Regina—Qu'Appelle , SK — 2015 Federal Election Results Map
Regina—Qu'Appelle — 2015 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Regina—Qu'Appelle was contested in the 2015 election.
🏆 Andrew Scheer, the Conservative candidate, won the riding with 16,486 votes (44.7% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Nial Kuyek (NDP-New Democratic Party) with 11,144 votes (30.2%), defeated by a margin of 5,342 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Della Anaquod (Liberal, 23%).
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Regina—Qu'Appelle
Regina—Qu'Appelle is a mixed urban-rural riding that takes in the northeastern quarter of Regina and extends eastward through the Qu'Appelle Valley into the farming communities and small towns of southeastern Saskatchewan. The riding's territory runs from the Mosaic Stadium area and north Regina through Pilot Butte and White City to the towns of Fort Qu'Appelle, Indian Head, Balcarres, and beyond.
Candidates
Andrew Scheer (Conservative) — First elected in the riding in 2004 at age 25, defeating NDP incumbent Lorne Nystrom, Scheer held a Bachelor of Arts in history, political science, and criminology from the University of Ottawa. He served as Assistant Deputy Chair of Committees of the Whole from 2006 to 2008, then as Deputy Speaker from 2008 to 2011, before being elected Speaker of the House of Commons in June 2011 — making him the youngest Speaker in Canadian parliamentary history at age 32. He held that non-partisan role throughout the 41st Parliament.
Nial Kuyek (NDP) — Kuyek was the former general manager of the Agricultural Producers Association of Saskatchewan. Raised on a farm and a resident of Regina for 35 years by 2015, he campaigned on agricultural issues including rail service improvements, the reopening of the Indian Head Tree Nursery, and increased affordable housing investment.
Della Anaquod (Liberal) — An education administrator, Anaquod served as a board member of the First Nations University of Canada. She appeared alongside Liberal leader Justin Trudeau during a campaign stop in Regina.
Greg Chatterson (Green Party) — Chatterson represented the Green Party in a riding where the Conservatives held a strong incumbency advantage.
About the Riding
The Qu'Appelle Valley, a glacially carved channel running roughly east-west across the riding, is one of Saskatchewan's most scenic landscapes, containing a chain of lakes — Echo, Mission, Katepwa, and Crooked — that serve as popular cottage and recreation destinations. Fort Qu'Appelle, situated between Echo and Mission Lakes, was historically a fur trading post and the site of the signing of Treaty 4 in 1874. The town of Indian Head, population roughly 1,800, was home to the federal PFRA Tree Nursery, which had operated since 1901 distributing millions of seedlings to prairie farmers for shelterbelts before the Harper government announced its closure in 2012 — a decision that became a campaign issue. Within Regina, the riding includes the city's North Central neighbourhood and areas around Evraz Place, the exhibition and event grounds. Several First Nations reserves fall within or adjacent to the riding's boundaries, including Piapot, Standing Buffalo, and Muscowpetung. The riding encompasses a mix of agricultural economies, Indigenous communities, and suburban growth areas east of Regina, where White City and Pilot Butte experienced rapid population increases.





