The Liberals won University-Rosedale riding by a wide majority.
Danielle Martin garnered 17,823 or 64.4 per cent of the vote after 146 polls of 153 reported.
The New Democrats got about 5,000 votes coming in second place.
Conservative Don Hodgson got about 3,500 votes or about 12.8 per cent.
The last election the NDP only got 9.9 per cent.
It appears half of the conservative voters vanished, from 23.5 per cent to 12.8 per cent.
The riding's previous Liberal representative was cabinet minister Chrystia Freeland since the riding's inception in 2015. She now has a non-paid role as an economic advisor to Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky. Freeland will also have a lead role at the Rhodes Trust, an educational charity in the U.K.
According to an aggregate survey done by 338Canada, the Liberals have a 99 per cent chance of winning the riding.
The Liberal candidate, Danielle Martin, is a family physician and health care advocate.
Both the Conservatives and the New Democrats have less than one per cent chance to win the byelection.
The Conservative candidate, Hodgson, is a business owner and works in the mortgage industry.
The NDP candidate, Purdy, is a health systems scholar and researcher at the University of Toronto Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation.
There are 93,971 registered voters in the riding and and about 30 per cent turned out to vote.
Thirty-six per cent of the 123,812 people who live in the riding have a bachelor's degree, while 31 per cent of the voters have a postgraduate degree.
Fifty-six per cent of the voters identify as non-visible minorities, and 46 per cent reported as visible minorities.
The 2021 Canada Census said 59 per cent of the riding's voters are renters, and 40 per cent own their homes.
