Grande Prairie—Mackenzie, AB 2015 Federal Election Results Map

Grande Prairie—Mackenzie — 2015 Election Results

📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Grande Prairie—Mackenzie was contested in the 2015 election.

🏆 Chris Warkentin, the Conservative candidate, won the riding with 38,895 votes (72.9% of the vote).

🥈 The runner-up was Reagan Johnston (Liberal) with 7,819 votes (14.7%), defeated by a margin of 31,076 votes.

📊 Other notable candidates: Saba Mossagizi (NDP-New Democratic Party, 8%).

Riding information

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Grande Prairie—Mackenzie

Covering the northwestern corner of Alberta, Grande Prairie—Mackenzie stretches from the city of Grande Prairie north to the border with the Northwest Territories and west to the British Columbia boundary. The riding was created during the 2012 redistribution as northern Alberta, previously served by two ridings, was split into three. More than half of the riding's population lives in Grande Prairie, Alberta's seventh-largest city.

Candidates

Chris Warkentin (Conservative) — Born in Grande Prairie in 1978, Warkentin grew up on a family farm near DeBolt in the Municipal District of Greenview. He attended the Peace River Bible Institute and studied business and marketing at Grande Prairie Regional College before establishing a custom home building company. First elected in 2006 as MP for the former Peace River riding, he was re-elected in 2008 and 2011. During the 41st Parliament, he chaired the Aboriginal Affairs and Northern Development Committee and was appointed Parliamentary Secretary to the Minister of Public Works and Government Services in February 2015.

Saba Mossagizi (NDP) — A union representative, Mossagizi carried the NDP banner in a riding where the party's provincial breakthrough in May 2015 had generated some local interest but the federal Conservatives retained deep support.

Reagan Johnston (Liberal) — Johnston, who worked as a Volkswagen salesman in Grande Prairie, ran as the Liberal candidate in a riding where the party typically drew modest support.

James David Friesen (Green Party) and Dylan Thompson (Libertarian) also sought election.

About the Riding

Grande Prairie—Mackenzie encompasses a vast geographic area spanning boreal forest, aspen parkland, and prairie grassland. The Peace River, Smoky River, Hay River, and Chinchaga River flow through the riding. Grande Prairie itself experienced rapid population growth through the early 2010s, driven by oil and gas activity and its role as a service hub for the Peace Country. The city's economy blends energy sector services, agriculture, forestry, and retail. Beyond Grande Prairie, communities such as High Level, Rainbow Lake, Manning, Beaverlodge, and Fairview depend on a mix of farming, forestry, and oil and gas extraction. The riding contains roughly 13 percent of Alberta's cropland, and the northwest produces a significant share of the province's pulp, oriented strand board, and dimensional lumber. By 2015, falling oil prices had begun to dampen the energy sector, prompting concerns about employment and municipal infrastructure spending across the riding. Federal issues during the campaign included energy market access, pipeline approvals, agricultural trade policy, and support for rural and remote communities, including investments in highways and broadband connectivity.

Census Data (2016)

Population by Age & Sex

Residence Type

Income Distribution

Nearby Ridings