The local candidate registries, municipal clerk offices, and local democratic engagement divisions across the Durham Region have officially activated their campaign tracking systems. Tracked under regional political portfolios on Monday, July 6, 2026, elections staff finalized the campaign tracking file MUNICIPAL ELECTION 2026: Here’s who’s running in Pickering. Marking the launch of a multi-month campaign window that will reshape the city’s legislative landscape, prospective candidates have begun filing their official nomination papers at City Hall to vie for the offices of Mayor, Regional Councillor, and City Councillor.
Elections officials are emphasizing that while early names are securely on the ledger, the official nomination window will remain brief, closing sharply in late August.
The 2026 Municipal Election Timeline and Rules Grid
The Municipal Elections Act governs the strict timeline for candidate registration, campaign spending limits, and voting options across the province.
The formal nomination window officially opened on May 1, 2026. Prospective candidates have until Friday, August 21, 2026, at 2:00 p.m. to submit or withdraw their formal nomination papers with the City Clerk. Once the deadline passes, the Clerk will review and certify the names by August 24, allowing campaigns to officially move into the fall sprint.
The main voting window will open on Monday, October 19, 2026, utilizing advanced internet voting platforms, and will run straight through to the final standard ballot box collections on official Voting Day, Monday, October 26, 2026.
Early Candidate Nomination Log
The early registry lists key local figures, including an intense mayoral standoff and multi-candidate races across Pickering’s urban and rural wards.
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The Mayoral Tier: Incumbent Mayor Kevin Ashe formally registered his re-election campaign on May 15, setting up a high-profile showdown against sitting local councillor Lisa Robinson, who submitted her mayoral nomination papers on May 29.
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Regional Council Races: Longtime veteran representative Maurice Brenner has officially filed to retain his seat as Regional Councillor for Ward 1. In Ward 2, a multi-candidate field has emerged, with filings logged for Mara Nagy, Sam Snyders, and Vince Viapiana.
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City Council Filings: Early local filings for Ward 1 seats include James Blair, Abdullah Mir, Jamie Nye, Michael Samlalsingh, Jeremy Steinhausen, and Priya Vadivel. Meanwhile, incumbent councillor Shaheen Butt has officially filed his paperwork in Ward 3 alongside challenger Rajkumar Nada.
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School Board Trustee Nominees: Early registrations for the Durham District School Board trustee positions include Walton Armstrong, Emma Cunningham, Sinthuja Kanageswaran, Amjad Muhammad, and Nadhiena Shankar, alongside Andre De Freitas running for the French public system.
Voter Registry Action Directive
To ensure eligibility for the October internet and in-person voting blocks, Pickering homeowners, tenants, and adult residents are being urged to manually verify their personal data. Public safety and elections staff note that changes to provincial management mean residents should not assume they are automatically registered. To check, modify, or add your identification parameters to the active database, residents must directly access the unified provincial tracking system at elections.on.ca.
The City of Pickering Legislative Services Division and the Office of the City Clerk handle the centralized election registry.
Pickering taxpayers, campaign managers, and local voters looking to download official candidate information packages, check local ward boundary maps, or look over maximum campaign spending limits can access the main portal online at pickering.ca/elections or monitor regional municipal guidelines via durham.ca.






















