Regina—Qu'Appelle, SK — 2019 Federal Election Results Map
Regina—Qu'Appelle — 2019 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Regina—Qu'Appelle was contested in the 2019 election.
🏆 Andrew Scheer, the Conservative candidate, won the riding with 24,463 votes (63.1% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Ray Aldinger (NDP-New Democratic Party) with 7,685 votes (19.8%), defeated by a margin of 16,778 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Jordan Ames-Sinclair (Liberal, 12%).
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Regina—Qu'Appelle
Regina—Qu'Appelle combines the northeastern quarter of the provincial capital with a vast stretch of prairie that extends into the Qu'Appelle Valley. Beyond Regina's city limits, the riding takes in the fast-growing bedroom communities of White City, Pilot Butte, and Balgonie before reaching the resort town of Fort Qu'Appelle, nestled between Echo and Mission Lakes some 70 kilometres to the northeast. The Qu'Appelle Valley—a dramatic channel carved by glacial meltwater roughly 14,000 years ago—defines much of the riding's landscape and recreational character.
Candidates
Andrew Scheer (Conservative) — Leader of the Conservative Party of Canada and Leader of the Official Opposition, Scheer first won the riding in 2004 at age 25, unseating long-serving NDP incumbent Lorne Nystrom. He earned a Bachelor of Arts in history, political science, and criminology and was elected Speaker of the House of Commons in 2011 at age 32, making him the youngest person to hold that office in Canadian history. He won the party leadership on the thirteenth ballot in May 2017.
Ray Aldinger (NDP) — A corrections worker with more than 29 years of experience in adult and youth corrections in Saskatchewan, Aldinger grew up in Central Texas and Germany before settling in Regina. He attended Central Texas College and ran against the Conservative leader in a riding that attracted national attention.
Jordan Ames-Sinclair (Liberal) — A 19-year-old business student at the University of Regina from Sakimay First Nation, Ames-Sinclair had been involved with the Liberal Party since age 14. He was among the youngest candidates in the country during the 2019 campaign.
Dale Dewar (Green Party) — Dewar was a rural physician and associate professor of family medicine at the University of Saskatchewan.
Tracey Sparrowhawk (People's Party), James Plummer (Libertarian), Kieran Szuchewycz (Independent), and Eric Normand (Rhinoceros Party) also ran.
About the Riding
The urban portion of Regina—Qu'Appelle captures northeastern Regina neighbourhoods that have seen steady residential growth, along with the suburban communities east of the city that increasingly function as commuter satellites. White City and Pilot Butte have both experienced rapid population growth as young families seek affordable housing within driving distance of Regina's employment centres. Beyond the suburban fringe, cereal grain, canola, and pulse-crop farming blankets the riding's eastern and northern sections. The Qu'Appelle Valley's chain of lakes—Echo, Mission, Pasqua, and Katepwa—support a tourism and cottage economy, while Fort Qu'Appelle serves as both a recreational hub and a service centre for surrounding First Nations communities, including Piapot, Standing Buffalo Dakota, and Muscowpetung. Fort Qu'Appelle was historically the site of the signing of Treaty 4 in 1874. As the home riding of the Conservative leader, the constituency attracted heightened national media scrutiny throughout the 2019 campaign.





