Thornhill (federal electoral district)

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LegislatureHouse of Commons
District created1996
First contested1997
Thornhill
Ontario electoral district
Interactive map of riding boundaries from the 2025 federal election
Federal electoral district
LegislatureHouse of Commons
MP
 
 
 
Melissa Lantsman
Conservative
District created1996
First contested1997
Last contested2025
District webpageprofile, map
Demographics
Population (2021)[1]115,292
Electors (2021)85,739
Area (km²)[2]62.90
Pop. density (per km²)1,832.9
Census divisionYork
Census subdivision(s)Markham (part), Vaughan (part)
Thornhill 2003 to 2015

Thornhill is a federal electoral district in Ontario, Canada, that has been represented in the House of Commons of Canada since 1997. It covers its namesake Thornhill neighbourhood, which is split between the Cities of Vaughan and Markham. The Vaughan portion also includes parts of the city east of Highway 400 and south of Rutherford Road, including the largely industrial district of Concord and Vaughan's planned downtown; Vaughan Metropolitan Centre. The part in the City of Markham is restricted its portion of Thornhill itself (but does not include it all) west of Bayview Avenue.[clarification needed] The riding was created in 1996 and the east end of the riding was split off into other ridings in 2012.

The riding has the largest Jewish population in Canada at 29.5 percent.[3]

The riding was initially safe for the Liberals, and they won large majorities of the vote in its first two elections. In 2004, the large Jewish population started shifting toward the Conservative Party, and the Conservatives won the riding in 2008. After being targeted by the Conservatives as part of their strategy to win a majority in 2011, the riding became a Conservative stronghold and the strongest Conservative seat in the Greater Toronto Area.

The riding is named after Thornhill, a suburban neighbourhood founded as a rural community that was first settled along Yonge Street in the mid-1790s, around the time of the street's opening.[4] The district of Concord and Vaughan Metropolitan Centre occupies the northern and western parts of the riding.[5]

According to the 2016 census, the population of the riding was 112,719, up 2.1% from 2011. In 2015, the median income in the riding was $33,474 compared to $30,798 in 2010. The average income in the riding was $54,590 compared to $47,097 in 2010.[2][6] The most spoken non-official language in the riding is Russian (14.5%) and 16.4% of the population is of Russian ethnic origin. The second largest ethnic origin is Chinese with 11.2% in 2016. About 37% of the riding's population is part of a visible minority.[2] The riding also has a large Jewish population (37.1% in 2011[6]) and has been cited as showing voting trends among Jewish populations.[7] The riding has a higher rate of postsecondary certificates, diplomas, and degrees than the Ontario average (66% compared to 55% for those aged 15+).[2] The riding has been described as a Conservative stronghold.[8]

Demographics

Population, 2021 census[9] 115,292
Electors 85,739
Area (km2) 62.66
Population density (people per km2) 1,839.8
Religion in Thornhill (2021)[10]
  1. Christian (33.5%)
  2. Jewish (30.5%)
  3. No Religion (23.3%)
  4. Muslim (6.60%)
  5. Hindu (3.20%)
  6. Buddhist (1.80%)
  7. Other religions (1.20%)
According to the 2021 Canadian census[11]

Ethnic groups: 57% White, 11.3% Chinese, 7% West Asian, 6.3% South Asian, 5.1% Korean, 4.8% Filipino, 2.6% Black, 1.5% Latin American, 1.1% Southeast Asian

History

1996-2004: Liberal dominance

The riding was first established in the 1996 redistribution from parts of York North and Markham—Whitchurch—Stouffville, consisting of the part of Vaughan east of Highway 400 and south of Rutherford Road, and the part of Markham west of Highway 404.[12][13] Both of the ridings Thornhill was originally part of elected Liberal MPs in 1993, though York North's Liberal vote share was about 17% more of the vote than that of Markham—Whitchurch—Stouffville.[14] The riding's redistributed result had the Liberals at 60%, triple the amount of the Progressive Conservatives (PCs).[15] In the 1997 election, Liberal candidate Elinor Caplan, who had previously served in the cabinet of former Premier David Peterson,[16] won with 59% of the vote, more than double the number received by PC candidate Bill Fisch, who came second.[17] Similarly to the previous election,[12] the Liberals had nearly swept the province of Ontario, this time winning all but two seats.[18]

In 1999, Caplan was appointed to Prime Minister Jean Chrétien's cabinet as Minister of Citizenship and Immigration.[16] In the 2000 election, Caplan would win again, this time with nearly 65% of the vote and by more than four times the amount won by Canadian Alliance candidate Robert Goldin.[17] Provincially, the Liberals had won another near-sweep of Ontario.[19] In 2002, Chrétien moved Caplan to Minister of National Revenue.[16] During the 2003 electoral redistribution, the boundaries of the district did not change.[13][20]

2004-2011: Shift to the Conservatives

Peter Kent with then-party leader Andrew Scheer in 2018 stating their position of the status of Jerusalem. The Conservatives' support for Israel was partially responsible for the riding's political shift.[21]

On February 23, 2004, Caplan announced that she would not run in the next federal election. The Liberals then chose Susan Kadis, who was then a Vaughan City Councillor, as their candidate for the next election.[7][22][23] In the 2004 election, many ridings with large Jewish populations, Thornhill among them, started shifting toward the Conservative Party. The Liberal Party would end up losing 10% of the vote and they were now at 54.6%, about 20% more of the vote than Conservative candidate Josh Cooper.[7][24] In the 2006 election, both Kadis and the Conservative candidate got slightly less votes than in 2004.[25]

Shortly after the 2006 election, Kadis was chosen to be the associate critic for Infrastructure and Communities.[26] In March 2008, she was appointed National Revenue critic by Opposition Leader Stéphane Dion.[27] In the 2008 election, the Conservative Party chose Peter Kent, an established media personality who had run in St. Paul's in 2006,[25] as their candidate. Kent would end up winning the riding with 49% of the vote compared to Kadis' 39%, possibly due to the fact that Conservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper promised continued support for Israel.[21]

2011-present: Conservative stronghold

Kent served as the Minister of State of Foreign Affairs for the Americas until a January 2011 cabinet shuffle when he was promoted to Minister of the Environment. This was met with some criticism as he was the fifth Environment Minister in five years. It also signalled Prime Minister Harper's determination to increase support in the Greater Toronto Area.[28] In the 2011 election, the Conservative Party targeted the riding as part of their strategy to gain a majority government and both Prime Minister Harper and Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff had campaign stops in the riding. Kent ended up increasing his vote share to 61%, compared to 24% for the Liberal candidate.[29][30]

During the 2012 redistribution, the area of the riding east of Bayview Avenue was divided along Highway 407, with portions being transferred to Richmond Hill and the new riding of Markham—Thornhill.[20][31] Concerns were raised about dividing the Thornhill neighbourhood into two ridings, suggesting that Concord (which includes Vaughan Metropolitan Centre) be excluded from the riding instead. The name of the riding was also an issue, as the proposed name, "Vaughan—Thornhill" was thought to exclude the Markham portion.[5] Markham was initially added to the name before Kent suggested reverting it back to "Thornhill". His suggestion was accepted by the commission.[32] The redistributed result put the Conservatives 2% higher than the actual result.[30][33] In July 2013, Kent was shuffled out of cabinet, becoming a backbench MP.[34] During his tenure, critics had described him as "Canada's worst environment minister."[35][36]

In the 2015 election, Kent lost about 5% of the vote, now receiving 58.6% to the Liberal candidate's 33.7%.[33] Shortly after the 2015 election, Kent became the Conservative Foreign Affairs critic.[37] After a 2017 shadow cabinet shuffle, Kent became the Conservatives' Ethics critic.[38] In 2019, Kent won his fourth consecutive election with 54.6% of the vote to Liberal candidate Gary Gladstone's 35.4%.[39][40] After the 2019 election, Kent was appointed critic on immigration, refugees, and citizenship.[41] In 2021, Kent announced he would not run in the next election.[42]

Following this, Melissa Lantsman won the nomination to represent the Conservative Party in Thornhill. On September 20, 2021, Melissa Lantsman won the riding of Thornhill by a 15-point margin. In the 2025 federal election, Lantsman was re-elected with 66.4% of the vote - the highest margin and popular vote share in the riding's history.

Members of Parliament

This riding has elected the following members of the House of Commons of Canada:

Parliament Years Member Party
Thornhill
Riding created from Markham—Whitchurch—Stouffville
and York North
36th  1997–2000     Elinor Caplan Liberal
37th  2000–2004
38th  2004–2006 Susan Kadis
39th  2006–2008
40th  2008–2011     Peter Kent Conservative
41st  2011–2015
42nd  2015–2019
43rd  2019–2021
44th  2021–2025 Melissa Lantsman
45th  2025–present

Election results

Graph of general election results in Thornhill (minor parties that never got 2% of the vote or didn't run consistently are omitted)
2025 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
ConservativeMelissa Lantsman44,41966.40+14.68
LiberalLiane Kotler20,87331.20–4.86
New DemocraticWilliam McCarty8331.24–4.73
People'sAmir Hart4400.73–3.87
GreenDominic Piotrowski3530.50–1.14
Total valid votes/expense limit 66,918
Total rejected ballots 663
Turnout 67,58168.94
Eligible voters 97,300
Conservative notional hold Swing +9.61
Source: Elections Canada[43][44]
2021 federal election redistributed results[45]
Party Vote %
  Conservative27,07151.72
  Liberal18,87636.06
  New Democratic3,1265.97
  People's2,4084.60
  Green8611.64
2021 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
ConservativeMelissa Lantsman25,68751.3%-3.26%$105,101.06
LiberalGary Gladstone18,16836.3%+0.88%$92,712.82
New DemocraticRaz Razvi3,0416.1%-0.38%$4,940.19
People'sSamuel Greenfield2,3224.6%$9,751.81
GreenDaniella Mikanovsky8441.7%-1.29%$0.00
Total valid votes/expense limit 50,06299.20.28$114,997.02
Total rejected ballots 3900.77-0.31
Turnout 50,45258.8-4.82
Eligible voters 85,73976.06%0.66%
Conservative hold Swing -4.14
Source: Elections Canada[46]
2019 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
ConservativePeter Kent29,18754.56-4.00$70,899.51
LiberalGary Gladstone18,94635.42+1.66$82,017.28
New DemocraticSara Petrucci3,4696.48+1.32$1.38
GreenJosh Rachlis1,6002.99+1.84none listed
RhinocerosNathan Bregman2170.41$0.00
Canada's Fourth FrontWaseem Malik770.14none listed
Total valid votes/expense limit 53,49698.92 111,210.50
Total rejected ballots 5831.08+0.49
Turnout 54,07963.62-3.50
Eligible voters 85,00575.4%
Conservative hold Swing -2.83
Source: Elections Canada[40][47]
2015 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
ConservativePeter Kent31,91158.56-4.63$123,230.74
LiberalNancy Coldham18,39533.76+11.26$55,910.58
New DemocraticLorne Cherry2,8145.16-6.33$6,832.09
GreenJosh Rachlis6271.15-1.33
LibertarianGene Balfour5871.08$202.00
SeniorsMargaret Leigh Fairbairn1570.29$4,584.13
Total valid votes/expense limit 54,49199.41 $216,565.52
Total rejected ballots 3240.59
Turnout 54,81567.12
Eligible voters 81,672
Source: Elections Canada[48][49][33]
2011 federal election redistributed results[33]
Party Vote %
  Conservative29,14063.19
  Liberal10,37322.49
  New Democratic5,29911.49
  Green1,1422.48
  Others1600.35
2011 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
ConservativePeter Kent36,62961.38+12.37$85,817.95
LiberalKaren Mock14,12523.67-15.76$89,258.36
New DemocraticSimon Strelchik7,14111.97+5.35$5,397.91
GreenNorbert Koehl1,5622.62-2.32$11,470.40
Animal AllianceLiz White2150.36$7,002.05
Total valid votes/expense limit 59,672100.00$99,784.20
Total rejected ballots 2750.46
Turnout 59,94760.98
Eligible voters 98,312
Source: Elections Canada[50]
2008 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
ConservativePeter Kent26,66049.01+15.30$91,400
LiberalSusan Kadis21,44839.43-13.67$62,484
New DemocraticSimon Strelchik3,6016.62-1.19$4,835
GreenNorbert Koehl2,6864.94+1.51$7,314
Total valid votes/expense limit 54,395100.00$95,547
Source: Elections Canada[51]
2006 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalSusan Kadis29,93453.10-1.48
ConservativeAnthony Reale19,00533.71-0.75
New DemocraticSimon Strelchik4,4057.81+0.83
GreenLloyd Helferty1,9343.43+0.35
Progressive CanadianMark Abramowitz1,0941.94
Total valid votes 56,372100.00
Source: Elections Canada[52]
2004 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalSusan Kadis28,70954.58-10.01
ConservativeJosh Cooper18,12534.46+3.58
New DemocraticRick Morelli3,6716.98+3.05
GreenLloyd Helferty1,6223.08
IndependentBenjamin Fitzerman2410.46
IndependentSimion Iron2330.44
Total valid votes 52,601100.00
Source: Elections Canada[24]

Note: Conservative vote is compared to the total of the Canadian Alliance vote and Progressive Conservative vote in 2000 election.

2000 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalElinor Caplan27,15264.59+5.59
AllianceRobert Goldin6,64315.80+7.91
Progressive ConservativeLou Watson6,33815.08-11.31
New DemocraticNathan Rotman1,6533.93-0.67
Canadian ActionArt Jaszczyk2540.60
Total valid votes 42,040100.00
Source: Elections Canada[17]

Note: Canadian Alliance vote is compared to the Reform vote in 1997 election.

1997 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%
LiberalElinor Caplan25,74759.00
Progressive ConservativeBill Fisch11,51726.39
ReformAurel David3,4417.89
New DemocraticHelen Breslauer2,0084.60
IndependentRick Levine3030.69
Natural LawLinda Martin2610.60
IndependentSid Soban2380.55
IndependentShel Bergson1240.28
Total valid votes 43,639100.00
Source: Elections Canada[17]
1993 federal election redistributed results[15]
Party %
  Liberal60
  Progressive Conservative20
  Reform14
  New Democratic3

See also

References

Sources

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