Prince Albert Northcote — 2024 Saskatchewan Provincial Election Results Map
Prince Albert Northcote — 2024 Election Results
Poll-by-poll results for Prince Albert Northcote 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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Prince Albert Northcote takes in the eastern half of Prince Albert, one of Saskatchewan's largest cities, situated along the North Saskatchewan River where the boreal forest meets the prairies. The constituency has seesawed between the Saskatchewan Party and the NDP for more than a decade, and the 2024 rematch between incumbent Alana Ross and former MLA Nicole Rancourt continued that tradition of razor-thin margins. Ross held the seat by one of the narrowest margins in the province — a result so close that mail-in ballots were needed to confirm the outcome.
Candidates
Alana Ross (Saskatchewan Party) — A lifelong Prince Albert area resident, Ross spent more than three decades working in healthcare as a registered nurse, hospital manager, and nursing instructor. She earned her Bachelor of Science in Nursing from the University of Alberta while working full-time and raising a family. During her first term as MLA from 2020 to 2024, she served as Government Deputy Whip, Legislative Secretary for Forestry to the Minister of Energy and Resources, and sat on Treasury Board. She was also involved in community organizations such as the Prince Albert Exhibition Board.
Nicole Rancourt (NDP) — A registered social worker who represented Prince Albert Northcote from 2016 to 2020, Rancourt sought to reclaim the seat she had narrowly lost four years earlier. She holds a Business Administration Certificate from Saskatchewan Polytechnic and a Bachelor of Social Work from the University of Regina. Before entering politics, she worked in mental health services at the Saskatchewan Penitentiary and at Prince Albert Mental Health Outpatient. In 2023, she was inducted into the Prince Albert Women's Hall of Fame by the Prince Albert Council of Women in recognition of her extensive community involvement and advocacy for women in leadership.
Terri Davis (Saskatchewan United Party) — Born in Buffalo Narrows and raised in Choiceland, Davis is an Essential Skills Development instructor at Saskatchewan Polytechnic who has worked in employment and education services in Prince Albert since 2009. She holds diplomas in criminology and entrepreneurship and has served on boards including Community Futures and Race Relations and Social Issues committees.
Jarren Jones (Green Party) also ran but received less than 2% of the vote.
Local Issues
The $898-million expansion of Victoria Hospital dominated local conversation during the 2020–2024 term. Construction on a new multi-storey acute care tower began in 2024, promising to increase the hospital's capacity by 40 percent — from 173 to 242 beds — and add a heliport, expanded emergency department, and larger operating rooms. The project also raised urgent questions about where the roughly 500 additional healthcare workers needed to staff the facility would come from, given that the province was already struggling with chronic nursing and physician shortages.
Homelessness emerged as a pressing concern in Prince Albert, with the city's 2024 Point-in-Time count identifying 230 individuals experiencing homelessness — nearly double the 2022 figure. Encampments became more visible across the city, and frontline workers reported growing demand for mental health and addictions services. Public safety was another top-of-mind issue, with Prince Albert continuing to rank among Canadian cities with the highest rates of violent crime. Both major-party candidates identified crime and affordability as the issues they heard about most frequently at the doorstep.





