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Bruce Fanjoy

Bruce Fanjoy
Member of Parliament
for Carleton
Assumed office
April 28, 2025
Preceded byPierre Poilievre
Personal details
Born1964 or 1965 (age 60–61)
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Political partyLiberal
Children2
RelativesHarold Fanjoy (uncle)
David Myles (third cousin)
EducationDalhousie University (BComm)
Saint Mary's University (MBA)
Websitebrucefanjoy.liberal.ca

Bruce Fanjoy (born 1964) is a Canadian politician who has been the member of Parliament (MP) for Carleton since 2025. A member of the Liberal Party, Fanjoy was elected in the 2025 federal election, unseating incumbent MP and Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre.

Early life and career

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Bruce Fanjoy was born c. 1964[1] in Toronto, Ontario, but grew up in Saint John, New Brunswick, with both of his parents having been from there. His family lived in the Saint John neighbourhood of Millidgeville where Fanjoy attended elementary school, after which they moved to Fredericton after Fanjoy's father, Emery Fanjoy, took a secretary position for the government. Fanjoy and his family later moved to Halifax, Nova Scotia.[2][3] Fanjoy has a Bachelor of Commerce (BComm) from Dalhousie University and an Master of Business Administration (MBA) from Saint Mary's University.[4] He worked in business and marketing, including as director of marketing at Deloitte,[5] before focusing on being a parent and turning to volunteer roles.[6]

Political career

[edit]

Fanjoy was elected MP for Carleton in the 2025 Canadian federal election, unseating Conservative leader Pierre Poilievre, who had held the riding seven times since the 2004 Canadian federal election.[6] The election in Carleton was targeted by the activist group Longest Ballot Committee, which managed to get 91 candidates on the ballot.[7] Despite this, Fanjoy received more than 50% of the votes in Carleton.[6][8]

Personal life

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Fanjoy resides in a house that he built in Ottawa's Manotick community.[6] He has two children.[9] Fanjoy's uncle, Harold Fanjoy, was a Progressive Conservative Member of the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick (MLA) from 1974 to 1987.[2] Fanjoy and incumbent Fredericton—Oromocto Liberal MP David Myles are third cousins through their shared great-great-grandparents.[10]

Electoral record

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2025 Canadian federal election: Carleton
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
Liberal Bruce Fanjoy 43,846 50.95 +19.09
Conservative Pierre Poilievre 39,333 45.70 −6.16
New Democratic Beth Prokaska 1,221 1.42 −9.95
Green Mark Watson 561 0.65 −1.50
United Karen Bourdeau 112 0.13 N/A
Canadian Future Shawn MacEachern 63 0.07 N/A
Independent Lorant Polya 57 0.07
Independent Scott Falkingham 45 0.05
Independent Sana Ahmad 41 0.05
Independent Pierre Gauthier 38 0.04
Marijuana Danny Légaré 37 0.04 N/A
Independent Guillaume Paradis 37 0.04
Independent Dan Kyung 35 0.04
Rhinoceros Sébastien CoRhino 31 0.04 N/A
Independent Sarah Burke 27 0.03
Independent Mark Moutter 23 0.03
Independent David Zhu 21 0.02
Independent Charlie Currie 20 0.02
Independent John Dale 20 0.02
Independent Euan Fraser Tait 18 0.02
Independent John Boylan 17 0.02
Independent Mélodie Anderson 16 0.02
Independent Alex Banks 16 0.02
Independent Michael Bednarski 15 0.02
Independent David Nguyen 15 0.02
Independent Sophie Bearden 14 0.02
Independent Seyed Hosseini Lavasani 13 0.02
No affiliation Jeani Boudreault 12 0.01
Independent Alexandra Engering 12 0.01
Independent Lajos Polya 12 0.01
No affiliation Darcy Vanderwater 12 0.01
Independent Jenny Cartwright 11 0.01
Independent Jeffrey Goodman 11 0.01
Independent Donald McKay 11 0.01
Independent Daniel Stuckless 11 0.01
Independent Maria Gabriel 10 0.01
No affiliation Laina Kohler 10 0.01
Independent Charles Lemieux 10 0.01
Independent Marthalee Aykroyd 9 0.01
Independent Ryan Huard 9 0.01
Independent Sarah Thompson 9 0.01
Independent Alain Bourgault 8 0.01
Independent Daniel Gagnon 8 0.01
Independent Robert Harris 8 0.01
Independent Andrea Hollinger 8 0.01
Independent Connie Lukawski 8 0.01
Independent John Francis O'Flynn 8 0.01
Independent Peter Gorman 7 0.01
Independent Julian Selody 7 0.01
Independent Michal Wieczorek 7 0.01
Independent Line Bélanger 6 0.01
Independent Blake Hamilton 6 0.01
Independent Loren Hicks 6 0.01
No affiliation Alexander Lein 6 0.01
Independent Agnieszka Marszalek 6 0.01
Independent Hakim Sheriff 6 0.01
Independent Tetia Bayoro 5 0.01
Independent David Cherniak 5 0.01
Independent Kevin Krisa 5 0.01
Independent Alain Lamontagne 5 0.01
Independent Winston Neutel 5 0.01
Independent Lény Painchaud 5 0.01
Independent Elliot Wand 5 0.01
Independent Dante Camarena Jimenez 4 0.00
Independent Jaël Champagne Gareau 4 0.00
Independent Gerrit Dogger 4 0.00
Independent Gregory Gillis 4 0.00
No affiliation Christopher Navarro-Canseco 4 0.00
Independent Lanna Palsson 4 0.00
Independent Spencer Rocchi 4 0.00
Independent Patrick Strzalkowski 4 0.00
No affiliation Manon Marie Lili Desbiens 3 0.00
Independent Artem Gudkov 3 0.00
No affiliation Kerri Hildebrandt 3 0.00
Independent Trevor Holsworth 3 0.00
No affiliation Krzysztof Krzywinski 3 0.00
Independent Samuel Lafontaine 3 0.00
Independent Roger Sherwood 3 0.00
Independent Yogo Shimada 3 0.00
Independent Michael Skirzynski 3 0.00
Independent Julie St-Amand 3 0.00
Independent Daniel Graham 2 0.00
Independent Zornitsa Halacheva 2 0.00
Independent Anthony Hamel 2 0.00
Independent Demetrios Karavas 2 0.00
Independent Sheri Oberman 2 0.00
Independent Wallace Richard Rowat 2 0.00
Independent Pascal St-Amand 2 0.00
Independent Benjamin Teichman 2 0.00
Independent Joseph Maw 1 0.00
No affiliation Ysack Dupont 0 0.00
Total valid votes/expense limit 86,060 99.31
Total rejected ballots 595 0.69
Turnout 86,655 81.84
Eligible voters 105,889
Liberal notional gain from Conservative Swing +12.63
Source: Elections Canada[11][12]
Note: number of eligible voters does not include voting day registrations.

See also

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  • Ali France, who similarly defeated the leader of the opposition in the Australian election within the same week of Fanjoy's election

References

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  1. ^ Harris, Michael (March 4, 2025). "One Man's March to Beat Poilievre in His Own Riding". The Tyee. Retrieved May 3, 2025.
  2. ^ a b Huras, Adam (April 30, 2025). "The giant-killer who defeated Poilievre? He's from New Brunswick". Telegraph-Journal. Retrieved May 1, 2025.
  3. ^ Rudderham, Hannah (May 6, 2025). "The man who unseated Poilievre: N.B.-raised Bruce Fanjoy had support from Maritimers". CBC News. Retrieved May 7, 2025.
  4. ^ "Bruce Fanjoy - À propos de Bruce". www.brucefanjoy.ca. Retrieved April 29, 2025.
  5. ^ Payne, Elizabeth (April 17, 2025). "Could a Liberal defeat Pierre Poilievre in his own riding? Bruce Fanjoy thinks so". Ottawa Citizen.
  6. ^ a b c d "Liberal Bruce Fanjoy topples Pierre Poilievre in Carleton". CBC News. April 29, 2025. Retrieved May 1, 2025.
  7. ^ Major, Darren (April 7, 2025). "Longest ballot protest targets Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre's riding". CBC News. Retrieved April 29, 2025.
  8. ^ "Carleton was Poilievre's riding to lose. When he did, it came as a shock to many". CBC News. April 30, 2025. Retrieved May 1, 2025.
  9. ^ Sadeen, Mohsen (April 29, 2025). "How Bruce Fanjoy (somehow) beat Pierre Poilievre in Carleton". Ottawa Citizen. Retrieved April 29, 2025.
  10. ^ https://x.com/brucefanjoy/status/1925349361652809866?s=46
  11. ^ "Voter information service". Elections Canada. Retrieved May 6, 2025.
  12. ^ "Election Night Results - Electoral Districts". Elections Canada. Retrieved May 6, 2025.