Toronto, Aug. 20 -- Toronto Canada's parliament will have a familiar figure back as Conservative Party leader Pierre Poilievre was elected to the House of Commons from a rural constituency in the province of Alberta in a by-election on Monday. Poilievre comfortably won the contest for Battle River-Crowfoot over his rivals. Within an hour of ballots being cast, Canadian networks projected that Poilievre had swept to victory with his closest rival, independent candidate Bonnie Critchley garnering a fraction of his level of support. The trend became obvious once polls closed on Monday evening and the first results trickled in as Poilievre appeared to be cruising with over 80% of the vote share. Advance polls for the by-election witnessed a higher turnout than the Federal election this year, with 220 more voters turning out. He was trying to regain a seat in parliament after suffering a shock defeat from Carleton in Ontario in the April Federal election. He lost to Liberal Party's Bruce Fanjoy by over a 4% margin. Poilievre had represented Carleton in the House since 2015. While Battle River-Crowfoot is considered a safe Conservative seat in rural Alberta, the high-profile nature of the by-election, resulted in a spike in early voter turnout. The riding spans over 52,000 square kilometres, an area larger than the northern Indian state of Punjab. Poilievre will face off against Prime Minister Mark Carney in parliament for the first time when it resumes sitting in mid-September. Andrew Scheer was serving as the interim leader of the principal opposition party in the House. In a release on Wednesday, Elections Canada said 14,454 voters participated in the advanced polls. Conservative candidate Damien Kurek swept to victory with nearly 83% of the vote share in the Federal election, but later resigned so Poilievre could be re-elected to the House. Poilievre's leadership will be reviewed by the party in January next year, after the Conservatives squandered a double-digit lead they enjoyed till the end of December 2024, and couldn't even emerge as the single largest group in the House....