Swift Current—Grasslands—Kindersley, SK — 2025 Federal Election Results Map
Swift Current—Grasslands—Kindersley — 2025 Election Results
📌 The Canadian federal electoral district of Swift Current—Grasslands—Kindersley was contested in the 2025 election.
🏆 Jeremy Patzer, the Conservative candidate, won the riding with 32,292 votes (82.0% of the vote).
🥈 The runner-up was William Caton (Liberal) with 4,420 votes (11.2%), defeated by a margin of 27,872 votes.
📊 Other notable candidates: Alex McPhee (NDP-New Democratic Party, 6%).
Riding information
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Swift Current—Grasslands—Kindersley is a new federal riding created by the 2022 redistribution, replacing the former Cypress Hills—Grasslands. The riding covers a vast swath of southwestern Saskatchewan, stretching from the U.S. border in the south to the communities of Biggar and Rosetown in the north, and from the Alberta border in the west into the central prairie. Compared to its predecessor riding, it lost the town of Assiniboia to Souris—Moose Mountain but gained significant territory to the north.
The city of Swift Current is the largest population centre and the riding's commercial hub. Other communities include Kindersley, Rosetown, Maple Creek, Biggar, Shaunavon, Leader, and the village of Val Marie near Grasslands National Park, which lends part of its name to the riding. The riding has a population of approximately 75,700.
Candidates
Jeremy Patzer (Conservative) grew up on the family farm outside Frontier in the riding's southwest corner and has lived in Swift Current for over a decade. First elected in the former Cypress Hills—Grasslands riding in 2019, he is the nephew of former MP David L. Anderson. In Parliament, Patzer successfully steered Private Member's Bill C-294 on interoperability to Royal Assent with unanimous support in November 2024.
William Caton (Liberal) is a rancher from the Cypress Hills area running in his sixth federal election and fourth as a Liberal. He has emphasized his commitment to both agriculture and environmental stewardship, reflecting the concerns of a riding where farming and ranching are the dominant way of life.
Alex McPhee (NDP) is an entrepreneur and professional cartographer who has lived in Val Marie since 2020. He holds a BSc in geophysics from the University of Alberta and has produced a widely sold illustrated map of Saskatchewan. This was his second federal election as an NDP candidate.
Maria Rose Lewans (Independent) is the owner and operator of Lewans Plumbing and was running in her third federal election as an independent. She has spoken about her frustration with partisan polarization and her desire to offer voters an alternative outside the party system.
About the Riding
Agriculture is the defining economic activity across the riding, with grain farming, ranching, and pulse crop production sustaining communities from the Cypress Hills to the northern prairies. The Kindersley area is also significant for oil and gas production, and the energy sector provides employment in several communities throughout the riding.
Grasslands National Park, located near Val Marie in the riding's southern reaches, protects one of the last remaining tracts of native mixed-grass prairie in North America. The park and the surrounding landscape are home to species at risk including black-footed ferrets, burrowing owls, and prairie rattlesnakes, and the area draws visitors interested in dark-sky viewing and ecological tourism.
The 2025 election was the first to be contested under the new riding name and boundaries, though the political character of the region has been consistently Conservative for decades. U.S. tariff threats on Canadian agricultural and energy exports were a dominant concern, given the riding's heavy dependence on cross-border trade. Rural healthcare, the availability of physicians and emergency services in smaller communities, broadband connectivity, and the maintenance of rural highways and grid roads were also prominent issues for voters across this geographically enormous constituency.





