Saskatoon West, SK — 2025 Federal Election Results Map
Saskatoon West — 2025 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Saskatoon West was contested in the 2025 election.
🏆 Brad Redekopp, the Conservative candidate, won the riding with 19,814 votes (52.7% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was Chad Eggerman (Liberal) with 10,254 votes (27.2%), defeated by a margin of 9,560 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Rachel Loewen Walker (NDP-New Democratic Party, 19%).
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Saskatoon West
Saskatoon West covers the western portion of the city of Saskatoon, bounded roughly by the South Saskatchewan River to the east and south, 33rd Street West to the north, and the city's western limits. The riding encompasses some of the city's most diverse and economically varied neighbourhoods, from the inner-city communities of Riversdale, Pleasant Hill, and Caswell Hill to the suburban areas of Confederation, Dundonald, Fairhaven, and Lawson farther west.
About 20 percent of the riding's population are immigrants, with significant communities from the Philippines, Pakistan, and India. Approximately 18 percent of residents identify as Indigenous, one of the highest proportions of any urban riding in western Canada. The riding's economy is anchored by retail trade, healthcare and social services, construction, and education.
Candidates
Brad Redekopp (Conservative) was first elected to represent Saskatoon West in 2019. Prior to entering politics, Redekopp had a career in the technology and business sectors in Saskatoon.
Chad Eggerman (Liberal) is a partner at the law firm Procido LLP with nearly 20 years of legal experience. He spent close to eight years working in Northern Europe and served as Honorary Consul for Saskatchewan and the Northwest Territories in a Nordic country for over 12 years. His legal practice spans cross-border trade, tariffs, regulatory compliance, and work in the agriculture, energy, manufacturing, and mining sectors.
Rachel Loewen Walker (NDP) is a professor at the University of Saskatchewan, where she chairs the Gender, Sexuality and Social Justice program in Political Studies. She previously served as the Ariel F. Sallows Chair in Human Rights with the College of Law and was the Executive Director of OUTSaskatoon, a 2SLGBTQ community centre, from 2013 to 2020. She was raised on a farm near Warman.
Naomi Hunter (Green Party) is the leader of the Saskatchewan Green Party. She runs her family's haskap berry farm near Prince Albert during the summer and operates a retail store in Saskatoon's Riversdale neighbourhood selling custom-made sterling silver jewelry during the rest of the year. She is co-chair of the federal Green Party's Women's Caucus.
About the Riding
Saskatoon West contains some of the city's oldest and most culturally vibrant neighbourhoods alongside areas that face significant socioeconomic challenges. Riversdale, once considered a struggling inner-city area, has undergone a commercial revival along 20th Street with new restaurants, shops, and the Riversdale Farmers' Market, but gentrification pressures and homelessness have created tensions. The city's plans to purchase vacant lots in Riversdale and Pleasant Hill for homeless support initiatives in 2025 drew mixed reactions from residents and business owners.
Pleasant Hill and the surrounding core neighbourhoods have some of the highest rates of poverty and housing insecurity in Saskatoon. The riding's large Indigenous population has drawn attention to issues of systemic inequality, access to services, and the need for culturally appropriate support programs.
Heading into the 2025 election, housing affordability, homelessness, healthcare access, and the impact of U.S. tariffs on Saskatchewan's trade-dependent economy were central issues. The riding's immigrant communities also brought concerns about immigration policy and settlement supports into the local conversation, while the inner-city neighbourhoods focused attention on poverty reduction and public safety.





