The CBC Decision Desk has not made projections in 15 ridings.
They will likely need to wait until all the ballots are counted in some of them.
Trois-Rivières
Sault Ste. Marie
Charleswood-St. James-Assiniboia-Headingley
Edmonton Centre
Brome-Missisquoi
Kitchener-Conestoga
Vancouver Granville
Davenport
Fredericton
Coast of Bays-Central-Notre Dame
Hamilton Mountain
Richmond Centre
Nanaimo-Ladysmith
Parkdale-High Park
Spadina-Fort York
Poll workers are still counting special ballots. "We expect the vast majority of those counts will be completed by tomorrow," an Elections Canada spokesperson says. "That will give a better picture of overall turnout."
The CBC News Decision Desk projects Liberal @viraniarif will win in Toronto's
Parkdale-High Park.
Liberal @JenicaAtwin wins in Fredericton. Results are final.
All the votes are in - Liberal @JulieDzerowicz wins in Toronto's Davenport riding by a margin of 165 votes.
Just off the phone with a Conservative caucus member who spoke very frankly about Monday's election.
They're not happy with O'Toole. Biggest issue? Campaigning as a "true blue" in the leadership and then abandoning many promises in the general. Carbon tax. Guns. Fiscal prudence.
"He campaigned as a Liberal. He wasn't even Liberal lite — he campaigned as a Liberal in this campaign with no input from caucus or the party or anybody else," the caucus member said.
The caucus member also said they and others were caught off guard by what was actually in the party's platform.
"I didn't even know what we were running on until I saw him on TV," the Tory said of O'Toole's platform launch on day two of the campaign.
With the proviso that there are still votes to count, the Conservatives are on track to perform **worse** in the GTA than they did in 2019. #cdnpoli
Despite the CPC shift toward the centre, Conservative incumbents lost in Markham-Unionville and Aurora-Oak Ridges-Richmond Hill. The Liberal margins were also much larger in many area ridings.
Only one of the area's many seats, Thornhill, elected a Conservative MP. However, with votes still left to be counted, Liberal cabinet minister Deb Schulte is also in a tough fight in her riding of King-Vaughan
And so it begins! The polls have closed in Newfoundland and Labrador. I'll be writing a rolling story tonight on the results as they come in from across the country. Follow along — cbc.ca/1.6182364#cdnpoli
Early results from Nfld. and Labrador and the Maritimes could signal how Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau and his team will fare elsewhere tonight.
With fewer than 10,000 ballots counted so far, the Liberals have 48 per cent of ballots cast and the CPC have about 40 per cent.
With fewer than 45,000 ballots counted so far, the Liberals have 45 per cent of the ballots cast, the Conservatives have about 38 per cent and the NDP has nearly 14 per cent.
The Greens have fewer than one per cent while the PPC has about three per cent.
"What we're saying — and what we've been saying all along — is that mRNA vaccines are the preferred vaccines," says Dr. Shelley Deeks, the vice-chair of NACI.
Deeks says there's a shift in recommendations. NACI now estimates the frequency of the vaccine-induced rare blood clots (VITT) is closer to 1 in 100,000. People who can work from home - or those in areas with lower rates of transmission - may just want to wait for an mRNA shot.
NACI says AstraZeneca and J&J shots should be used by people who don't want to wait for Pfizer and Moderna or those who can't really afford to wait (essential workers).
Based on current delivery estimates — and those could change! — there should be enough Pfizer and Moderna shots coming in May to vaccinate every Ontarian over the age of 30 with at least one shot by the first week of June.
As of today, 5,248,345 shots have been distributed to Ontario minus 351,354 second shots = 4,896,991 people who have already received, or soon will receive, at least one shot.
4,485,780 Pfizer shots will arrive in Ontario between April 26 and June 6. At least 235,700 Moderna shots will come over the next month (there will likely be more).
Maj.-Gen. Fortin confirms *no new doses* of the Serum Institute-produced AstraZeneca shots will arrive this month. One million doses had been expected by month's end — that's not happening now.
300,000 Johnson & Johnson doses will arrive next week, they will be distributed to the provinces and territories during the first week of May.
As India grapples with a deadly surge in cases, the government there has restricted virtually all exports of Serum Institute-made shots, diverting most of the 2.4 million doses it churns out each day to the domestic vaccination campaign.