LPC
Liberal Minority
45th
General Election
338
Seats Contested
Apr 28
Election Day 2025

Results

Seat Distribution — 45th Parliament

Liberal
169
Conservative
144
Bloc
23
NDP
1
Green
1

Source: Elections Canada, Official Results (2025). 170 seats required for majority.

Accountability Gap

Issues Not Contested at the Ballot Box

MAID

76,475 Deaths — No Platform Response

Not a single major party platform proposed reducing MAID eligibility, restoring removed safeguards, or addressing the Carney-Brookfield financial conflict. 5.1% of all Canadian deaths are now state-administered.

MAID timeline →
Foreign Interference

Hogue Commission Findings Ignored

Despite confirmed foreign interference in both 2019 and 2021 elections, and NSICOP identifying MPs wittingly assisting foreign states, the 2025 campaign treated foreign interference as a settled issue rather than an active threat.

Foreign influence dossier →
Conflict of Interest

PM Carney — Brookfield Asset Management

Mark Carney holds $6.8M in Brookfield options. Brookfield manages $1T+ in assets including seniors housing. No independent blind trust established. The conflict between MAID cost savings and Brookfield's long-term care holdings went unexamined.

Carney-Brookfield dossier →
Procurement

$93M ArriveCAN — No Accountability

Despite the Auditor General's damning report, no criminal charges resulted from the ArriveCAN procurement fraud. The 2025 campaign did not include procurement reform as a priority issue.

ArriveCAN dossier →
Military

12,785 Troop Shortfall Unaddressed

The Canadian Armed Forces operates at a critical personnel deficit. 76% of occupations suffer shortfalls exceeding 10%. The CFAT cognitive baseline was eliminated. Campaign platforms offered vague "investment" promises without structural reform.

Recruitment crisis →
Charter

Section 6 Violations — No Precedent Set

The 22-month domestic travel ban was imposed without scientific basis and mooted before constitutional review. No party committed to preventing future Charter violations through mandatory judicial review of emergency measures.

PHAC S.6 dossier →

The Democratic Accountability Deficit

The 2025 election demonstrates a structural accountability gap: documented institutional failures spanning procurement fraud ($93M ArriveCAN), state-administered death (76,475 MAID), foreign election interference (11 ridings targeted), and Charter violations (6M+ citizens barred from travel) — none of these produced electoral consequences. The mechanisms documented across TENET5 investigations operated without democratic correction at the ballot box.

45th Parliament

Legislative Session — 1st Session

The 45th Parliament, 1st Session opened May 26, 2025. As of April 2026, 151 bills have been introduced. Below: key government bills tracked for accountability relevance.

Bill Short Title Sponsor Status Days
C-5 One Canadian Economy Act LeBlanc (Privy Council) Royal Assent — SC 2025, c.2 20
C-2 Strong Borders Act Anandasangaree (Public Safety) 2nd Reading — House (stalled) 284+
C-8 Cyber Security Act Anandasangaree (Public Safety) 2nd Reading — Senate 283
C-22 Lawful Access Act, 2026 Anandasangaree (Public Safety) 1st Reading — House 32
S-231 Amend Criminal Code (MAID) Sen. Pamela Wallin 2nd Reading — Senate (stalled) 305+

Source: LEGISinfo, Parliament of Canada. Days = calendar days since first reading. Data as of April 13, 2026.

Priorities Exposed

C-5 (internal trade) received Royal Assent in 20 days — the Senate adopted extraordinary fast-track procedures, sitting in Committee of the Whole for 3 consecutive days. Meanwhile: C-2 (border security with the US) has stalled at second reading for 7+ months. S-231 (MAID reform) has not advanced since October 2025 — 5 months without a single sitting day of debate. The government that kills 45 Canadians per day via MAID cannot find time to debate a bill reforming it. Minister Anandasangaree sponsors three simultaneous Public Safety bills (C-2, C-8, C-22) — two involve surveillance powers.

Campaign Finance

Follow the Money — 2025 Campaign

Under the Canada Elections Act, political parties and candidates must file financial returns with Elections Canada. The 2025 campaign spending data is being submitted and will be published on the Elections Canada website. Key areas of investigation: corporate donor patterns, third-party advertising spending, and compliance with spending limits.

The TENET5 GC data sync pipeline automatically monitors Elections Canada for new financial returns as they are published. Data will be integrated into the Elections Finance dashboard when available.

Sources: Elections Canada — Official Results, 45th General Election (April 28, 2025); Canada Elections Act (S.C. 2000, c. 9); Elections Canada — Financial Returns of Political Entities; Health Canada — Sixth Annual Report on MAID (2024 data); Hogue Commission — Final Report on Foreign Interference; NSICOP Special Report (June 2024); Auditor General of Canada — ArriveCAN Report (2024). All data from official government records and published election results.