Federal byelection called in B.C.'s Cloverdale-Langley City riding

A federal byelection has been announced for the Cloverdale-Langley City riding, formerly held by the Liberals, to be held on Dec. 16. (Chanss Lagaden/CBC - image credit)
A federal byelection has been announced for the Cloverdale-Langley City riding, formerly held by the Liberals, to be held on Dec. 16. (Chanss Lagaden/CBC - image credit)

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has announced that a byelection will be held in the federal seat of Cloverdale-Langley City, in British Columbia's Lower Mainland, on Dec. 16.

It comes a little under six months after former MP John Aldag, who had represented the Liberals in the seat from 2015-19 and then from 2021 until May, resigned to run for the B.C. NDP in the provincial election.

Aldag was defeated in the Langley-Abbotsford riding by B.C. Conservative candidate Harman Bhangu, gaining just under 34 per cent of the votes after final results were released last week.

Running instead for the Liberals is Madison Fleischer, a local business owner and community leader.

"Im fighting to make life more affordable, deliver stronger public health care, take bold climate action, and create new local jobs and an economy that works for everyone in our community," Fleischer said in a press release Sunday.

The byelection for the federal seat is the 11th such campaign since the 2021 federal election.

MP John Aldag speaks during a press conference, announcing more child care spaces will move into the $10 a Day ChildCareBC program, in Surrey, B.C. on Thursday, March 28, 2024.
MP John Aldag speaks during a press conference, announcing more child care spaces will move into the $10 a Day ChildCareBC program, in Surrey, B.C. on Thursday, March 28, 2024.

John Aldag, then the Cloverdale-Langley City MP, speaks during a March 2024 news conference with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. (Tijana Martin/The Canadian Press)

Cloverdale-Langley City covers an area of Surrey, B.C., as well as the entire City of Langley. The 2021 census showed there were around 130,000 residents there.

Campaigns in Cloverdale-Langley City have been closely fought during the previous two elections, with Aldag losing by fewer than 1,500 votes in 2019 to the federal Conservatives, and winning by about 1,650 votes in 2021.

Trudeau's party has taken a few humiliating byelection losses of late, including in previously safe Liberal seats in Montreal and Toronto.

The federal Conservatives hope to retake the riding with their candidate Tamara Jansen, a former MP who previously held the seat from 2019 to 2021.

Tamara Jansen, co-owner of Darvonda Nurseries, is worried about FortisBC's natural gas rate hikes. Her business has already been hit hard by the pipeline rupture earlier this year.
Tamara Jansen, co-owner of Darvonda Nurseries, is worried about FortisBC's natural gas rate hikes. Her business has already been hit hard by the pipeline rupture earlier this year.

Tamara Jansen, who held the seat for the Conservatives between 2019 and 2021, is now running again for the party. (Denis Dossman/CBC)

Elections Canada says there will be four advanced voting days — from Dec. 6 to 9 — at assigned polling stations in the Cloverdale-Langley City district. Registered voters can also cast a ballot at the Elections Canada office between now and Dec. 10.

To vote by mail, voters have to apply by 6 p.m. PT on Dec. 10, and return their ballot by mail, or in person at the Elections Canada office, before polls close on Dec. 16.