Prince George—Peace River—Northern Rockies, BC — 2019 Federal Election Results Map
Prince George—Peace River—Northern Rockies — 2019 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Prince George—Peace River—Northern Rockies was contested in the 2019 election.
🏆 Bob Zimmer, the Conservative candidate, won the riding with 38,473 votes (69.8% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Mavis Erickson (Liberal) with 6,391 votes (11.6%), defeated by a margin of 32,082 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Marcia Luccock (NDP-New Democratic Party, 9%) and Catharine Kendall (Green Party, 6%).
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Prince George—Peace River—Northern Rockies
Prince George—Peace River—Northern Rockies is one of Canada's largest federal ridings by area, spanning the northeastern quadrant of British Columbia from the northern half of Prince George to the Yukon and Alberta borders. The district covers an enormous territory of boreal forest, river valleys, Rocky Mountain foothills, and prairie-like Peace River country. Major communities include parts of Prince George, the province's largest northern city; Fort St. John, the hub of the oil and gas sector; Dawson Creek, which marks Mile Zero of the Alaska Highway; Fort Nelson; Tumbler Ridge; Mackenzie; and Chetwynd.
Candidates
Bob Zimmer (Conservative) — The incumbent MP since 2011, Zimmer was born in Dawson Creek and raised in Fort St. John. He worked as a welder's assistant in the oil industry before earning a degree in human kinetics from Trinity Western University, where he also coached varsity rugby, and obtaining a teaching certification from UBC. He taught school in Fort St. John for seven years before entering politics.
Mavis Erickson (Liberal) — A Prince George lawyer, Erickson served two terms as Tribal Chief of the Carrier Sekani Tribal Council. She held three degrees, including a Master of Law from Harvard Law School, and was known as an advocate for missing and murdered women. She officially launched her campaign in September 2019.
Marcia Luccock (NDP) — A registered psychiatric nurse and registered nurse, Luccock taught psychiatric nursing and pathophysiology at Kwantlen Polytechnic University in the Lower Mainland.
Catharine Kendall (Green Party) — A Prince George resident and owner of Magenta Mare Consulting, Kendall had spent twenty years in community development work across northern British Columbia. She focused her campaign on climate change and agricultural policy.
Ron Vaillant also ran for the People's Party of Canada.
About the Riding
The oil and natural gas industry dominates the Peace River region's economy. The Montney Formation, one of North America's most productive unconventional gas plays, underlies much of the riding east of the Rocky Mountains, with Fort St. John and Dawson Creek serving as the logistical centres for hundreds of drilling and pipeline operations. The Site C dam, a massive BC Hydro hydroelectric project on the Peace River near Fort St. John, was under active construction heading into the 2019 election, employing thousands but also generating debate over costs and environmental impacts. Forestry anchors the economy around Prince George, which is home to pulp mills and sawmills and serves as the service centre for BC's central Interior. The University of Northern British Columbia, established in 1990, is a major employer and educational institution for the north. Tumbler Ridge hosts significant coal mining operations in the Rocky Mountain foothills. The riding's vast geography creates persistent challenges for health care access and transportation — residents of Fort Nelson, for instance, face journeys of more than a thousand kilometres to reach specialist care in Vancouver. Highway safety, particularly along the Alaska Highway and Highway 97, was a perennial concern.





