
Conservative Borrelli holds onto Windsor-Tecumseh-Lakeshore by 4 votes
A judicial recount in the southern Ontario riding of Windsor-Tecumseh-Lakeshore confirmed late Thursday evening that the Conservative candidate clung to the seat by a handful of votes — nearly one month after the April 28 federal election.
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The three-day recount narrowed the margin from 77 votes to just four, securing Conservative Kathy Borrelli a razor-thin victory over Liberal candidate Irek Kusmierczyk, who had held the federal seat since 2019.
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'After a thorough review, I am humbled to confirm the result has reaffirmed the outcome of election night,' Conservative Kathy Borrelli said in an emailed statement around 2:30 a.m. Friday.
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The judicial review began Tuesday morning at a Tecumseh office space in Green Valley Plaza, where 25 tables staffed by teams of four — including two Elections Canada appointees and one representative from each campaign — meticulously combed through every ballot box, including all rejected ballots.
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Over three days, the recount teams reviewed more than 70,000 votes from 23 advance, 252 ordinary, and five mobile polls.
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The judicial recount confirmed that Borrelli received 32,090 votes to Kusmierczyk's 32,086 — 45.8 per cent and 45.7 per cent of the total ballots cast, respectively.
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'It is with great excitement and deep respect that I prepare to be sworn in as your next Member of Parliament,' said Borrelli.
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The recount was ordered May 9 by Justice Macfarlane after Kusmierczyk applied to the court, flagging multiple tabulation errors and a high number of rejected ballots.
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