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Canada election: Liberals head for historic victory | Canada election: Liberals head for historic victory |
(35 minutes later) | |
Canada's opposition Liberal Party is heading for victory in parliamentary elections, ending nine years of Conservative rule, early results show. | |
The Liberals, led by Justin Trudeau, are leading in 191 electoral districts. | |
The son of late Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau is now poised to form a majority government, Canada's CBC and CTV networks predict. | |
Incumbent Conservative PM Stephen Harper - who is fighting for a fourth term - is leading in 104 districts. | |
The left-leaning New Democratic Party (NDP) is in the third place - ahead in 32 districts. | |
To form a majority government, a party needs 170 seats in the 338-member parliament. | To form a majority government, a party needs 170 seats in the 338-member parliament. |
Canada votes: live updates | Canada votes: live updates |
Meet Justin Trudeau | |
Stephen Harper's final stand? | |
'Sea of change' | 'Sea of change' |
Voting hours were staggered across the country and polls opened in Newfoundland at 08:30 local time (11:00 GMT). Polls closed in the west of the country at 19:00 (02:00 GMT). | Voting hours were staggered across the country and polls opened in Newfoundland at 08:30 local time (11:00 GMT). Polls closed in the west of the country at 19:00 (02:00 GMT). |
It was one of the longest and possibly closest election campaigns in Canada's history, with leaders criss-crossing the country to try to sway undecided voters. | |
Early counts in the eastern provinces show the Liberals ahead in all 32 seat races there. | Early counts in the eastern provinces show the Liberals ahead in all 32 seat races there. |
As the results began pouring in, former Conservative Justice Minister Peter MacKay said: "A sea of change here. We are used to high tides in Atlantic Canada. This is not what we hoped for." | As the results began pouring in, former Conservative Justice Minister Peter MacKay said: "A sea of change here. We are used to high tides in Atlantic Canada. This is not what we hoped for." |
The Conservatives are now in danger of losing all 13 seats they held in Atlantic Canada in 2011. | |
In a remarkable turnaround, the Liberals - who held only 36 seats before the election - are now expected to form a majority cabinet. | |
At the scene: BBC's Anthony Zurcher, Liberal HQ in Montreal | |
It was a fairly empty room here at Liberal Party campaign headquarters when Canadian television announced that Justin Trudeau would be the next prime minster of Canada - but those in attendance cheered heartily when they heard the news. | |
It hasn't taken long for supporters to begin showing up in droves, however, crowding around a stage bathed in Liberal Party red, in anticipation of a Justin Trudeau victory speech sometime later tonight. | |
As national television cameras broadcast the scene, one supporter shouted: "Vive Justin Trudeau! Vive Canada!" | |
"It feels fantastic," said Michael Wright, who drove to the Montreal from Ottawa because he believed Liberals were poised for victory. | |
Like many of the Canadian voters who recently told pollsters they were opting for change, he says he's happiest about Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper's impending defeat. | |
"I wish him luck in his gardening in Alberta," he says with a laugh. | |
Mr Trudeau, 43, started the race in third place but the Liberals took the lead in opinion polls in a late surge. | |
He has campaigned on a promise of change, urging voters ahead of the polling day to "come together as a country". | |
Mr Trudeau's father, Pierre, is considered the father of modern Canada. | |
Mr Harper, 56, portrayed himself as the steady hand who could steer Canada's troubled economy back on track. | |
His campaign ran TV advertisements saying that Mr Trudeau was "just not ready" to take office. | |
"Every single vote for a Conservative candidate is a vote to protect our economy against Liberal and NDP deficits and taxes," Mr Harper told supporters in Regina, Saskatchewan, on Sunday. | |
As polls opened, he tweeted that a vote for the Conservatives would "protect Canadian jobs and our economy". |