LIVE BLOG: Ontario election night updates from Windsor area ridings

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Welcome to the Windsor Star’s live blog for the Ontario election. The polls close at 9 p.m. Windsor Star staff will be filing updates as information comes in.

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8:10 p.m.

Tick, tick, tick — polls close in 50 minutes. Still plenty of time to head over to the nearest polling station in your riding. Remember, if you don’t vote, do you really have any reason to complain about the folks elected to represent you?

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voting
A couple of Ontario voters head into the St. John Vianney Catholic Elementary School polling station in Windsor on Thursday, Feb. 27, 2025. Photo by Dan Janisse /Windsor Star

8:07 p.m.

“I haven’t really seen much aside from signs on front lawns,” first-time voter Thomas Holmes told the Star. “That gives me an idea of who to vote for.” He’s in Essex — and seems to like signs.

As elections go, this snap winter election saw relatively very few election signs pounded into the (sometimes frozen) ground.

8 p.m.

“It has been steady all day” — Elections Ontario poll official Bonnie Deslippe in Amherstburg told Star reporter Millar Holmes-Hill. Since 9 a.m., she’s seen “a good number” of young people and first-time voters.

“I enjoy meeting different people, seeing people I haven’t seen in a while.”

See, folks, voting and participating in elections is not only healthy for democracy — great way to meet the most interesting, engaged people in your community.

7:58 p.m.

election

Christian Sachs, middle, New Democratic Party candidate for Chatham-Kent-Leamington, is seen here with long-time NDP party members Joe Hill, left, and Bill Zilio Thursday night waiting for the results of the 2025 Ontario election to come in. PHOTO Trevor Terfloth/Chatham Daily News

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7:48 p.m.

Polls close in just over an hour (get out and vote!), but post-vote festivities are already taking shape — Windsor-Tecumseh PC candidate Andrew Dowie supporters start gathering at Bourbon Tap & Grill in Tecumseh at 8 p.m. Contrast that to his Windsor West PC colleague, who has run a very quiet campaign, is having a ‘private gathering’ and will ‘issue a statement’ when appropriate.

As of February 23, 2025, there were the following number of registered electors in each electoral district: 

027

Essex 109,002

118

Windsor—Tecumseh 97,578

119

Windsor West 96,735

Windsor West

As he has done for the duration of the election campaign, Windsor West Tory candidate Tony Francis continued to avoid the media, refusing even a photo-op Thursday night.

After repeated requests over several days about where Francis planned to spend election night, his team sent the Star on email on Thursday stating he again would not be available.

“The campaign will be hosting a private gathering with Tony’s family, friends, and volunteers to mark the evening,” his campaign said in an email.

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“However, once the election results have been announced, the Tony Francis Campaign will issue a statement, which we will ensure is shared with you promptly.”

Chatham-Kent Leamington

Bill Kirby is running for the Liberals in Chatham-Kent–Leamington this election. However, there was a bit of intrigue for the party last time around.

Audrey Festeryga, the last-minute Liberal candidate in 2022, withdrew her candidacy amid a nomination signature controversy.

The Leamington lawyer was announced as the Liberal candidate after the previous Liberal nominee, Alec Mazurek, was replaced just hours before the nomination deadline after the NDP uncovered social media posts Mazurek wrote as a teen that contained anti-gay slurs.

NDP officials then alleged the Liberals recycled signatures from Mazurek’s nomination papers for their new candidate.

election
Chatham-Kent—Leamington has a healthy mix of rural and urban voters, and includes a chunk of Essex County — Leamington. Photo by Map courtesy of Elections Ontario /Windsor Star

Windsor West

Windsor West NDP incumbent Lisa Gretzky contested her fourth provincial campaign and said she sensed more division and anger among the electorate.

Gretzky said it goes beyond just the combination of difficult issues such as inflation, housing affordability, homelessness and a challenged healthcare system.

“There’s more division and politics have become uglier,” Gretzky said.

“When we ask if they’d like a lawn sign, we’ve often heard they would but they’re afraid what their neighbours might say.”

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Windsor-Tecumseh

Windsor-Tecumseh NDP candidate Gemma Grey-Hall said she found people are more engaged in the issues than she experienced in her 2022 provincial campaign in the riding.

“A lot more people understand the connection the provincial government has to their daily lives,” Grey-Hall said. “I’ve heard we need to change this or that much more this time around.”

Health care and overall affordability have dominated her conversations with voters.

Grey-Hall recalled a conversation with a man who wanted to rent an east Windsor apartment for his wife and children across the road from his mother so they could help with her care.

“It cost $2,400 per month,” Grey-Hall said. “The man said even with him and his wife both working 40 hours per week, they couldn’t afford it.”

Chatham-Kent-Leamington

In the last provincial election in Chatham-Kent–Leamington, the PC’s Trevor Jones won with 17,522 votes, ahead of New Democrat candidate Brock McGregor, who had 11,163 votes.

Rick Nicholls had 5,478 votes for the Ontario Party, while New Blue’s Jubenville had 1,463. Green candidate Jennifer Surerus had 1,244 votes.

Nicholls had a strong showing for a smaller party since he was the previous PC MPP in the riding. However, he was ousted from Doug Ford’s caucus in the summer of 2021 for refusing to provide proof of COVID-19 vaccination.

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