Prince Albert , SK — 2015 Federal Election Results Map
Prince Albert — 2015 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Prince Albert was contested in the 2015 election.
🏆 Randy Hoback, the Conservative candidate, won the riding with 19,673 votes (49.8% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Lon Borgerson (NDP-New Democratic Party) with 11,244 votes (28.5%), defeated by a margin of 8,429 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Gordon Kirkby (Liberal, 20%).
Riding information
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Situated in the central part of the province where the open prairie transitions into the boreal forest, the Prince Albert riding covers roughly 15,000 square kilometres stretching from Birch Hills and MacDowall in the south to Candle Lake, Emma Lake, and Prince Albert National Park in the north. The city of Prince Albert, with a population of approximately 35,000, anchors the riding as Saskatchewan's third-largest city and the self-styled Gateway to the North.
Candidates
Randy Hoback (Conservative) — First elected in 2008, Hoback earned a business administration certificate from the University of Saskatchewan and a Chartered Director's designation from McMaster University. Before entering politics, he spent fourteen years at farm machinery manufacturers Flexicoil and Case New Holland, then purchased and operated the family farm in 2000. He also served as chairman of the Western Canadian Wheat Growers Association.
Lon Borgerson (NDP) — A retired educator with 36 years of experience as a teacher, principal, and director of education, Borgerson had previously served as the NDP member of the Saskatchewan Legislative Assembly for Saskatchewan Rivers from 2003 to 2007. He had worked extensively with First Nations students through the SUNTEP teacher training program in Prince Albert.
Gordon Kirkby (Liberal) — Kirkby had served as mayor of Prince Albert from 1988 to 1993 before winning the federal riding of Prince Albert—Churchill River as a Liberal in 1993. He served as Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Justice and Attorney General of Canada from 1996 to 1997 before losing his seat. He returned to Prince Albert and established a law practice, from which he launched his 2015 comeback bid.
Byron Tenkink (Green Party) — Tenkink represented the Green Party, bringing the party's platform to a riding where resource management and environmental stewardship resonated with some voters.
About the Riding
Prince Albert sits on the banks of the North Saskatchewan River and has historically served as the commercial and administrative gateway for northern Saskatchewan's resource economy. The forestry sector, centred on pulp and lumber operations, provides significant employment alongside mining activity in the broader region. Prince Albert National Park, established in 1927 and covering nearly 3,900 square kilometres of aspen parkland and boreal forest, draws tourists and supports a seasonal hospitality economy around the resort community of Waskesiu Lake. The riding includes several First Nations communities, among them James Smith Cree Nation, Muskoday First Nation, Sturgeon Lake First Nation, and Montreal Lake Cree Nation, giving Indigenous issues — housing, education, clean drinking water, and self-governance — particular prominence in local political debate. The city itself grappled with above-average unemployment and poverty rates compared to provincial averages, and the closure or curtailment of forestry operations in the preceding years had added to economic anxiety. Agricultural operations, particularly grain and cattle, remain important in the riding's southern sections.





