Calgary Confederation, AB — 2019 Federal Election Results Map
Calgary Confederation — 2019 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Calgary Confederation was contested in the 2019 election.
🏆 Len Webber, the Conservative candidate, won the riding with 36,312 votes (55.1% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Jordan Stein (Liberal) with 14,908 votes (22.6%), defeated by a margin of 21,404 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Gurcharan Singh Sidhu (NDP-New Democratic Party, 11%) and Natalie Odd (Green Party, 9%).
Riding information
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Calgary Confederation occupies a broad arc of Calgary's northwest, stretching from neighbourhoods near the University of Calgary northward past Nose Hill Park into the suburbs of Beddington Heights and Huntington Hills. Created in 2012 from portions of Calgary Centre-North, Calgary West, and Calgary--Nose Hill, the riding takes in communities such as Varsity, Dalhousie, Brentwood, Silver Springs, Hawkwood, Ranchlands, and Banff Trail.
Candidates
Len Webber (Conservative) — Born in Calgary, Webber earned a bachelor of commerce from the University of Calgary and a journeyman communications-electrician certificate from SAIT. He ran his own electrical contracting company for a decade and later served as vice-president of the Webber Academy, a private preparatory school founded by his father, Dr. Neil Webber, a former Alberta cabinet minister. He represented Calgary-Foothills in the Alberta Legislature from 2004 to 2014, holding cabinet portfolios in International and Intergovernmental Affairs and Aboriginal Relations. He left the provincial PC caucus in 2014 in protest and was first elected federally in 2015.
Jordan Stein (Liberal) — A Calgarian who had attended the University of Calgary, Stein won the Liberal nomination over two competitors. She had previously run as the provincial NDP candidate in Calgary-Glenmore in the 2019 Alberta election, finishing second.
Gurcharan Singh Sidhu (NDP) — Sidhu carried the NDP banner in Calgary Confederation, running on the party's national platform of pharmacare, dental care, and housing affordability.
Natalie Odd (Green Party) — Odd represented the Green Party in a riding where Nose Hill Park and urban green space gave environmental issues local relevance. She had also run for the Greens in the riding in 2015.
Colin Korol (People's Party) — Korol represented the People's Party, campaigning on fiscal conservatism and individual liberty.
Tim Moen ran for the Libertarian Party and Kevan Hunter for the Marxist-Leninist Party.
About the Riding
Calgary Confederation is predominantly suburban and residential, its character shaped by neighbourhoods built from the 1960s through the 1990s alongside newer developments on the city's expanding northwestern edge. The southern portion, near the University of Calgary, has a university-town feel in Varsity, Brentwood, and Banff Trail, with a transient student population, rental housing, and a strip of restaurants and shops along University Drive. Moving north, the riding transitions into the mature, family-oriented suburbs of Dalhousie, Silver Springs, and Hawkwood, populated by long-tenured homeowners.
Nose Hill Park, one of the largest urban parks in North America at over 11 square kilometres of native fescue grassland and glacial erratics, is the riding's most prominent natural landmark, offering panoramic views of the Rocky Mountain front range. The park serves as a recreational anchor for surrounding communities.
The riding's residents are ethnically diverse, with growing South Asian, Filipino, and Chinese communities particularly in the northern neighbourhoods of Beddington Heights and Huntington Hills. Many residents commute to downtown Calgary or to energy-sector offices along the Deerfoot corridor. Federal issues in 2019 included economic diversification amid continued energy-sector uncertainty, transit expansion, aging suburban infrastructure, and affordability for young families.





