Souris—Moose Mountain, SK — 2019 Federal Election Results Map
Souris—Moose Mountain — 2019 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Souris—Moose Mountain was contested in the 2019 election.
🏆 Robert Kitchen, the Conservative candidate, won the riding with 35,067 votes (84.4% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Ashlee Hicks (NDP-New Democratic Party) with 3,214 votes (7.7%), defeated by a margin of 31,853 votes.
Riding information
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Souris--Moose Mountain occupies the southeast corner of Saskatchewan, a vast expanse of prairie stretching from the Manitoba border westward to the communities of Weyburn and Assiniboia. The riding runs south to the American border and north toward the Qu'Appelle River valley, covering roughly 41,000 square kilometres of farmland, oil country, and small towns, with Estevan and Weyburn serving as its principal cities.
Candidates
Robert Kitchen (Conservative) — Born in England while his father, a major general in the Canadian Armed Forces, was stationed overseas, Kitchen grew up in multiple countries before settling in Saskatchewan. He earned a bachelor of science in kinesiology from the University of Waterloo and a doctor of chiropractic degree from the Canadian Memorial Chiropractic College, then completed a two-year specialty fellowship in chiropractic clinical sciences, including a residency at Royal University Hospital in Saskatoon. He operated a chiropractic clinic in Estevan for approximately 26 years and served as registrar of the Chiropractors' Association of Saskatchewan. First elected in 2015, he sought a second term.
Ashlee Hicks (NDP) — A member of the Cowessess First Nation, Hicks had roots in the Broadview area before relocating to Saskatoon. She campaigned on the NDP platform's commitments to universal pharmacare, dental care, and affordable child care.
Javin Ames-Sinclair (Liberal) — A student at the University of Regina's Campion College majoring in psychology, Ames-Sinclair is a member of the Zagime Anishinabek (formerly Sakimay First Nation). Born and raised in Regina, he was drawn to the Liberal Party's positions on Indigenous self-government and climate policy.
Phillip Zajac (People's Party) — Zajac ran under the People's Party banner, advocating for reduced government spending and greater individual liberty in a riding dominated by resource-sector concerns.
Judy Mergel (Green Party) — Mergel represented the Green Party, bringing environmental stewardship issues to the campaign in a resource-dependent region.
Travis Patron ran under the banner of the Canadian Nationalist Party.
About the Riding
The economy of Souris--Moose Mountain is built on natural resources and agriculture. Estevan, situated atop the Williston Basin in the riding's south, serves as a hub for oil and gas extraction and is home to SaskPower's Boundary Dam Power Station, the province's largest coal-fired generating facility and the site of a pioneering carbon capture and storage project that attracted international attention. Weyburn functions as a major agricultural service centre, with large volumes of grain passing through its terminals each year, making it one of Canada's largest inland grain-gathering points. Potash mining operations around Rocanville, operated by companies including Nutrien, add another industrial pillar.
Agriculture spans the riding, from cattle ranching in the south to cereal crops and pulse farming across some of Saskatchewan's most productive land. Moose Mountain Provincial Park draws summer visitors for camping and recreation. The riding had weathered the 2014-2016 commodity price downturn, which brought job losses to the Estevan area energy sector and renewed debate over the long-term trajectory of coal-fired power generation. Federal issues in 2019 centred on pipeline policy, carbon pricing, agricultural trade, and rural infrastructure investment.





