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Leader of the New Democratic Party

The leader of the New Democratic Party (French: chef du Nouveau Parti démocratique) is the highest position in the New Democratic Party of Canada (NDP). Avi Lewis was elected as the ninth and current leader in the leadership election in March 2026.


Leader of the New Democratic Party
Chef du Nouveau Parti démocratique
IncumbentAvi Lewissince March 29, 2026
Party leader
New Democratic Party
Elected by members of the party
J. S. Woodsworth (CCF)Tommy Douglas (NDP)
August 1, 1932 (CCF)August 3, 1961 (NDP)
Deputy leader(s) of the New Democratic Party

The leader of the New Democratic Party (French: chef du Nouveau Parti démocratique) is the highest position in the New Democratic Party of Canada (NDP). Avi Lewis was elected as the ninth and current leader in the leadership election in March 2026.

The New Democratic Party was founded in 1961 following the merger of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) and the Canadian Labour Congress. Prior to the merger, the CCF had three leaders from its founding in 1932 until the 1961 merger, with J. S. Woodsworth serving as the CCF's first leader. Following Woodsworth's death in 1942, he was replaced by M. J. Coldwell, who led the party to their best electoral performance in 1945 by winning 28 seats.

Coldwell ended up losing his seat in the 1958 election leading to a party leadership crisis. Hazen Argue, the CCF member of Parliament for Assiniboia, was named the parliamentary leader due to Coldwell's absence from the House of Commons, however he continuously persuaded Coldwell to officially step down as leader. At the time, the CCF executives were in the process of transitioning their party into a new party with closer ties to organized labour, and wanted Tommy Douglas to become the party leader. This merger was something Argue opposed, and fearing that Argue's leadership would derail the merger, party president David Lewis tried to prevent Argue from initiating a leadership challenge during the 1960 CCF convention. This attempt was ultimately unsuccessful, and Coldwell resigned on August 10, 1960. The CCF caucus elected Argue as the new leader on the following day.

Despite the leadership crisis, the merger talks continued, and eventually culminated in the New Democratic Party founding convention in the summer of 1961. During the convention, the NDP was formally established on August 3, 1961. On the same day, Argue and Douglas ran against each other for the party leadership, with Douglas winning a landslide victory to become the first leader of the NDP. Argue left the party for the Liberals shortly afterwards.

The NDP's most successful leader was Jack Layton, who served as leader from 2004 to 2011, and led the NDP to a 103 seat result in the 2011 Canadian federal election. The NDP won the second-most seats in the House of Commons, and Layton became the first leader of the NDP to serve as the leader of the Official Opposition. However, his tenure as opposition leader was very short lived, as he died from cancer a few months later.

In the 2017 New Democratic Party leadership election, the party elected Jagmeet Singh, making him the first visible minority to lead a major Canadian federal political party. Singh, who was a member of the Ontario Provincial Parliament at the time, resigned his provincial seat and was first elected to the House of Commons on February 25, 2019 for the riding of Burnaby South.

According to the New Democratic Party's constitution, the leader of the NDP must be selected through a leadership election in-which all party members may vote. Each leadership election must use an instant-runoff voting system, where the new leader is elected once they receive 50%+1 of the votes cast in the final round of voting.

If the leadership position becomes vacant, the party's national council may appoint an interim leader until a leadership convention can be held. This has happened on two occasions, the appointment of Nycole Turmel as interim leader following the death of Jack Layton in 2011, and the appointment of Don Davies as interim leader following the resignation of Jagmeet Singh after the party's defeat in the 2025 Canadian federal election.

No.PortraitLeaderTenureRiding(s)Prime Minister(s) while leader
1J. S. Woodsworth(1874–1942)August 1, 1932March 21, 19429 years, 232 daysWinnipeg North Centre (1921–1925) Winnipeg Centre (1925–1942)Bennett (1930–1935) Conservative
King (1935–1948) Liberal
2M. J. Coldwell(1888–1974)July 29, 1942August 10, 196018 years, 12 daysRosetown—Biggar (1935–1958)
St. Laurent (1948–1957) Liberal
Diefenbaker (1957–1963) PC
3Hazen Argue(1921–1991)August 11, 1960August 2, 1961356 daysWood Mountain (1945–1949) Assiniboia (1949–1963)
No.PortraitLeaderTenureRiding(s)Prime Minister(s) while leader
1Tommy Douglas(1904–1986)August 3, 1961April 24, 19719 years, 264 daysBurnaby—Coquitlam (1962–1968) Nanaimo—Cowichan—The Islands (1969–1979)Diefenbaker (1957–1963) PC
Pearson (1963–1968) Liberal
P. Trudeau (1968–1979) Liberal
2David Lewis(1909–1981)April 24, 1971July 7, 19754 years, 74 daysYork South (1962–1963, 1965–1974)
3Ed Broadbent(1936–2024)July 7, 1975December 5, 198914 years, 151 daysOshawa–Whitby (1968–1979) Oshawa (1979–1990)
Clark (1979–1980) PC
P. Trudeau (1980–1984) Liberal
Turner (1984) Liberal
Mulroney (1984–1993) PC
4Audrey McLaughlin(b. 1936)December 5, 1989October 14, 19955 years, 313 daysYukon (1987–1997)
Campbell (1993) PC
Chrétien (1993–2003) Liberal
5Alexa McDonough(1944–2022)October 14, 1995January 25, 20037 years, 103 daysHalifax (1997–2008)
6Jack Layton(1950–2011)January 25, 2003August 22, 20118 years, 209 daysToronto–Danforth (2004–2011)
Martin (2003–2006) Liberal
Harper (2006–2015) Conservative
Nycole Turmel(interim leader)(b. 1942)August 22, 2011March 24, 2012215 daysHull—Aylmer (2011–2015)
7Tom Mulcair(b. 1954)March 24, 2012October 1, 20175 years, 191 daysOutremont (2007–2018)
J. Trudeau (2015–2025) Liberal
8Jagmeet Singh(b. 1979)October 1, 2017May 5, 20257 years, 216 daysBurnaby South (2019–2025)
Carney (2025–present) Liberal
Don Davies(interim leader)(b. 1963)May 5, 2025March 29, 2026328 daysVancouver Kingsway (since 2008)
9Avi Lewis(b. 1967)March 29, 2026Incumbent12 days
NDP deputy leaderTerm startTerm endRiding(s)NDP leaderNotes
Bill BlaikieAugust 1, 2004October 14, 2008Elmwood—TransconaJack Layton
Tom MulcairSeptember 27, 2007October 12, 2011OutremontJack LaytonNycole Turmel
Libby DaviesSeptember 27, 2007October 18, 2015Vancouver EastJack LaytonNycole TurmelTom Mulcair
Megan LeslieApril 19, 2012October 18, 2015HalifaxTom Mulcair
David ChristophersonApril 19, 2012March 11, 2019Hamilton CentreTom MulcairJagmeet Singh
Sheri BensonMarch 14, 2019October 20, 2019Saskatoon WestJagmeet Singh
Alexandre BoulericeMarch 14, 2019incumbentRosemont—La Petite-PatrieJagmeet SinghDon DaviesAvi Lewis
NDP house leaderTerm startTerm endRiding(s)Notes
Stanley KnowlesSeptember 1962September 3, 1984Winnipeg North Centre
Ian DeansSeptember 4, 1984September 3, 1986Hamilton MountainActing NDP house leader from 1981 to 1984
Nelson RiisSeptember 5, 1986January 11, 1994Kamloops—Shuswap (1980–1988) Kamloops (1988–2000)
Len TaylorJanuary 12, 1994January 10, 1996The Battlefords—Meadow Lake
Bill BlaikieJanuary 11, 1996February 5, 2003Winnipeg—Transcona
Libby DaviesFebruary 6, 2003May 25, 2011Vancouver East
Tom MulcairMay 26, 2011October 12, 2011OutremontOpposition House Leader
Joe ComartinOctober 13, 2011April 14, 2012Windsor—Tecumseh
Nathan CullenApril 19, 2012March 19, 2014Skeena—Bulkley Valley
Peter Julian (1 of 3)March 20, 2014October 18, 2016Burnaby—New Westminster (2004–2015) New Westminster—Burnaby (2015–2025)Opposition House Leader (March 20, 2014 to October 20, 2015)
Murray RankinOctober 19, 2016October 23, 2017Victoria
Peter Julian (2 of 3)October 24, 2017January 24, 2018New Westminster—Burnaby
Ruth Ellen BrosseauJanuary 25, 2018March 13, 2019Berthier—Maskinongé
Peter Julian (3 of 3)March 14, 2019April 28, 2025New Westminster—Burnaby
Alexandre BoulericeMay 28, 2025April 10, 2026Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie
Heather McPhersonApril 10, 2026IncumbentEdmonton Strathcona
NDP party whipsTerm startTerm endRiding(s)Notes
Stanley Knowles1962December 1972Winnipeg North Centre
William George KnightJanuary 3, 19731974Assiniboia
Lorne Edmund NystromJune 19741981Yorkton—Melville
Neil YoungOctober 1981October 28, 1984Beaches
Victor Fredrich AlthouseOctober 29, 1984September 4, 1986Humboldt—Lake Centre
Rodney Edward MurphySeptember 5, 1986January 21, 1990Churchill
Iain AngusJanuary 22, 1990October 24, 1993Thunder Bay—Atikokan
Christopher AxworthySeptember 6, 1994January 10, 1996Saskatoon—Clark's Crossing
John SolomonJanuary 11, 1996January 30, 2000Regina—Lumsden (1993–1997) Regina—Lumsden—Lake Centre (1997–2000)
Yvon GodinFebruary 1, 2000May 25, 2011Acadie—BathurstChief Opposition Whip(May 2–25, 2011)
Chris CharltonMay 26, 2011April 18, 2012Hamilton MountainChief Opposition Whip
Nycole TurmelApril 19, 2012November 11, 2015Hull—AylmerChief Opposition Whip
Marjolaine Boutin-SweetNovember 12, 2015March 13, 2019Hochelaga
Ruth Ellen BrosseauMarch 14, 2019October 20, 2019Berthier—Maskinongé
Rachel BlaneyNovember 26, 2019April 4, 2024North Island—Powell River
Heather McPhersonApril 5, 2024April 28, 2025Edmonton Strathcona
  • David Lewis (1961–1962)

  • Audrey McLaughlin (1995–1997)

  • Bill Blaikie (2003–2004)

  • Guy Caron (2017–2019)

  • Michael Kelway Oliver (1961–1963)

  • Merv Johnson (1963–1965)

  • Eamon Park (1965–1967)

  • James Renwick (1967–1969)

  • Allan Blakeney (1969–1971)

  • Donald C. MacDonald (1971–1975)

  • Joyce Nash (1975–1977)

  • Alvin Hewitt (1977–1981)

  • Tony Penikett (1981–1985)

  • Marion Dewar (1985–1987)

  • Johanna den Hertog (1987–1989)

  • Sandra Mitchell (1989–1991)

  • Nancy Riche (1991–1995)

  • Iain Angus (1995–1997)

  • Ed Tchorzewski (1997–1999)

  • Dave MacKinnon (c. 1999–2000)

  • Adam Giambrone (2001–2006)

  • Anne McGrath (2006–2009)

  • Peggy Nash (2009–2011)

  • Brian Topp (2011)

  • Rebecca Blaikie (2011–2016)

  • Marit Stiles (2016–2018)

  • Mathieu Vick (2018–2021)

  • Dhananjai Kohli (2021–2023)

  • Mary Shortall (2023–2026)

  • Niall Ricardo (2026–present)

  • Laurie Antonin (2023–2026)

  • Libby Davies (2026–present)

  • History of the New Democratic Party

  • New Democratic Party leadership elections

  • List of Canadian conservative leaders

  • Leader of the Liberal Party of Canada

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