Prince Albert, SK 2019 Federal Election Results Map

Prince Albert — 2019 Election Results

📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Prince Albert was contested in the 2019 election.

🏆 Randy Hoback, the Conservative candidate, won the riding with 26,891 votes (67.7% of the vote).

🥈 The runner-up was Harmony Johnson-Harder (NDP-New Democratic Party) with 6,925 votes (17.4%), defeated by a margin of 19,966 votes.

📊 Other notable candidates: Estelle Hjertaas (Liberal, 10%).

Riding information

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Prince Albert

Centred on Saskatchewan's third-largest city, the Prince Albert riding sits at the transition zone between open prairie and the boreal forest. The city of Prince Albert, with a population of approximately 36,000, serves as the self-styled Gateway to the North—the last major service centre before the vast hinterland of mines, forests, and lakes that stretches to the territorial border. The riding extends north to include Candle Lake, Emma Lake, and portions of Prince Albert National Park.

Candidates

Randy Hoback (Conservative) — Born in Prince Albert and raised near Canwood, Hoback holds a business administration certificate from the University of Saskatchewan and a Chartered Director's designation from McMaster University. He spent fourteen years at farm machinery manufacturer Flexicoil, later acquired by Case New Holland, before purchasing the family farm in 2000. He chaired the Western Canadian Wheat Growers Association and first won election to Parliament in 2008.

Harmony Johnson-Harder (NDP) — Johnson-Harder was a community volunteer and coordinator in Prince Albert who decided to seek office after years of working with families facing economic hardship. She ran on NDP values rooted in Saskatchewan's CCF tradition and spoke about homelessness and support for marginalized residents in the Prince Albert area.

Estelle Hjertaas (Liberal) — A legal-aid lawyer in Prince Albert, Hjertaas studied history and political science at McGill University before earning her law degree at the University of Ottawa. She spent years with Legal Aid Saskatchewan representing youth and adults and travelling with the Cree circuit court to serve Indigenous communities. She also co-founded the local chapter of the Dolly Parton Imagination Library in Prince Albert.

Kerri Wall (Green Party) — Wall worked in municipal planning and healthy public policy. Born and raised in Saskatoon, she brought the Green platform to a riding where resource management and environmental stewardship intersected with the local economy.

Kelly Day (People's Party) and Brian Littlepine (VCP) also stood as candidates.

About the Riding

Prince Albert sits on the banks of the North Saskatchewan River and has historically served as the commercial and administrative gateway to the province's northern resource economy. Forestry, including pulp and lumber operations, and mining activity in the broader region provide significant employment. Prince Albert National Park, covering nearly 3,900 square kilometres of aspen parkland and boreal forest, supports a seasonal tourism and hospitality economy around the resort village of Waskesiu Lake. Several First Nations, including James Smith Cree Nation, Muskoday First Nation, Sturgeon Lake First Nation, and Montreal Lake Cree Nation, fall within or near the riding, giving Indigenous issues—housing, education, clean drinking water—particular prominence. The riding holds a distinctive place in Canadian political history: it was represented by two Prime Ministers, William Lyon Mackenzie King from 1926 to 1945 and John Diefenbaker from 1953 to 1979. In 2019, the carbon tax, trade agreements affecting agricultural exports, and broadband connectivity in rural areas all featured in local debate.

Census Data (2016)

Population by Age & Sex

Residence Type

Income Distribution

Nearby Ridings