador are electing its provincial legislature, the House of Assembly. Newfoundland and Labrador is Canada’s easternmost and most recently added province. Previously a separate part of the British Commonwealth and entirely Anglophone, it voted to become part of Canada in 1949. It has a population of about 550,000, making it the second smallest province by population, larger only than P…
Churchill Falls Could Make Newfoundland and Labrador Rich—or Break It Again
For the past month, John Hogan has been doing his best to make the ballot question in Newfoundland and Labrador’s election today all about the province’s energy future. In mid-September, as the premier greeted voters in Happy Valley-Goose Bay—a regional service town in central Labrador—he made a vow. If his Liberal government is re-elected, he’ll ensure the proposed redevelopment of the massive Churchill Falls hydroelectric project goes ahead, t…
It is the day of the provincial elections in Newfoundland and Labrador.
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