选举什么时候出结果?

walkley road

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选举什么时候出结果啊?有没有网友来个适时播报?电视上各频道看着太乱了。
 
CBC
保守党少数政府
 
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CBC
保守党少数政府

Yes. It could be the Conservatives... but a minority. They would need to form a coalition government with the party that would hold the balance of power (could be the NDP). But the results so far showed that the two parties might not have more than half of the seats in the House. The country will face constitutional crisis. Too bad for Canada and the people. There could be another election in less than two years.
 
Tories, NDP picking up seats in Ontario
Last Updated Mon, 23 Jan 2006 22:14:39 EST
CBC News

Ontario voters swung away from their traditional Liberal leanings in Monday's federal election, with Conservative candidates poised to pick up about a dozen seats and the NDP also making gains.

Both parties were benefitting from a slide in support for the party that has governed Canada since 1993.

Liberal candidates were leading or declared elected in 56 of the province's 106 federal ridings at 10:50 p.m. EST, down from the 75 they won in the 2004 election. Conservatives were leading or elected in 38 ridings, compared to the 24 seats the party captured in the previous race.

The New Democratic Party was ahead in 12 ridings, improving on the seven ridings the party won last time.

* CBC TORONTO: Election coverage

* CBC OTTAWA: Election coverage

The Greater Toronto Area continued to be painted mostly Liberal red, with candidates from the party either leading or declared elected in 36 ridings, compared to five for the Conservatives and three for the NDP.

Outside the province's urban core, the Conservatives were winning or elected in 32 ridings, compared to 21 for the Liberals and nine for the NDP.

Among the ridings that looked like they were changing hands were:

* Lambton-Kent-Middlesex, where Conservative Bev Shipley was declared elected over Liberal Jeff Wesley.
* Chatham-Kent-Essex, where Dave Van Kesteren beat Liberal Jim Comiskey.
* Hamilton Mountain, where the NDP's Chris Charlton edged aside Liberal Bill Kelly.
* Trinity-Spadina, where NDP candidate Olivia Chow was slightly ahead of Liberal incumbent Tony Ianno.

Chow's husband, NDP Leader Jack Layton, was easily elected in the nearby riding of Toronto-Danforth.

Other prominent Liberals who were leading or declared elected in their ridings included Belinda Stronach in Newmarket-Aurora, John McCallum in Markham-Unionville, Michael Ignatieff in Etobicoke-Lakeshore, Joe Volpe in Eglinton-Lawrence and Maria Minna in Beaches-East York.

Earlier in the evening, the Liberals held all but two of their Atlantic seats, with the Conservatives picking up those ridings. The NDP kept its seat count at three, compared to the 2004 election.

* RELATED COVERAGE: National election developments

Toronto's core has long been a safe house for the Liberals. All but one of its 22 seats went to Paul Martin's party in the 2004 election that gave him a minority government, for example, accounting for almost a third of the Liberals' 75 seats in the 106-seat province.

The so-called "905 belt" of cities and suburbs in the Toronto area has been less of a sure thing. The Conservatives picked up a handful of seats there in 2004 and were hoping for a bigger share this time out.

Among other factors, they hope suburban voters will swing their way because of:

* Dislike of the Liberals' same-sex marriage legislation on the part of immigrant and socially conservative communities.
* Approval of the Conservatives' promised cuts in the GST, $1,200 a year day-care allowance for each child under six, and family-friendly tax credits.

Much of rural Ontario turned Conservative blue in the 2004 election, giving Stephen Harper's newly merged, united-right party 24 seats in the province. In the previous federal election, the Canadian Reform Conservative Alliance elected only two MPs in Ontario, while the Progressive Conservatives were shut out.

* LIVE ANALYSIS: CBC.ca's Reality Check Team on election day developments

In the current election, Ipsos-Reid pollster John Wright said Canada's largest city could hold the key to whether the Conservatives would be able to carry out their ambitious election platform.

"It's tilting Tory at the moment, but if Toronto starts to swing Tory, … it could be a Conservative majority across the country," Wright told CBC News on Jan. 18.

Key issues in Toronto have included:

* Law and order, especially after a 15-year-old girl was shot dead on Boxing Day during a downtown shopping trip, apparently as a result of a gang-related dispute.
* Duelling promises by the Liberals and Conservatives to cut or drop an $895 "landing fee" charged to immigrants.
* Offers to either increase money for public transit infrastructure or give monthly pass holders some income tax relief.

New Democrats in Ontario went into this election day hoping to reverse a strategic voting trend that smacked them in the face in 2004. In that campaign's dying days, many traditional NDP voters decided to shift their ballots to the Liberals to prevent Conservative candidates from winning.

This time out, Layton aggressively pressed Liberal voters to return their favour. "Lend me your vote," he told them in the last two weeks of the campaign, saying the Liberals needed some time in the "repair shop" to sort out their ethical issues.

Canada Votes 2006

* Harper wins Tory minority government
* Tories, NDP picking up seats in Ontario
* Conservatives make breakthrough in Quebec at expense of Liberals and Bloc
* Peter MacKay, Scott Brison re-elected in Nova Scotia
* Goodale holds seat as prairie results come in
* B.C. to decide final size of new Tory government
 
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