Moose Jaw North 2024 Saskatchewan Provincial Election Results Map

Moose Jaw North — 2024 Election Results

Poll-by-poll results for Moose Jaw North in the 2024 Saskatchewan election. The Saskatchewan Party candidate won this riding. Explore detailed voting data, candidate results, and turnout statistics at the poll level.

Riding information

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Moose Jaw North

Moose Jaw North covers the northern half of Saskatchewan's fourth-largest city, a community of roughly 33,700 people situated at the junction of the Trans-Canada Highway and Highway 2. The riding's residential neighbourhoods include older established areas near the downtown core as well as newer subdivisions expanding along the city's northern fringe. Moose Jaw's economy draws on a distinctive mix of military operations, agriculture, potash, tourism, and healthcare. 15 Wing Moose Jaw—home to the Royal Canadian Air Force's pilot training program and the celebrated Snowbirds aerobatics team—provides approximately one thousand jobs and a payroll exceeding $30 million annually, making the base one of the city's largest single employers.

Candidates

Tim McLeod (Saskatchewan Party) — Born and raised in Martensville, McLeod attended the University of Saskatchewan, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts in psychology and a Juris Doctor in law. After law school he directed a restorative justice project facilitating sentencing conferences for high-risk youth, then practiced law at Chow McLeod in Moose Jaw. He served on the Prairie South School Board from 2012 to 2020 and held positions on the University of Saskatchewan Senate, the Saskatchewan Trial Lawyers Association board, and as president of the Moose Jaw and Area Bar Association. First elected in 2020, McLeod was returned for a second term and subsequently appointed Minister of Justice and Attorney General, Minister of Corrections, Policing and Public Safety.

Cheantelle Fisher (NDP) — Fisher spent most of her career in the non-profit sector, working across Canada as a support worker, community counsellor, and labour advocate. After returning to Moose Jaw to raise her young family, she joined the Moose Jaw and District Food Bank and began studying the root causes of chronic food-bank usage. She lives in Moose Jaw North with her husband and three children. Her campaign highlighted affordability, healthcare wait times, and the cost of living.

Local Issues

Healthcare access shaped much of the local political conversation from 2020 to 2024. A specialist cardiology clinic in Moose Jaw made national headlines in October 2023 when it opted out of the publicly funded system—the first practice in Saskatchewan to do so—citing years of operational difficulty and an inability to pay competitive salaries. The province later announced plans for a regional urgent care centre in Moose Jaw, though by election day timelines remained uncertain.

Affordability and food insecurity were closely linked concerns. Usage at the Moose Jaw and District Food Bank rose during the term, reflecting broader provincial trends driven by inflation, rising rents, and stagnant social assistance rates. The presence of 15 Wing insulated part of the local economy from the worst effects of broader downturns, but civilian workers and small-business owners reported feeling the squeeze.

Nearby Ridings