Updated April 2026

A general federal election was held on April 28, 2025. Mark Carney was elected as head of a minority Liberal government.

(As of April 2026, Carney has a majority, after several floor‑crossings and byelections. None of those changes happened in ridings on the island of Montreal.)

Mark Carney unveiled his cabinet on May 13, 2025.

As of latest edit, Montreal has 16 Liberal ridings, one Bloc Québécois riding and one NDP riding on the island.

The wikipedia page on Canadian federal general elections is a good summary of previous governments.

Ahuntsic-Cartierville: Mélanie Joly, Liberal, incumbent, is back. May 2025, Mark Carney made her Minister of Industry and Quebec economic development. House of Commons official page, X, Instagram, Facebook, Open Parliament.

Bourassa: Newcomer Abdelhaq Sari, Liberal. House of Commons official page, Open Parliament.

Dorval-Lachine-LaSalle: Anju Dhillon, Liberal, is back. House of Commons official page, X, Instagram, Facebook, Open Parliament.

Hochelaga–Rosemont-Est: Newcomer Marie‑Gabrielle Ménard, Liberal, takes Soraya Martinez Ferrada’s place as the latter has launched herself into municipal politics. House of Commons official page, Instagram, Open Parliament.

Honoré-Mercier: Newcomer Eric St-Pierre, Liberal, took Pablo Rodríguez’s place whens Rodriguez launched himself (unsuccessfully) into provincial politics. House of Commons official page, Open Parliament.

La Pointe-de-l’Île: Mario Beaulieu is now the only Blocster on the island. House of Commons official page, X, Facebook, Open Parliament.

Lac Saint-Louis: Liberal Francis Scarpaleggia is back. On May 26, 2025 he was elected Speaker of the House of Commons. House of Commons official page, X, Facebook, second Facebook, Open Parliament.

LaSalle-Émard-Verdun: Newcomer Claude Guay has wrested the riding back from the Bloc’s Louis-Philippe Sauvé, who took it in a byelection in September 2024. House of Commons official page, Open Parliament.

Laurier Sainte-Marie: Liberal Steven Guilbeault is back. May 2025, he was made Minister of Canadian Identity and Culture, a role renamed from Minister of Canadian Heritage. November 2025, Guilbeault resigned from cabinet over Mark Carney’s pipeline promise to Alberta premier Danielle Smith. He remains in the Liberal caucus. House of Commons official page, X, Facebook, Open Parliament.

Mount Royal: Liberal Anthony Housefather is back after a contest that was more about the Middle East than Canada. House of Commons official page, Facebook, Open Parliament.

NDG-Westmount: Liberal Anna Gainey is back. May 2025, she was made Secretary of State for Children and Youth. House of Commons official page, X, Instagram, Open Parliament.

Outremont: Liberal Rachel Bendayan is back. House of Commons official page, X, Instagram, Facebook, Open Parliament. Bendayan was made official languages minister and associate minister of public safety in the December 2024 shuffle, and Mark Carney made her minister of Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship in March 2025.

Papineau: Justin Trudeau’s old riding, won by Marjorie Michel, who has worked for the Liberals for years. May 2025, she was made Minister of Health. House of Commons official page, Open Parliament.

Pierrefonds-Dollard: Sameer Zuberi is back. House of Commons official page, X, Facebook, Open Parliament.

Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie: Sole remnant in Montreal of the 2011 NDP Orange Wave, Alexandre Boulerice is once again the only Dipper in Quebec. House of Commons official page, X, Facebook, Open Parliament.

Saint-Laurent: Liberal Emmanuella Lambropoulos is back. House of Commons official page, X, Facebook, Open Parliament.

Saint-Léonard—Saint-Michel: Liberal Patricia Lattanzio is back. House of Commons official page, X, Facebook, Open Parliament.

Ville-Marie–Le Sud-Ouest–Île-des-Sœurs: Liberal Marc Miller is back. He was out of cabinet at first in the Carney government, but was made minister for culture in December 2025 to replace Steven Guilbeault. House of Commons official page, X, Facebook, Open Parliament.