Sunday marks exactly one year until the next federal election.

While the political sparring never stops on Parliament Hill, it’s begun to creep across the country. Parties have started to rally their troops in the form of nominated candidates (something iPolitics will be tracking until election day).

Here’s how each of the parties shapes up with one year to go.

The Conservatives

Opposition Leader Andrew Scheer will mark this Oct. 21 with a campaigning call to arms to volunteers and supporters in Ottawa. His Conservatives have been the fastest out of the gate this election period, having nominated 141 candidates by Oct. 19.

Here’s how the party’s nominations break down by province or territory for Team Blue:

Note: Conservative candidate figures are based on the party’s website and announcements posted on its Twitter.

The Liberals

The Liberals trail behind the official Opposition. Their 2019-branded class of candidates has been aptly branded “Team Trudeau,” since it’s made up almost entirely of current MPs. The prime minister is keeping busy attending nomination events, such as the one tonight in the riding of Northumberland—Peterborough South, where he’s throwing his support behind incumbent MP Kim Rudd. The Liberals have 65 nominated candidates for the 2019 election.

Note: Liberal candidate figures are based on information provided by the party and candidate nominations reported by iPolitics and other media.

The NDP

The NDP was slow out of the gate, failing to nominate a candidate aside from Leader Jagmeet Singh until this month.

Aside from Singh, the NDP only has four confirmed candidates in 2019. Those candidates are incumbent MPs Richard Cannings, Niki Ashton, Cheryl Hardcastle and Tracey Ramsey. Two of the party’s MPs, former leader Tom Mulcair and B.C. MP Kennedy Stewart, have left the party, while five incumbents have said they won’t be seeking re-election.

The five who are not seeking re-election are Linda Duncan, the NDP’s only Alberta MP, Ontario members Irene Mathyssen, who has been an MP for 12 years, and David Christopherson, who has sat in the House of Commons for 14 years, plus Quebec MPs Hélène Laverdière and Roméo Saganash, who have both served two terms.

The Greens

Just behind the NDP sits the Green Party. Leader Elizabeth May will compete for a seat in her fifth election in 2019. If she’s successful, it will be her third time elected as an MP.

The Green Party has three nominees for 2019: Amita Kuttner, David Merner and Claude Bertrand, so far. Merner ran for the Liberal Party in the last election.

The Leftovers

Maxime Bernier has repeatedly insisted that his upstart conservative movement, the People’s Party of Canada, will field 338 candidates in the next election. Bernier’s the party’s lone candidate at the moment.

Former NDP MP and current Independent Erin Weir hasn’t ruled out running again in 2019, but Singh has made it clear he will not be re-admitted to the party under his lead.

Two of the 10 Bloc Québécois MPs have declared they’ll seek re-election in 2019, but the party has not announced any other candidates.

With files from Kirsten Smith

Follow @CharliePinkerto