Close X
Wednesday, January 15, 2025
ADVT 
National

19 Indian-Canadians Elected To Canadian Parliament

Darpan News Desk IANS, 20 Oct, 2015 11:27 AM
    The Indian-Canadians more than doubled their representation in the Canadian parliament from eight to 19 as Canadians voted out the Conservative Party by handing out a landslide to the Liberal Party on Monday.
     
    While longest-serving MP Deepak Obhrai won for the seventh time from Calgary Forest Lawn, outgoing minister of state Bal Gosal and four-time MP Nina Grewal were prominent Indian-origin Canadians who lost the elections.
     
    Bal Gosal lost to fellow Indian-Canadian Ramesh Sangha of the Liberal Party in Brampton Centre, and Nina Grewal of the Conservative Party lost in Fleetwood-Port Kells, British Columbia.
     
    But the biggest surprise was created by Darshan Kang of the Liberal Party who won the Calgary Skyview seat for his party for the first time in 50 years by beating fellow Indian-Canadians Devinder Shory of the Conservative Party and Sahajvir Singh Randhawa of the New Democratic Party (NDP).
     
     
    Amarjeet Sohi won the seat in the riding of Edmonton Mill Woods for the Liberal Party by beating outgoing minister of state Tim Uppal and Jasvir Deol of the NDP. At first count, just 80 votes separated Sohi and Uppal. A second count done Tuesday confirmed the initial poll results.
     
    Most Indian-Canadian victories came in Canada's biggest province of Ontario as many seats in Brampton and Mississauga cities went to Indian-Canadian candidates.
     
    In Brampton East, Raj Grewal of the Liberal beat Harbaljit Kahlon of the NDP and Naval Bajaj of the Conservative Party. Naval is the former president of the Indo-Canada Chamber of Commerce.
     
     
    In Brampton West, Kamal Khera of the Liberal Party beat Ninder Thind of the Conservative Party.
     
    In Brampton North, Ruby Sahota of the Liberal Party beat outgoing MP Parm Gill of the Conservative Party and white Sikh Martin Singh of the NDP.
     
    In Brampton South, Sonia Sidhu of the Liberal party beat Amarjeet Sangha of the NDP.
     
     
    In the newly demarcated constituency of Mississauga-Malton in the Toronto area, former MP Navdeep Bains got elected once again by beating Jagdish Grewal (an independent after he was kicked out by the Conservative Party over his write-up on homosexuality).
     
    In Mississauga Streetville, Gagan Sikand of the Liberal Party was also elected.
     
    Raj Saini of the Liberal Party won from Kitchener Centre - not far from Toronto.
     
    Bardish Chagger of the Liberal Party also won from Waterloo- again not far from Toronto.
     
     
    Bob Saroya of the Conservative Party won in Markham-Unionville - another constituency in the Toronto area.
     
    In Don Valle East, Yasmin Ratansi of the Liberal Party was elected.
     
    Chandra Arya of the Liberal Party won from Napean in the Ottawa area.
     
    In British Columbia, Harjit Sajjan of the Liberal Party beat Amarjeet Nijjar of the NDP in Vancouver South.
     
     
    In Surrey Centre, Randeep Sarai of the Liberal party beat Jasbir Sandhu of the NDP and Sucha Thind of the Conservative party. 
     
    In Surrey-Newton, Sukh Dhaliwal of the Liberal Party again won after a gap of four years by beating Jinny Sims of the NDP and Harpreet Singh of the Conservative Party.
     
    In Mission-Matsqui-Fraser Canyon, Jati Sidhu of the Liberal Party won.
     
     
    Interestingly, Anju Dhillon of the Liberal Party became the first Indian-Canadian to win a seat - Dorsal-Lachine-LaSalle - in the French-speaking Quebec.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Sanjeev Sanghara Opens Bollywood-Themed Indian Restaurant In Britain

    Sanjeev Sanghara Opens Bollywood-Themed Indian Restaurant In Britain
    Inspired by roadside dhabas dotting the national highways in India, an Indian-origin chef has opened a Bollywood-themed restaurant in Britain, a media report said.

    Sanjeev Sanghara Opens Bollywood-Themed Indian Restaurant In Britain

    More Than Half Of Canadians Have Less Than $10k Set Aside For Emergencies

    More Than Half Of Canadians Have Less Than $10k Set Aside For Emergencies
    TORONTO — Canadians on average are socking away more money for potential financial emergencies than in the past, but a new survey has found that almost a quarter are still living paycheque to paycheque.

    More Than Half Of Canadians Have Less Than $10k Set Aside For Emergencies

    New York Wedding Shooting Case: Indian-Origin Man Balkumar Singh Pleads Not Guilty

    New York Wedding Shooting Case: Indian-Origin Man Balkumar Singh Pleads Not Guilty
    Balkumar Singh, 37, from Guyana apologised to the people as he was led into a court on Long Island in New York on August 31, India West news portal reported.

    New York Wedding Shooting Case: Indian-Origin Man Balkumar Singh Pleads Not Guilty

    Alberta Faces $5.9 Billion Deficit; Minister Says That May Grow If Oil Stays Low

    Alberta Faces $5.9 Billion Deficit; Minister Says That May Grow If Oil Stays Low
    Alberta's finance minister says the province is on track for a record $5.9-billion deficit this year as the oil crunch hits families and businesses.

    Alberta Faces $5.9 Billion Deficit; Minister Says That May Grow If Oil Stays Low

    'Shoving Them Anywhere:' Manitoba Seizes A Newborn A Day: First Nations Advocate

    'Shoving Them Anywhere:' Manitoba Seizes A Newborn A Day: First Nations Advocate
    WINNIPEG — Manitoba's First Nations children's advocate says social workers are seizing an average of one newborn baby a day and "shoving them anywhere." 

    'Shoving Them Anywhere:' Manitoba Seizes A Newborn A Day: First Nations Advocate

    Penn West, ConocoPhillips Cut Over 900 Oil And Gas Jobs, Mostly In Calgary

    Penn West, ConocoPhillips Cut Over 900 Oil And Gas Jobs, Mostly In Calgary
    CALGARY — A fresh wave of layoffs is hitting the energy sector as two oil and gas companies cut a total of 900 jobs, mostly in Calgary.  

    Penn West, ConocoPhillips Cut Over 900 Oil And Gas Jobs, Mostly In Calgary