On the 28th (local time), the Liberal Party, which won in the Canadian general election, failed to secure a majority with a margin of 3 seats.
According to the New York Times (NYT) on the 29th, the final vote count announced by the Canadian Election Commission indicated that the Liberal Party secured a total of 169 seats. This was just 3 seats short of the majority of 172 out of a total of 343 seats. The leading opposition party, the Conservative Party, secured 144 seats.
With the Liberal Party's failure to secure a majority, it cannot pass bills or budgets unilaterally in parliament. However, the Liberal Party is considered center-left, and foreign media expect that it will not be difficult to gain cooperation from minor left-wing parties such as the Green Party Korea and the New Democratic Party.
With this victory in the general election, the Liberal Party has successfully achieved a fourth consecutive term in power. Pierre Poilievre, the leader of the Conservative Party, who was once seen as a potential future prime minister, lost his seat to a Liberal candidate in his own constituency, which he had held for 20 years.