Regina—Qu'Appelle, SK — 2021 Federal Election Results Map
Regina—Qu'Appelle — 2021 Election Results
Poll-by-poll results for Regina—Qu'Appelle in the 2021 Canadian federal election. The Conservative candidate won this riding. Explore detailed voting data, candidate results, and turnout statistics at the poll level.
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Regina—Qu'Appelle
Regina—Qu'Appelle is a sprawling urban-rural riding in southern Saskatchewan that combines the northeastern quarter of the provincial capital with a vast stretch of prairie extending toward the Qu'Appelle Valley. The district takes in the fast-growing bedroom communities of White City, Pilot Butte, and Balgonie east of Regina, then fans outward to encompass the resort town of Fort Qu'Appelle—nestled between Echo and Mission Lakes roughly 70 kilometres northeast of the capital—as well as the towns of Indian Head, Balcarres, Southey, Cupar, Raymore, and Punnichy. The Qu'Appelle Valley, carved some 14,000 years ago by glacial meltwater into a dramatic 180-metre-deep, two-kilometre-wide channel, runs through the riding's northern half and defines much of its landscape and recreational character. The riding was created in 1987 from portions of the former Assiniboia, Humboldt—Lake Centre, Qu'Appelle—Moose Mountain, and Regina East ridings.
Candidates
Andrew Scheer (Conservative) Born in Ottawa in 1979, Scheer moved to Saskatchewan after meeting his wife, Jill Ryan, and completing studies at the University of Regina. Elected at age 25 in 2004—defeating long-serving NDP MP Lorne Nystrom by 861 votes—he became the youngest Speaker of the House of Commons in 2011 at age 32, serving in that role until 2015. He was elected leader of the Conservative Party of Canada in 2017 and led the Official Opposition until stepping down as leader in 2020. The 2021 contest marked his sixth consecutive campaign in the riding.
Annaliese Bos (NDP) A registered veterinary technologist and working mother, Bos was active in the LGBT+ community in Regina. She ran on a platform emphasizing the climate crisis, systemic racism, affordable housing, and the need for expanded health care and meaningful reconciliation with Indigenous peoples.
Cecilia Melanson (Liberal) Originally from Ecuador, Melanson is a graphic designer, notary public, and daycare operator who became a Canadian citizen and settled in Regina. At the time of the 2021 campaign she was studying Early Childhood Education at Saskatchewan Polytechnic and was in the process of becoming a licensed immigration consultant.
Andrew Yubeta (PPC) Yubeta carried the People's Party of Canada banner in Regina—Qu'Appelle, running on the party's platform of reduced government intervention and individual freedoms.
About the Riding
The urban portion of the riding captures northeastern Regina neighbourhoods that have seen steady residential growth, driven by new subdivisions and proximity to the Trans-Canada Highway. Pilot Butte grew by 23% between 2016 and 2021 to a population of 2,638, while White City has similarly expanded as young families seek affordable housing within commuting distance of the capital. These satellite communities increasingly function as suburbs of Regina, with most residents commuting daily into the city for work.
Beyond the suburban fringe, agriculture dominates the landscape. The riding's eastern and northern sections are blanketed by cereal grain, canola, and pulse crop operations. The Qu'Appelle Valley provides a striking topographical contrast to the surrounding flatlands and supports a tourism and cottage economy centred on the Fishing Lakes chain—Echo, Mission, Pasqua, and Katepwa. Fort Qu'Appelle, the valley's principal town, is both a service centre for surrounding First Nations communities and a summer recreational hub. Several First Nations reserves, including those of the Muscowpetung, Piapot, and Standing Buffalo Dakota, lie within or adjacent to the riding.
Regina—Qu'Appelle has been a Conservative stronghold since its creation. Scheer's personal profile—as former Speaker and former party leader—gave the riding outsized national visibility during both the 2019 and 2021 campaigns. The riding's political character reflects a combination of fiscally conservative suburban voters on Regina's eastern edge and a deeply rooted rural conservatism across the agricultural hinterland.





