Red Deer—Mountain View, AB — 2019 Federal Election Results Map
Red Deer—Mountain View — 2019 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Red Deer—Mountain View was contested in the 2019 election.
🏆 Earl Dreeshen, the Conservative candidate, won the riding with 54,765 votes (80.3% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Logan Garbanewski (NDP-New Democratic Party) with 4,946 votes (7.3%), defeated by a margin of 49,819 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Gary Tremblay (Liberal, 6%).
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Red Deer--Mountain View
Red Deer--Mountain View covers the southern half of the city of Red Deer and extends south through Mountain View County and Red Deer County, taking in the towns of Innisfail, Olds, Didsbury, Carstairs, Bowden, Sundre, and Cremona. The riding straddles the transition from urban commercial centre to foothills ranch country, with the Rocky Mountains visible along the western horizon.
Candidates
Earl Dreeshen (Conservative) -- A farmer and former physics and mathematics teacher with 34 years in the classroom, Dreeshen was first elected as MP for the former Red Deer riding in 2008. Following redistribution, he transitioned to Red Deer--Mountain View in 2015 and continued to manage his family farm alongside his parliamentary duties. He sought his fourth consecutive term in 2019.
Logan Garbanewski (NDP) -- A 21-year-old education student at Red Deer College who also worked as a night manager at a downtown Red Deer McDonald's, Garbanewski volunteered with the college's student ambassador leadership program. He was a first-time candidate who hoped to bring a younger perspective to the race.
Gary Tremblay (Liberal) -- An insurance broker from Calgary, Tremblay stepped up as the Liberal candidate when the originally selected local candidate withdrew. He served as chair of the Liberal riding association in Calgary-Shepard and campaigned on supporting middle-class families and investing in rail connectivity between Calgary and Edmonton.
Paul Mitchell (People's Party) -- An entrepreneur from Didsbury, Mitchell had previously worked on Parliament Hill as the Reform Party's foreign affairs researcher in the mid-1990s. He campaigned on pipeline construction, equalization reform, and increased healthcare funding for Alberta.
Conner Borle (Green Party) -- A Grade 9 math and science teacher at Notre Dame School in Red Deer, Borle was drawn to the Green platform's proposals for electoral reform and transitioning Alberta to a sustainable economy.
About the Riding
Red Deer, Alberta's third-largest city with a population of approximately 100,000, sits at the midpoint of the Calgary-Edmonton corridor along Highway 2 and serves as the commercial and service hub for central Alberta. The southern half of the city contained within this riding includes the downtown core, Red Deer Regional Hospital Centre, and the city's post-secondary campuses. Red Deer College provides a range of applied and academic programs that draw students from across the region.
Beyond the city limits, cattle ranching, grain farming, and mixed agriculture dominate the landscape. Mountain View County encompasses nearly 13,000 residents spread across rangeland and cropland. Olds is home to Olds College, a polytechnic institution with national recognition in agriculture and technology programs and an early Canadian leader in municipal broadband infrastructure through its community-owned fibre network. Innisfail functions as a supply and service centre for the surrounding farming district and hosts the Innisfail Auction Mart, one of the region's busiest livestock exchanges.
Sundre and Cremona, at the riding's western edge, sit in the foothills and attract visitors for outdoor recreation along the Red Deer River. Oil and gas activity has historically supplemented agricultural income throughout the constituency, with pipelines, well sites, and service companies providing employment across the rural portions. The prolonged energy sector downturn that began in 2014 reduced drilling activity and pipeline construction, leaving some communities with fewer jobs and lower municipal tax revenues. Healthcare access was a persistent concern, with the Red Deer Regional Hospital Centre serving a catchment area far larger than the city itself and rural communities facing ongoing challenges in recruiting family physicians. Federal issues during the 2019 campaign included pipeline approvals, carbon pricing, agricultural trade, healthcare funding, and infrastructure investment for growing communities along the Calgary-Edmonton corridor.





