2021 Yukon general election

[citation needed] The final seat standing for the election was only resolved on April 19, 2021, because of a 78–78 vote tie in the Vuntut Gwitchin riding, the territory's smallest by population.

Bold indicates party leaders and cabinet members are italicized † - denotes a retiring incumbent MLA In Vuntut Gwitchin, both candidates each received 78 votes, resulting in a tie.

The Yukon Party and the Liberals, with 8 seats each, entered discussions with the NDP to determine support for a minority government.

[5] Following the tie vote in Vuntut Gwitchin, which declared NDP candidate Annie Blake as the winner following the drawing of lots, outgoing Liberal MLA Pauline Frost filed a legal challenge challenging the results; Frost initially claimed that two votes had been counted from the district that "should not have been cast.

"[16] Only one vote was actually formally challenged by Frost in court, on the grounds that as a prisoner in the Whitehorse Correctional Centre the voter should have registered to vote in Whitehorse rather than his home community; the challenge was rejected by Suzanne Duncan of the Supreme Court of Yukon in August, affirming Blake's victory.