Moosomin-Montmartre 2024 Saskatchewan Provincial Election Results Map

Moosomin-Montmartre — 2024 Election Results

Poll-by-poll results for Moosomin-Montmartre 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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Moosomin-Montmartre

Moosomin-Montmartre is a newly drawn constituency in southeastern Saskatchewan, assembled by the 2022 boundaries commission from portions of the former Moosomin and Indian Head-Milestone ridings. Its territory follows the Trans-Canada Highway corridor from Wolseley eastward to the Manitoba border, capturing the towns of Moosomin, Whitewood, Broadview, Grenfell, Kipling, Montmartre, and Rocanville along the way. Moosomin—home to the World-Spectator, Saskatchewan's oldest continuously published weekly newspaper, in print since 1884—serves as the riding's commercial centre. The local economy rests on grain and livestock farming, potash mining, and a growing small-business sector. Two of Canada's largest potash mines, near Rocanville and Esterhazy, have attracted billions of dollars in upgrades and expansion investment, anchoring the riding's resource economy.

Candidates

Kevin Weedmark (Saskatchewan Party) — Weedmark is the editor, publisher, and proprietor of the Moosomin World-Spectator. Over three decades he built the newspaper into a successful printing and publishing operation while earning multiple journalism awards. Active in community affairs, he serves as president of the Moosomin Chamber of Commerce, chair of the Moosomin Housing Authority, a member of the Moosomin Economic Development Committee, and a founding member of the Community Builders Alliance. He won a contested nomination over two challengers before claiming the seat in 2024. He was named deputy government whip and Legislative Secretary to the Minister of Health.

Chris Ball (NDP) — Ball grew up in Wolseley and lives with his family in Indian Head, where he has volunteered with the fire department for fifteen years. He operates a mobile truck service business in Indian Head. His campaign focused on healthcare, affordability, and ensuring rural communities receive adequate provincial investment.

Local Issues

Housing supply emerged as a pressing concern as the riding's population grew. The town of Moosomin launched a $30,000 incentive for anyone who builds a new home in the community, an initiative aimed at attracting workers to fill job vacancies across agriculture, mining, and the service sector. Municipal revenue-sharing payments from the province rose steadily—from roughly $567,000 in 2022 to over $769,000 in 2024—but local leaders argued the increases still fell short of what was needed to finance water, sewer, and road infrastructure in growing towns.

Healthcare access in smaller communities was another persistent theme. Residents of towns distant from regional hospitals relied on volunteer ambulance services and expressed frustration over emergency-room closures at rural facilities across the broader region. The riding's agricultural producers, meanwhile, contended with volatile input costs and uncertain commodity markets, while potash operations provided a stabilizing counterweight through steady employment and tax revenue.

Nearby Ridings