MENU
Aerial view of parliament hill in ottawa
01
Home
02
Services
03
Sectors
04
Team
05
Our Work
06
Updates
07
Careers
08
Contact
Services
01
Government Relations
02
Communications & Digital
03
Advisory Services
Sectors
01
Energy
02
Environment
03
Health Care
Updates
01
Insights
02
News
EN
FR
ServicesSectorsTeamOur WorkUpdates
EN
FR
insights
updates
October 5, 2023

Manitoba: The results are in!

written by
Federal Team
Manitoba: The results are in!

A historic evening in Manitoba yesterday! After seven years of Progressive Conservative government, voters have chosen change. The citizens in the province have elected an NDP majority government.

Premier-Elect Wab Kinew will be sworn in as the first First Nations provincial premier in Canada.

This was a campaign based on two very different perspectives, with clear lines in the sand on key issues, like healthcare, education, and climate change.  The NDP made efficient work of the voting system and it played a significant role in shaping the outcome of this election. They utilized their vote very well, monopolizing the Manitoba Liberal Party and Green Party votes, handing the politically active progressive left a favourable advantage in securing government.

Key promises the Manitoba NDP proposed are to temporarily cut the gas tax, freeze hydro rates for Manitobans for a year and aggressive healthcare reform, promising to re-open three emergency room departments in Winnipeg and look to open new family medical centers across the province.

As of Wednesday, the NDP is leading or elected in 34 ridings, five above the needed 29 for a majority government. The Progressive Conservatives are leading or elected in 22 seats and will become the Official Opposition. The Liberals have only one seat, down from three. Outgoing Premier Heather Stefanson as well as Liberal leader Dougald Lamont both have stepped down as leaders.

Another seven ridings remain too close to call as of this writing with out-of-district advance votes still trickling in. The NDP lead in four of those and the PCs in three.

What Happens Next  

With the dust settling, burning questions remain: who will be the next Progressive Conservative leader?

Will the Manitoba Liberal Party be able to rebuild, and ever become relevant in Manitoba politics again? Will the governing NDP be able to keep its commitments to healthcare and an important promise to fund the search of a landfill for the remains of murdered Indigenous women? How will the new NDP government work with the Trudeau Liberals?

One thing is absolutely clear, if nothing else. Manitobans were looking for change, and they found that in Wab Kinew.

Photo Credits: THE CANADIAN PRESS/David Lipnowski

Happy to Help

Make Sussex Your First Call for All Your Government Needs

Our consultants have detailed knowledge and expertise to assist our clients in navigating provinces, territories, and the federal government. Our robust experience throughout Canada allows us to provide detailed and specific counsel to you. We look forward to continuing to put our expertise to its best use as your advisors during this next term of council and beyond.

Devin McCarthy
Managing Partner
dmccarthy@sussex-strategy.com
view profile
Dan Lovell
Vice President, Federal
dlovell@sussex-strategy.com
view profile
Roberto Chavez
Vice President, Federal & Energy
rchavez@sussex-strategy.com
view profile
share article
Link copied
‍

RECENT POSTS

Canada’s Nuclear Renaissance, Continued
June 26, 2026

Canada’s Nuclear Renaissance, Continued

Canada unveiled its first-ever sectorwide Nuclear Energy Strategy, setting concrete build-out targets: up to 10 new domestic reactors by 2040, four new export markets by 2040, across a four-pillar plan covering domestic builds, exports, fuel/waste management, and fission/fusion innovation. The strategy stays technology-agnostic between CANDU, AP1000, and Gen IV designs, leans on existing financing tools rather than new funding (with a dedicated financing policy due next April), and frames nuclear as central to doubling Canada's grid capacity and capturing global export demand as countries move away from Russian supply chains.

Canada Tables Sweeping New Federal Privacy Law
June 16, 2026

Canada Tables Sweeping New Federal Privacy Law

Bill C-36, the Protecting Privacy and Consumer Data Act, would represent the most significant overhaul of Canada's private sector privacy regime in more than 25 years.

Not all nuclear is created equal
June 11, 2026

Not all nuclear is created equal

Traditional large-scale nuclear plants have long demonstrated that it is possible to produce dependable electricity at scale without direct greenhouse gas emissions. They provide steady, around-the-clock power that supports modern economies while helping jurisdictions meet climate goals.

view all
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.
company
HomeTeamCareersContactTerms & PoliciesAccessibility
explore
ServicesSectorsOur WorkUpdates
follow us
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 2020
Land Acknowledgement