Saskatoon South, SK — 2025 Federal Election Results Map
Saskatoon South — 2025 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Saskatoon South was contested in the 2025 election.
🏆 Kevin Waugh, the Conservative candidate, won the riding with 24,516 votes (49.3% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Rokhan Sarwar (Liberal) with 20,107 votes (40.4%), defeated by a margin of 4,409 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Jacob Gadzella (NDP-New Democratic Party, 9%).
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Saskatoon South
Saskatoon South occupies the southern portion of the city of Saskatoon, east of the South Saskatchewan River. Previously known as Saskatoon—Grasswood, the riding was renamed following the 2022 federal redistribution, which stripped away all territory outside the city limits—including the rural Grasswood area south of the city—and transferred the neighbourhoods north of 8th Street and west of Highway 11 to Saskatoon—University. What remains is a fully urban riding encompassing established residential areas such as Brevoort Park, Lakeview, Nutana, Holliston, and the newer suburban developments of Stonebridge, Rosewood, and Brighton in the city's fast-growing south end.
The riding is home to a mix of older tree-lined neighbourhoods near the riverbank and sprawling new subdivisions that have driven Saskatoon's population growth over the past decade. Broadway Avenue in Nutana serves as a local commercial and cultural strip, while the southern suburbs are oriented around big-box retail and commuter routes.
Candidates
Kevin Waugh (Conservative) is a former television sportscaster who spent nearly four decades at CTV Saskatoon before entering politics. He served as a Ward 9 Trustee for the Saskatoon Public School Division from 2006 to 2015 and held a leadership role on the Saskatchewan School Boards Association. First elected to Parliament in 2015 in the riding then known as Saskatoon—Grasswood, Waugh has held various shadow cabinet roles including Deputy Critic for Canadian Heritage.
Rokhan Sarwar (Liberal) was acclaimed as the Liberal candidate for Saskatoon South.
Jacob Gadzella (NDP) was born and raised in Saskatoon's Brevoort Park neighbourhood. He studied visual communications design at the Alberta College of Art and Design before returning to Saskatoon to work as a graphic designer and later in digital communications at Affinity Credit Union. He recently completed an MBA in Community Economic Development through Cape Breton University and is active in the cooperative movement as a member of the Saskatoon Co-op, Steep Hill Co-op, and a former shop steward with UFCW Local 1400.
Hamish Graham (Green Party) owns a haskap berry orchard in Birch Hills and is a former president of Haskap Canada. He has run in multiple provincial and federal elections for the Greens, including the 2024 Saskatchewan provincial election in the riding of Batoche.
Richard Brent Wintringham (People's Party) ran as the PPC candidate in the riding.
About the Riding
Saskatoon South reflects the two faces of the city's growth. The older neighbourhoods near the river—Nutana, Buena Vista, Brevoort Park—are mature residential areas with walkable commercial strips, parks along the riverbank, and proximity to downtown. The southern suburbs of Stonebridge and Rosewood, developed largely in the 2010s, are newer communities built around automobile-oriented planning, with young families drawn by relatively affordable new housing.
The renaming of the riding from Saskatoon—Grasswood to Saskatoon South reflected the practical consequence of boundary changes that removed the rural component of the old riding. The result is a constituency entirely within the city limits, giving it a more uniformly urban character.
Heading into the 2025 election, affordability and the cost of living were top concerns for residents across the riding. The threat of U.S. tariffs on Canadian goods, particularly agricultural products central to Saskatchewan's export economy, generated significant anxiety among voters. Housing costs in Saskatoon, while lower than in Vancouver or Toronto, have risen sharply in recent years, particularly in the newer southern suburbs where many young families have stretched their finances to buy homes.





