Adam van Koeverden
Adam Joseph van Koeverden (born January 29, 1982) is a Canadian sprint kayaker and politician who represented Canada in four consecutive Summer Olympics from 2004 to 2016, securing one gold, one silver, and two bronze medals in kayak events.[1][2] He later transitioned to politics, winning election as the Liberal Member of Parliament for Milton, Ontario, in 2019 and currently serving as Secretary of State for Sport while holding the Burlington North—Milton West riding.[3][4] Van Koeverden's Olympic debut came at the 2004 Athens Games, where, at age 22, he claimed bronze in the K-1 1000 m and gold in the K-1 500 m, marking Canada's first victory in canoe/kayak sprint in two decades.[5] In Beijing 2008, he earned silver in the K-1 500 m, followed by bronze in the K-1 1000 m at London 2012; he competed without medaling in Rio 2016.[6][7] Complementing his Olympic success, he secured multiple podium finishes at the ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships, including golds in the K1 500 m in 2007 and K1 1000 m in 2011.[1] As a parliamentarian, van Koeverden has focused on sport policy, environmental initiatives, and community leadership, drawing on his background as a first-generation Canadian raised in Oakville, Ontario, and his kinesiology degree from McMaster University.[3][8] In 2025, he was appointed as Canada's "sherpa" for preparations surrounding the 2026 FIFA World Cup co-hosted by Canada, the United States, and Mexico.[9]Early Life and Education
Family Background and Childhood
Adam van Koeverden was born on January 29, 1982, in Toronto, Ontario, to Joe van Koeverden, whose family immigrated from the Netherlands when Joe was an infant shortly after World War II, and Beata Bokrossy, of Hungarian descent.[10] [11] As a first-generation Canadian, he grew up in a modest family setting at the Chautauqua Co-operative in North Oakville, Ontario, with his younger brother and mother following his parents' separation.[8] [3] Van Koeverden's early environment in Oakville exposed him to local community sports and outdoor pursuits typical of suburban Ontario life, though specific family-led activities such as boating are not documented in primary accounts.[12] His parents' immigrant backgrounds shaped a household emphasizing adaptation and resilience, as reflected in van Koeverden's later public comments on his father's Dutch heritage and early arrival in Canada.[10] At age 13, van Koeverden's entry into paddling sports began when his mother enrolled him at the Burloak Canoe Club, marking an initial, family-initiated step into athletics rather than innate or elite early grooming. This period preceded more intensive involvement, with his mother's observation that he was not a "natural athlete" underscoring a trajectory built on persistence over prodigious talent.[13]Academic Pursuits
Van Koeverden completed his secondary education in Oakville, Ontario, at a local Catholic high school, where he balanced participation in sports with academic responsibilities, laying the foundation for his ability to manage demanding schedules.[14] He then enrolled at McMaster University in Hamilton, Ontario, pursuing a degree in kinesiology to complement his athletic endeavors. This field, emphasizing the science of human movement, biomechanics, and exercise physiology, offered practical insights directly applicable to optimizing performance in sprint kayaking. Despite rigorous training regimens and international competitions—including his gold medal win at the 2004 Athens Olympics during his undergraduate years—van Koeverden maintained high academic standards.[2][3][15] In June 2007, he graduated with an Honours Bachelor of Science in Kinesiology, earning distinction as class valedictorian—a testament to his disciplined time management and intellectual capability amid professional-level athletic commitments.[2][3][12] Van Koeverden has not pursued postgraduate studies, with his formal education centered on undergraduate coursework geared toward physical sciences rather than policy or theoretical disciplines.[2][16]Athletic Career
Introduction to Kayaking and Early Successes
Adam van Koeverden began competitive kayaking at age 13 in 1995, when his mother enrolled him at the Burloak Canoe Club in Oakville, Ontario, after spotting a local advertisement seeking "Future Champions."[2][16] There, he quickly developed proficiency in sprint kayak events, particularly the K-1 1000 m discipline, training on Sixteen Mile Creek and emphasizing technique and endurance through rigorous daily paddling sessions.[17] His grassroots progression at Burloak, a club known for nurturing elite paddlers, laid the foundation for his technical skill acquisition, as he transitioned from novice to competitive racer within a few years.[18] By the late 1990s, van Koeverden earned selection to Canada's junior national team, reflecting his rapid rise through domestic rankings.[2] In 1999, at age 17, he secured a bronze medal in the K-1 1000 m at the ICF World Junior Championships in Zagreb, Croatia, marking his first international podium and demonstrating competitive viability against global youth talent.[2] This achievement stemmed from consistent performances in Canadian junior circuits, where his power and stroke efficiency in longer sprints began to stand out.[19] Van Koeverden debuted at the senior international level in the early 2000s, competing in events that established his baseline competitiveness with regular top finishes in World Cup regattas and preparatory meets.[2] By 2003, he had advanced to a silver medal in the K-1 1000 m at the ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships, signaling his adaptation to elite senior racing demands.[2] These early results highlighted his focus on sprint kayak distances, including emerging strength in the K-1 500 m, through sustained training emphasizing aerobic capacity and anaerobic bursts.[2]International Competitions and World Championships
Van Koeverden established himself as a dominant force in non-Olympic international kayak sprint events, particularly at the ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships, where he secured multiple podium finishes in K-1 events emphasizing endurance over short sprints. His performances demonstrated sustained excellence, with consistent top-three results in the 500m and 1000m distances from 2003 to 2011, reflecting rigorous training focused on aerobic capacity and race strategy.[2][20] At the 2003 ICF Canoe Sprint World Championships in Gainesville, United States, van Koeverden earned silver in the K-1 1000m.[2] In 2005, at the championships in Zagreb, Croatia, he claimed silver in the K-1 1000m and bronze in the K-1 500m.[21] The 2007 edition in Duisburg, Germany, marked a peak, with gold in the K-1 500m and silver in the K-1 1000m.[2] He added another gold in the K-1 1000m at the 2011 World Championships in Szeged, Hungary.[1]| Year | Event | Medal | Location |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2003 | K-1 1000m | Silver | Gainesville, USA[2] |
| 2005 | K-1 500m | Bronze | Zagreb, Croatia[21] |
| 2005 | K-1 1000m | Silver | Zagreb, Croatia[21] |
| 2007 | K-1 500m | Gold | Duisburg, Germany[2] |
| 2007 | K-1 1000m | Silver | Duisburg, Germany[2] |
| 2011 | K-1 1000m | Gold | Szeged, Hungary[1] |
Olympic Achievements
Adam van Koeverden participated in four Summer Olympics from 2004 to 2016, securing four medals in men's kayak singles sprint events, including one gold. His achievements highlight peak performance in his early 20s, with sustained competitiveness into his late 20s before a medal-less finish at age 34 in Rio.[1][2] At the 2004 Athens Games, van Koeverden, aged 22, won gold in the K-1 500 m final with a time of 1:37.919, executing a tactical come-from-behind surge after a conservative start to overtake Australia's Nathan Baggaley by 0.548 seconds amid a competitive field featuring strong European and Oceanic paddlers.[5][22] Two days prior in the K-1 1000 m, he claimed bronze in 3:28.218, holding off Australia's Baggaley for third behind New Zealand's Ben Fouhy and Hungary's Botond Storcz.[1][23]| Olympics | Event | Medal | Time | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2004 Athens | K-1 500 m | Gold | 1:37.919 | Tactical pacing key to victory over pre-race favorites.[5][22] |
| 2004 Athens | K-1 1000 m | Bronze | 3:28.218 | Third place after strong semifinal qualification.[1] |
| 2008 Beijing | K-1 500 m | Bronze | 1:38.675 | Competed post-Athens peak, securing podium against defending champion Ken Wallace (gold).[6] |
| 2012 London | K-1 1000 m | Silver | 3:27.170 | Narrowly behind Norway's Eirik Verås Larsen; followed world championship gold in same event.[24][1] |
Post-Competitive Involvement in Sport
Following his retirement from competitive kayaking after the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, van Koeverden returned to the Burloak Canoe Club in Oakville, Ontario, where he began coaching junior paddlers. With the club supporting around 50 children using only two coaches, he contributed hands-on training and mentorship to develop the next generation of athletes.[17] Van Koeverden also promoted paddling through community engagement, regularly participating in events like the Burloak Canoe Cup by paddling alongside participants and interacting with club members to inspire continued interest in the sport.[17] In parallel, he served as an athlete ambassador for Right To Play, advocating for expanded access to physical activity among vulnerable youth, including Indigenous children in Canada via the organization's PLAY initiative. He personally donated $5,000 to the program and supported fundraising that approached $25,000 of a $100,000 target by October 2016.[17] These activities emphasized grassroots involvement over formal administrative positions within national sport bodies, with van Koeverden focusing on direct athlete support and public-facing promotion in the years leading to his entry into politics in 2019. Public records show no sustained leadership roles in canoe/kayak federations or committees during this period, limiting his influence to localized coaching and charitable advocacy rather than broader policy or funding reforms in amateur sports.[2]Transition to Politics
Motivations for Entering Public Life
Van Koeverden announced his intention to seek the federal Liberal Party nomination in the Milton electoral district on October 4, 2018, after nearly two decades representing Canada in international kayaking competitions. He framed the decision as an extension of his athletic discipline into public service, stating, "I proudly represented Canada on the international stage for almost 20 years, and now my objective is to represent the needs of Miltonians on Parliament Hill in Ottawa and here at home in Milton."[26] His campaign emphasized applying leadership skills developed through high-stakes competition to address community priorities, particularly in youth engagement, sport, physical education, and fostering healthy communities.[27] Central to van Koeverden's stated motivations was a yearning for impact beyond individual achievement, describing politics as "doing something bigger than myself again" and an opportunity to "give back" by dedicating himself to service after Olympic representation.[28] He cited admiration for public servants and a desire to utilize his public platform positively, having weighed the challenge against easier post-athletic pursuits like corporate wellness consulting. Although approached by Conservatives, van Koeverden aligned with the Liberals due to congruence with his values, including support for reproductive rights and LGBTQ+ rights, marking a deliberate pivot from solitary sport to collaborative policy-making under the Trudeau government's progressive framework.[28] This transition mirrors patterns in athlete-to-politician pathways, where attributes like resilience and performance under pressure—evident in van Koeverden's four Olympic medals—facilitate entry into governance, as seen in figures like Sebastian Coe, who leveraged track success for parliamentary leadership emphasizing fiscal and organizational discipline. However, van Koeverden's endorsement of Liberal priorities on social equity contrasts with conservative-leaning athlete politicians who prioritize restraint and traditionalism, raising questions about whether the timing, following a medal-less Rio 2016 outing and waning athletic visibility, partly reflected self-interested pursuit of a sustained public role amid career reinvention rather than purely altruistic "giving back."[28] Such inferences align with broader causal dynamics in elite athlete retirements, where public profile often channels into politics for renewed purpose and influence, though empirical outcomes vary without guaranteed policy efficacy.Pre-Political Advocacy and Party Affiliation
Prior to entering electoral politics, van Koeverden focused his advocacy efforts on integrity and accessibility within competitive and recreational sports. In 2014, he publicly rejected assumptions of widespread doping among athletes, stating that he had never used performance-enhancing drugs and emphasizing personal responsibility in maintaining clean sport.[29] He reiterated this stance in response to media debates on the prevalence of banned substances, positioning himself as an advocate for ethical competition.[30] In 2016, van Koeverden voiced strong opposition to state-sponsored doping, particularly criticizing the International Olympic Committee's allowance of Russian athletes at the Rio Games despite evidence of systemic violations, which he deemed "frustrated and disappointing."[31] Concurrently, he promoted broader access to youth sports, drawing from his upbringing in a single-parent household where canoe-kayak's relative affordability provided an entry point. He donated $5,000 to Right to Play Canada's Promoting Life-skills in Aboriginal Youth program, underscoring sport's role in fostering teamwork, conflict resolution, and community development for Indigenous and Northern children.[32] These efforts remained non-partisan through 2017, centered on athlete welfare without alignment to specific political platforms. Van Koeverden entered partisan politics in October 2018 by seeking the Liberal Party nomination for Milton, the first political party he joined.[27] He attributed his decision to prior non-partisan representation roles, including nine years on the Canadian Olympic Committee's Athletes' Commission, which honed skills in advocacy and government relations applicable to public service.[33] Lacking prior policy manifestos or ideological publications, he expressed alignment with Liberal priorities on progressive community initiatives, motivated by a desire to contribute to national progress through hard work for constituents.[33]Parliamentary Career
2019 Election and Initial Term
Adam van Koeverden was elected to represent the riding of Milton in the Canadian federal election held on October 21, 2019, defeating the incumbent Conservative Member of Parliament Lisa Raitt.[34] He received 24,250 votes, or 49.08 percent of the total cast, securing a narrow victory margin of 905 votes over Raitt's 23,345 votes (47.26 percent).[35] The contest in this fast-growing suburban constituency, characterized by young families and swing voter dynamics, highlighted van Koeverden's appeal as a former Olympic kayaker, which helped the Liberals flip the seat previously held by Conservatives.[36] In the ensuing 43rd Parliament, which operated as a Liberal minority government requiring cross-party support for legislation, van Koeverden assumed the role of Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Canadian Heritage, with responsibilities centered on sport and physical activity policy. He contributed to the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage, engaging in discussions on cultural and recreational matters aligned with his athletic expertise.[37] His parliamentary activities emphasized local constituent services in Milton, including advocacy for community infrastructure and youth programs, amid the challenges of navigating minority government dynamics where bills often faced amendments or delays.) Van Koeverden aligned with the Liberal caucus on major fiscal measures, supporting budgets that expanded federal deficits—reaching $354 billion in 2020-21 primarily due to COVID-19 responses—which drew opposition critiques for prioritizing short-term spending without robust evidence of economic returns./votes) While no private member's bills sponsored by him advanced to passage during this term, his interventions reflected ongoing interest in athlete welfare, informed by personal experiences in high-performance sport.)Key Legislative Activities and Committee Roles
Van Koeverden participated in House of Commons committee hearings scrutinizing Hockey Canada's handling of sexual assault allegations from 2018, questioning officials on policy changes and training reforms during a June 20, 2022, session of the Standing Committee on Canadian Heritage.[38] His interventions focused on cultural shifts within the organization amid public funding concerns, though subsequent reports in 2025 indicated persistent issues in addressing abuse without measurable reductions in incidents.[39][40] As a backbench Liberal MP, van Koeverden did not sponsor any private member's bills during his initial term from 2019 to 2025.) He consistently voted in favor of government priorities, including third reading of Bill C-64, An Act respecting pharmacare, on June 3, 2024, which aimed to establish a national framework for universal coverage of select medications.[41] Similarly, he supported Bill C-6, banning conversion therapy practices, as stated in his June 10, 2021, endorsement highlighting its protection of vulnerable groups from discredited methods.[42] Van Koeverden advocated for safe sport reforms predating his parliamentary tenure, having been tasked in 2017 by the then-Minister of Sport to address maltreatment issues, and continued this through interventions at committees like Canadian Heritage and the Status of Women, where survivor testimonies informed policy discussions.[43] Despite these efforts, a 2025 commission report described Canada's sport system as "broken" with ongoing widespread abuse, suggesting limited causal impact from legislative scrutiny to date.[40] His voting record aligned closely with Liberal positions, including expansions to medical assistance in dying, reflecting over 95% party unity on recorded divisions per available analyses of key social and health bills.[44]2025 Re-election and Ministerial Appointment
Van Koeverden was re-elected to the House of Commons on April 28, 2025, securing a third consecutive term as a Liberal Member of Parliament in the newly configured riding of Burlington North—Milton West, which incorporated portions of his prior Milton constituency along with adjacent Burlington areas redistributed under the 2022 federal electoral boundaries review.[45][46] He defeated Conservative challenger Zeeshan Tariq by a margin exceeding 4,000 votes based on unofficial tallies with 93% of polls reporting, amid a national election that saw the Liberal Party retain sufficient seats to form a minority government under Prime Minister Mark Carney.[45] Following the Liberal victory, van Koeverden was elevated to the cabinet on May 13, 2025, as Secretary of State for Sport within the Department of Canadian Heritage, a junior ministerial role tasked with advancing federal policies on amateur and high-performance athletics.[47]/roles) The appointment, announced shortly after the swearing-in of the 45th Parliament on May 26, 2025, positioned him to address ongoing challenges in sport governance, including oversight of national sports organizations amid parliamentary inquiries into systemic issues like abuse and financial accountability in entities such as Hockey Canada./votes)[48] Initial priorities emphasized collaboration with sport bodies on safe sport implementation, though measurable outcomes on reforms remained pending as of October 2025.[49]Policy Positions on Key Issues
Van Koeverden has advocated for increased federal involvement in sport governance to address systemic issues like abuse and safety. In his August 28, 2025, statement as Secretary of State for Sport, he endorsed the preliminary report of the Future of Sport in Canada Commission, which calls for a national public registry of individuals violating safe-sport policies and enhanced federal-provincial coordination to implement uniform standards.[50] [51] This position emphasizes centralized mechanisms for accountability, including potential safe-sport legislation, despite constitutional divisions placing sport primarily under provincial jurisdiction, which some view as risking inefficient duplication and reduced local flexibility without proven efficacy in reducing incidents.[40] On foreign affairs, van Koeverden aligns with Liberal multilateral approaches but has taken pointed stances critical of Israel in the Israel-Gaza conflict. He publicly supported Canada's formal recognition of the State of Palestine on September 21, 2025, framing it as advancing peace through respect for international law and Palestinian self-determination.[52] In a March 11, 2025, social media post, he asserted that Israel must uphold Palestinian human rights, including access to electricity and aid, while condemning blockades.[53] Earlier, on October 17, 2023, in House of Commons remarks, he urged adherence to humanitarian principles amid the conflict.[54] These views, while consistent with party emphases on diplomacy and equity, have faced pushback for overlooking Israel's security context and Hamas's role, potentially reflecting selective application of multilateral norms. Domestically, van Koeverden favors interventionist economic policies characteristic of Liberal platforms, including support for expanded public spending. He voted in favor of the government's Fall Economic Statement on May 21, 2024, which included measures on housing and affordability without detailed independent cost-benefit analyses.[55] In September 24, 2025, House interventions, he defended federal investments in social programs like school food initiatives as essential for health outcomes, rejecting opposition critiques of fiscal overreach.[56] He opposed a Conservative motion on food inflation and budgetary policy, prioritizing government-led responses over market-driven alternatives.[57] Such votes align with broader Liberal patterns of deficit-financed programs, critiqued by fiscal conservatives for contributing to sustained deficits—reaching $40 billion annually in recent budgets—absent rigorous evidence of long-term multipliers exceeding borrowing costs.[57]Controversies
2025 Campaign Statements on Israel-Gaza Conflict
During a campaign event at a mosque in Milton, Ontario, on or around April 11, 2025, van Koeverden addressed Muslim voters in his riding, stating, "Your voices will be strong in Ottawa strong to condemn the genocide and end the genocide in Gaza to continue to make sure the Palestinian voices are heard."[58] The remarks, captured in a video circulated on social media, framed Israel's military operations following the October 7, 2023, Hamas attack—which killed 1,139 Israelis and involved the taking of over 250 hostages—as genocidal, emphasizing the need for Palestinian advocacy in Canadian politics.[59][60] This occurred amid the 2025 federal election campaign, where van Koeverden sought re-election in a riding with a significant Muslim population, amid broader Liberal efforts to consolidate support in diverse urban areas.[61] The statement drew immediate condemnation from Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre, who accused the Liberals of inconsistent messaging on the conflict, contrasting it with Liberal Leader Mark Carney's recent clarification distancing the party from genocide allegations.[59] Jewish advocacy groups and pro-Israel commentators labeled the rhetoric inflammatory and pandering, arguing it minimized Hamas's initiating role—responsible for the deliberate targeting of civilians in the October 7 assault—while adopting a term ("genocide") that implies intent to eradicate a people, despite Israel's stated aims of dismantling Hamas infrastructure and rescuing hostages, with operations including warnings to civilians and facilitation of humanitarian corridors.[60] Gaza casualty figures, reported by the Hamas-controlled Health Ministry at over 40,000 by mid-2025, have been critiqued for lacking differentiation between combatants (estimated by Israel at up to 17,000 Hamas fighters killed) and civilians, and for including deaths from misfired rockets or unrelated causes, undermining claims of systematic extermination when weighed against Israel's demographic-preserving measures.[62] On April 23, 2025, van Koeverden issued a partial retraction, expressing regret for publicly using the term "genocide" but affirming that his underlying views on the conflict remained unchanged, without elaborating on revised assessments of causality or casualty verification.[62] This response highlighted tensions in political discourse, where campaign appeals to specific voter bases can employ loaded terminology detached from granular empirical scrutiny, such as independent audits of Gaza death tallies or Hamas's use of human shields, which complicate narratives of unilateral aggression.[61] Earlier in April 2025, van Koeverden had signed a parliamentary pledge alleging genocide in Gaza, aligning with a minority of Liberal MPs but diverging from Canada's official stance recognizing Israel's right to self-defense post-October 7.[63]Criticisms Regarding Sport Governance and Safe Sport Reforms
In response to the Future of Sport in Canada Commission's preliminary report released on August 28, 2025, which characterized the national sport system as "broken" with entrenched maltreatment, emotional abuse, and a pervasive culture of silence deterring reporting, Secretary of State for Sport Adam van Koeverden issued a statement affirming that such abuses have no place in sport and pledging government analysis of the report's 71 recommendations for systemic overhaul, including independent oversight mechanisms and survivor-centered processes.[50][40] The commission, drawing from consultations with over 1,000 stakeholders including athlete survivors, highlighted empirical failures such as inadequate complaint handling, conflicts of interest in national sport organizations, and governance structures prioritizing high-performance outcomes over participant safety, with historical data showing thousands of unreported incidents across disciplines like gymnastics and swimming.[64] Van Koeverden's office initiated enhanced monitoring of Hockey Canada in August 2025 as a funding condition, citing noted progress in leadership and education on sexual violence prevention since 2022 scandals involving junior team assaults, yet emphasizing persistent cultural gaps requiring sustained federal scrutiny.[39] Proposed reforms under his tenure include provincial-federal collaborations to standardize safe sport training and funding tied to compliance metrics, aiming to address the report's findings of meagre core funding stagnant since 2005, which has strained organizations and amplified risks in under-resourced environments.[51][65] Critics, including athlete advocates and opposition voices, contend that federal responses remain reactive and insufficiently agile against decades-old scandals, such as Hockey Canada's delayed accountability for 2018 group assault allegations, where initial internal settlements obscured transparency until parliamentary pressure in 2022 prompted reforms.[39] Stakeholder testimonies in the commission report underscore causal links between centralized bureaucratic inertia—exemplified by the now-defunct Office of the Sport Integrity Commissioner closing on August 1, 2025—and unchecked power imbalances enabling coach-athlete abuses, contrasting with defenders in government circles who highlight incremental steps like the Canadian Safe Sport Program's April 1, 2025, launch for standardized reporting.[66] From a decentralized governance perspective, some analysts argue that intensified federal intrusion, including the proposed national oversight entity, risks compounding inefficiencies by overriding provincial and organizational autonomy, where local accountability has historically yielded faster adaptations without uniform metrics that lack proven correlations to reduced maltreatment rates.[51]Electoral History
2019 Federal Election Results
In the federal election on October 21, 2019, Adam van Koeverden of the Liberal Party won the Milton riding with 21,614 votes, equivalent to 49.6% of valid votes cast.[67] Incumbent Conservative MP Lisa Raitt received 16,614 votes (38.1%), while other candidates trailed significantly: Farina Hassan (NDP) with 2,614 votes (6.0%), Eleanor Hayward (Green Party) with 1,614 votes (3.7%), and Percy Dastur (People's Party of Canada) with 1,158 votes (2.6%).[67]| Candidate | Party | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adam van Koeverden | Liberal | 21,614 | 49.6% |
| Lisa Raitt | Conservative | 16,614 | 38.1% |
| Farina Hassan | NDP | 2,614 | 6.0% |
| Eleanor Hayward | Green | 1,614 | 3.7% |
| Percy Dastur | PPC | 1,158 | 2.6% |
2025 Federal Election Results
In the 2025 Canadian federal election held on April 28, Adam van Koeverden of the Liberal Party secured re-election in the newly created Burlington North—Milton West riding, defeating Conservative candidate Nadeem Akbar by 5,983 votes.[45][46] Van Koeverden received 37,155 votes, representing 52.75% of the total, while Akbar garnered 31,172 votes at 44.25%; the New Democratic Party's Naveed Ahmed obtained 1,507 votes (2.14%), and the People's Party of Canada's Charles Zach received 607 votes (0.86%).[68][69]| Party | Candidate | Votes | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Liberal | Adam van Koeverden | 37,155 | 52.75% |
| Conservative | Nadeem Akbar | 31,172 | 44.25% |
| New Democratic | Naveed Ahmed | 1,507 | 2.14% |
| People's | Charles Zach | 607 | 0.86% |