Winnipeg South, MB — 2021 Federal Election Results Map
Winnipeg South — 2021 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Winnipeg South was contested in the 2021 election.
🏆 Terry Duguid, the Liberal candidate, won the riding with 22,423 votes (47.5% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Melanie Maher (Conservative) with 15,967 votes (33.8%), defeated by a margin of 6,456 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Aiden Kahanovitch (NDP, 14%).
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Winnipeg South
Winnipeg South encompasses the southernmost portion of Manitoba's capital, a largely suburban constituency of residential neighbourhoods, shopping centres, parks, and institutional campuses. The riding stretches from the Fort Garry area—home to the University of Manitoba's main campus—southward to the Perimeter Highway and beyond, taking in Fort Richmond, Waverley Heights, Richmond West, Whyte Ridge, and portions of St. Norbert along the Red River. It is a riding of established middle-class and upper-middle-class households, with tree-lined streets, newer subdivisions, and proximity to both the university and several of Winnipeg's major commercial corridors along Pembina Highway.
Candidates
Terry Duguid (Liberal) — Born in Winnipeg to a family with deep sporting roots—his father Don Duguid was a professional curler—Duguid holds a Bachelor of Science in biology and a Master's degree in environmental science. He served on Winnipeg City Council from 1989 to 1995, where he helped create the city's blue-box recycling program, and later chaired the Manitoba Clean Environment Commission. He was president and CEO of Gateway North International, working to secure a future for the rail line to the Port of Churchill, and served as founding executive in various eco-business ventures. First elected to the House of Commons in 2015, Duguid has served in roles spanning environment, sport, and prairie economic development.
Melanie Maher (Conservative) — Maher is a Winnipeg resident who ran as the Conservative candidate in Winnipeg South in the 2021 election. She describes herself as a military family member and community advocate.
Aiden Kahanovitch (NDP) — A first-time federal candidate, Kahanovitch is a health-care human resources professional with a decade of experience in recruiting, employee engagement, policy development, and systems improvement, with a particular focus on supporting individuals living with disabilities.
Byron Curtis Gryba (PPC) — Gryba ran as the People's Party of Canada candidate in Winnipeg South for the 2021 election.
About the Riding
The University of Manitoba—the province's largest post-secondary institution—anchors the riding both economically and culturally, employing thousands of faculty and staff and drawing a student population from across Manitoba and beyond. Fort Richmond, the neighbourhood immediately south of campus, is popular with students, young families, and university employees, offering a mix of detached homes and apartment buildings developed between the early 1960s and mid-1980s. Further south, Whyte Ridge is one of Winnipeg's more affluent subdivisions, with an average household income roughly 1.7 times the city average and two large man-made lakes at its centre.
Winnipeg South has earned a reputation as a political bellwether, electing a member of Parliament from the party that formed government nationally in every election since the riding was re-created in 1988. This swing character reflects the riding's suburban, moderate electorate—well-educated homeowners attentive to issues of taxation, transit, environmental policy, and university funding.
St. Norbert, at the riding's southern edge where the Red and La Salle rivers meet, retains a distinctly francophone character and a small-town feel despite its incorporation into Winnipeg. The St. Norbert Heritage Park and farmers' market draw visitors from across the city. Environmental issues loom large in local politics, from Red River flood mitigation to the stewardship of riparian lands and urban green space.





