Battlefords—Lloydminster, SK — 2019 Federal Election Results Map
Battlefords—Lloydminster — 2019 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Battlefords—Lloydminster was contested in the 2019 election.
🏆 Rosemarie Falk, the Conservative candidate, won the riding with 28,030 votes (78.3% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Marcella Pedersen (NDP-New Democratic Party) with 4,098 votes (11.4%), defeated by a margin of 23,932 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Larry Ingram (Liberal, 7%).
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Battlefords—Lloydminster
Battlefords—Lloydminster covers a large area of west-central Saskatchewan, stretching from the twin cities of North Battleford and Battleford eastward and westward to the Saskatchewan side of Lloydminster, a city that uniquely straddles the Alberta border. The riding also takes in the communities of Unity and Kindersley along with numerous small rural towns and First Nations reserves.
Candidates
Rosemarie Falk (Conservative) — Born and raised in Lloydminster, Falk holds a Bachelor of Social Work from the University of Calgary and worked as a registered social worker and legal assistant before entering politics. She won a December 2017 by-election following the resignation of long-serving MP Gerry Ritz and entered the 2019 campaign as the incumbent.
Marcella Pedersen (NDP) — A certified reflexologist from the Cut Knife area, Pedersen was involved in farming and beekeeping and had been a long-time NDP activist in the riding.
Larry Ingram (Liberal) — A small-business owner born and raised in Turtleford, Ingram is a journeyman sheet metal worker who has built, repaired, and restored barns, homes, schools, and heritage buildings across the region. He served as a councillor for the Rural Municipality of Mervin and as a local school board trustee. The 2019 campaign marked his third consecutive run as the Liberal candidate in the riding.
Jason MacInnis (People's Party) and David Kim-Cragg (Green Party) also sought election. MacInnis, originally from the Niagara region, operated a tax consulting and legal process serving business in North Battleford.
About the Riding
The riding's economy is built on two pillars: agriculture and energy. The fertile black-soil belt around the Battlefords supports large-scale canola, wheat, and pulse crop operations, while the Lloydminster corridor is home to heavy crude oil extraction and the Husky Energy upgrader on the Saskatchewan side of the border city. Lloydminster itself is a geographic curiosity — founded in 1903 by the Barr Colonists from Britain, it was bisected when Alberta and Saskatchewan became separate provinces in 1905, and its two halves were amalgamated in 1930 under shared jurisdiction. North Battleford serves as a regional hub for health care, retail, and government services. The riding has a notable Indigenous population, with several First Nations reserves within its boundaries and Cree widely spoken. Federal issues in 2019 centred on pipeline access, carbon pricing, agricultural trade policy, and the sustainability of rural health-care and education services.





