Calgary Nose Hill, AB 2021 Federal Election Results Map

Calgary Nose Hill — 2021 Election Results

Poll-by-poll results for Calgary Nose Hill 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

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Calgary Nose Hill

Calgary Nose Hill covers the northwest quadrant of Calgary, running from the city's northern boundary south along Centre Street North and Beddington Trail to McKnight Boulevard, then west past John Laurie Boulevard and Sarcee Trail to Stoney Trail. The riding takes its name from Nose Hill Park — at over 11 square kilometres, the fourth-largest urban park in Canada — whose expansive fescue grasslands and panoramic prairie views dominate the district's interior. Neighbourhoods within the riding include Panorama Hills, Coventry Hills, Harvest Hills, Country Hills, Hidden Valley, MacEwan Glen, Sandstone Valley, Kincora, Nolan Hill, Sage Hill, Sherwood, and Evanston. The 2021 census recorded a population of approximately 117,700.

Candidates

Michelle Rempel Garner (Conservative) was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba and holds an economics degree from the University of Manitoba. Before entering politics she directed the University of Calgary's Institutional Programs Division, where she helped increase sponsored-research revenue from $7 million to over $100 million. First elected in Calgary Centre-North in 2011, she served as Minister of State for Western Economic Diversification — at the time the youngest female federal cabinet minister in Canadian history — and was named a World Economic Forum Young Global Leader in 2016.

Jessica Dale-Walker (Liberal) ran as the Liberal standard-bearer in the riding. A Calgary-area professional, she campaigned on the federal Liberal platform of housing affordability and climate action.

Khalis Ahmed (NDP) is a geoscientist who spent decades leading and managing projects in the oil-and-gas sector in both Canada and Norway. A veteran NDP candidate, he previously contested the 2017 Calgary-Heritage by-election and the 2015 and 2019 general elections in Calgary Signal Hill before running in Calgary Nose Hill in 2021.

Kyle Scott (PPC) is a Calgary lawyer called to the Alberta Bar in 1992. His career highlights include serving as vice-president and general counsel of FutureLink Corp. — a California-based technology firm — and spending over eight years as a senior lawyer and head of regulatory affairs for a major integrated oil-sands company, much of it based in Fort McMurray.

About the Riding

Nose Hill Park sits at the geographic and symbolic heart of the riding. Established in 1980, the park preserves one of the most significant remaining examples of native rough-fescue grassland on the Canadian prairies, supporting over 66 native vascular plant species and providing over 60 kilometres of walking and cycling trails. For the surrounding communities, it functions as a year-round recreational corridor — popular for off-leash dog walking, trail running, and cross-country skiing.

Beyond the park, the riding is defined by rapid suburban growth. Panorama Hills — the largest community in the district — saw its population surge by roughly 30 per cent between 2011 and 2019, reaching over 25,700 residents. Coventry Hills, Harvest Hills, and Country Hills round out a band of established subdivisions along the northern edge, while newer communities such as Nolan Hill, Sage Hill, Kincora, and Evanston were still absorbing new residents at the time of the 2021 election.

The riding is one of the most ethnically diverse in Calgary's northwest. South Asian, Chinese, and Filipino communities form significant demographic segments, and Punjabi is the second most commonly spoken mother tongue in several of the northern subdivisions. Places of worship, cultural centres, and ethnic grocery stores have proliferated along major corridors such as Country Hills Boulevard and Harvest Hills Boulevard.

Connectivity to the rest of the city relies on Deerfoot Trail, Stoney Trail, and Centre Street North, though the absence of a direct light-rail link to the northern communities has been a long-standing infrastructure concern. Employment patterns mirror much of suburban Calgary: a mix of energy-sector professionals, healthcare workers, and small-business owners, with many residents commuting south to downtown or to business parks along the Deerfoot corridor.

Census Data (2016)

Population by Age & Sex

Residence Type

Income Distribution

Nearby Ridings