Calgary Signal Hill, AB — 2021 Federal Election Results Map
Calgary Signal Hill — 2021 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Calgary Signal Hill was contested in the 2021 election.
🏆 Ron Liepert, the Conservative candidate, won the riding with 35,217 votes (59.0% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Shawn Duncan (Liberal) with 11,106 votes (18.6%), defeated by a margin of 24,111 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Patrick King (NDP, 15%).
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Calgary Signal Hill
Calgary Signal Hill spans the city's west side, running from the Bow River south to Glenmore Trail and from 101 Street SW east to 37 Street SW. Created in the 2012 redistribution from portions of the former Calgary West and Calgary Centre districts, it was first contested in 2015. The riding takes its name from the Signal Hill community, a residential neighbourhood developed in the 1980s on elevated terrain that once served as a sightline for early surveyors. Its roughly two dozen neighbourhoods — including Aspen Woods, Springbank Hill, West Springs, Cougar Ridge, Crestmont, Discovery Ridge, Valley Ridge, Bowness, Coach Hill, Patterson, Glamorgan, Glenbrook, Glendale, Rosscarrock, Spruce Cliff, Strathcona Park, Westgate, Wentworth, Wildwood, Christie Park, and The Slopes — span a wide socio-economic range, from affluent estate communities in the west to more modest post-war bungalow districts closer to Sarcee Trail. The 2021 census placed the population at approximately 120,200.
Candidates
Ron Liepert (Conservative) was born in 1949 in Saltcoats, Saskatchewan and grew up on the family farm before moving to Alberta in 1971. He trained at the Columbia School of Broadcasting and spent eight years as a radio and television news reporter in the Edmonton area. From 1980 to 1985 he served as press secretary to Premier Peter Lougheed during the National Energy Program negotiations and the Constitutional Accord of 1982. He later worked in trade promotion, telecommunications — playing a role in the AGT-to-Telus rebrand — and public-relations consulting. As a Progressive Conservative MLA for Calgary-West from 2004 to 2012, he held cabinet portfolios in Health and Wellness, Education, Energy, and Finance. He defeated incumbent Rob Anders for the federal Conservative nomination in 2014 and was first elected to Parliament in 2015.
Shawn Duncan (Liberal) was the Liberal Party's candidate in Calgary Signal Hill, running on the federal platform of housing affordability and pandemic recovery.
Patrick King (NDP) is a Calgary-born app developer who has led teams on public- and private-sector software projects, including work in the oil-and-gas industry. He volunteers at learn-to-code events, is active in the just-transition movement, and is a year-round cycling commuter.
Nick Debrey (PPC) is a teacher by profession whose father fled communist Hungary and arrived alone in Canada at the age of 17. He ran on a platform emphasizing personal freedoms and parental rights in education.
About the Riding
Calgary Signal Hill is defined by its geographic diversity. The western edge — Aspen Woods, Springbank Hill, West Springs, and Discovery Ridge — features large-lot estate homes backing onto ravines and coulee systems, with median household incomes well above the city average. Signal Hill itself, the riding's namesake community, was developed in the 1980s and 1990s and centres on a commercial hub at the intersection of Sirocco Drive and Sarcee Trail. The eastern neighbourhoods of Glamorgan, Glenbrook, Glendale, Rosscarrock, and Westgate date largely to the 1950s and 1960s, with smaller bungalows, mature elm and poplar canopies, and proximity to the Westbrook and 45th Street LRT stations on the Blue Line.
Bowness, nestled along the Bow River in the riding's northwest corner, is one of Calgary's most distinctive communities — originally an independent town until annexation in 1964. Its main street retains a village-like character with independent shops, cafes, and the Bowness Park lagoon, which draws visitors for canoeing in summer and skating in winter.
The Bow River and its valley system form the riding's northern boundary, providing an extensive network of paved and gravel pathways popular with cyclists, runners, and cross-country skiers. Canada Olympic Park — site of several events during the 1988 Winter Olympics — sits just outside the riding's northern edge but is closely associated with the surrounding communities.
Economically, the riding reflects Calgary's resource-sector dependence, though its proximity to the downtown core and the University of Calgary also supports a significant professional-services and post-secondary employment base. Housing stock ranges from multi-million-dollar properties in Aspen Woods to entry-level condominiums near the LRT stations in Westgate and Glamorgan, giving the riding a broader socio-economic mix than many of Calgary's suburban districts.





