Supreme Court cancels result from federal election in Terrebonne riding
The Supreme Court overturned a one-vote victory due to an uncounted special ballot, leaving the Terrebonne seat vacant until a byelection, the federal government must call within six months.
- On Feb. 14, 2026, the Supreme Court of Canada annulled the Terrebonne result, vacating the seat and granting an appeal by Bloc Québécois candidate Nathalie Sinclair-Desgagné.
- After the April 28 general election, a Terrebonne voter said she mailed a special ballot for the Bloc Québécois that was returned and never counted due to an address error.
- Auguste's lawyers argued that defining a clerical error as an election irregularity would open a Pandora's box, while a Superior Court judge rejected the request for a new election, citing 'human error' that did not affect integrity.
- The Supreme Court announced its ruling following a hearing earlier today, and the federal government must call a byelection within six months.
- The case has national significance because the Supreme Court of Canada annulled Terrebonne riding’s result due to a special ballot’s address error, potentially affecting the minority government returned April 28.
46 Articles
46 Articles
In this context, La Joute panelists believe that the Supreme Court of Canada's decision to set aside the result was inevitable.
Liberals lose seat as Supreme Court of Canada annuls single-vote win in Terrebonne riding
The Supreme Court of Canada on Friday granted an appeal by a Bloc Québécois candidate who lost the federal election in Terrebonne riding by a single vote , vacating the seat and requiring a byelection to determine the winner. Liberal Tatiana Auguste won the seat in the April 28 general election after a judicial recount, but Bloc Québécois candidate Nathalie Sinclair-Desgagné appealed to the courts, who found in Auguste’s favour. Auguste has bee…
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