Regina Rosemont — 2020 Saskatchewan Provincial Election Results Map
Regina Rosemont — 2020 Election Results
Poll-by-poll results for Regina Rosemont in the 2020 Saskatchewan election. The NDP candidate won this riding. Explore detailed voting data, candidate results, and turnout statistics at the poll level.
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Regina Rosemont
Regina Rosemont is an urban riding in northwest Regina, covering the Normanview West, Dieppe, and Mount Royal neighbourhoods. NDP MLA Trent Wotherspoon had held this seat since 2007 and was one of the most prominent opposition voices in the province. After the NDP's 2016 election defeat, Wotherspoon was elected interim leader of the party and served as leader of the official opposition until stepping aside in June 2017 to seek the permanent leadership, which Ryan Meili ultimately won in March 2018. Heading into 2020, Wotherspoon served as the NDP's deputy leader and finance critic, making Regina Rosemont one of the most high-profile constituency races in the province.
Candidates
Trent Wotherspoon (NDP) — Born and raised in northwest Regina, Wotherspoon studied business administration and education at the University of Regina. Before entering politics, he taught in Regina Public Schools and developed a nationally recognized program for high-risk youth offenders that improved educational outcomes and reduced recidivism. First elected in 2007 and re-elected in 2011 and 2016, Wotherspoon served as NDP interim leader from 2016 to 2017 and as deputy leader and finance critic heading into the 2020 election.
Alex Nau (Saskatchewan Party) — Nau was acclaimed as the Saskatchewan Party candidate for Regina Rosemont. During the campaign, controversy arose when it emerged that Nau had participated in a drinking game at Craven several years earlier that was disrespectful to women, for which he publicly apologized.
Chris McCulloch (Progressive Conservative) and James Park (Green Party) also ran, each receiving less than 5% of the vote.
Local Issues
As the NDP's finance critic, Wotherspoon spent the 2016-to-2020 term scrutinizing the government's fiscal management. The provincial debt had grown considerably under the Saskatchewan Party's watch, and the 2017 budget introduced a series of cuts and tax increases that affected households across the province. The consolidation of twelve health regions into a single Saskatchewan Health Authority in December 2017 was pitched as an efficiency measure but raised concerns about local oversight and service delivery in communities like those in Regina Rosemont.
Education funding remained a dominant local issue. The riding's schools served a mix of established and growing neighbourhoods, and parents were vocal about rising class sizes and insufficient classroom supports. The COVID-19 pandemic added urgency to healthcare debates, with voters evaluating both the government's preparedness and its plans for economic recovery. Wotherspoon's deep roots in the community and his profile as a former interim leader made this riding a safe NDP hold, even as the Saskatchewan Party won a commanding majority province-wide.





