Regina Wascana Plains — 2020 Saskatchewan Provincial Election Results Map
Regina Wascana Plains — 2020 Election Results
Poll-by-poll results for Regina Wascana Plains in the 2020 Saskatchewan election. The Saskatchewan Party 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 Wascana Plains
Regina Wascana Plains covers southeast Regina and extends beyond the city limits to include the town of White City and surrounding rural areas. Saskatchewan Party MLA Christine Tell had held this seat since 2007, winning increasingly comfortable margins with each election. A former police officer who served with both the Saskatoon and Regina police services, Tell brought a law-and-order profile to the Legislature and was one of the Saskatchewan Party's most durable incumbents. She entered the 2020 race seeking her fourth term.
Candidates
Christine Tell (Saskatchewan Party) — Born and raised in Regina, Tell graduated from Miller Comprehensive High School and earned a psychiatric nursing diploma. After a brief career as a psychiatric nurse, she joined the Saskatoon Police Service and later transferred to the Regina Police Service in 1983, rising to the rank of sergeant. She served as president of the Regina Police Association for six years and was the first woman in Canada to head the police association of a major service. First elected in 2007, Tell was re-elected in 2011 and 2016.
Mike Sinclair (NDP) — Sinclair had worked in the community for 18 years as a faith leader. His volunteer involvement included chairing a rural food bank and developing a police chaplaincy program, and he campaigned on themes of social and economic justice.
Sonja Doyle (Green Party) and Nestor Mryglod (Independent) also ran, each receiving less than 3% of the vote.
Local Issues
Regina Wascana Plains was one of the fastest-growing areas in the province, with new suburban developments in southeast Regina and the expansion of White City driving demand for schools, roads, and municipal services. The pace of residential construction outstripped the provision of community infrastructure, and families in newer subdivisions called for additional school capacity and improved transportation links.
Public safety was a recurring issue in the riding, consistent with Tell's professional background. Rural crime and property crime in communities on the city's outskirts generated calls for enhanced policing and community safety initiatives. The broader provincial themes of healthcare funding, pandemic response, and the economy also featured in the campaign. Tell's strong personal vote and the riding's conservative-leaning demographics made it one of the safer Saskatchewan Party seats in the Regina area.





