Regina South Albert 2024 Saskatchewan Provincial Election Results Map

Regina South Albert — 2024 Election Results

Poll-by-poll results for Regina South Albert in the 2024 Saskatchewan election. The NDP candidate won this riding. Explore detailed voting data, candidate results, and turnout statistics at the poll level.

Riding information

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Regina South Albert

Regina South Albert is a new constituency created through the 2022 redistribution, carved from portions of the former Regina University and Regina Pasqua ridings along with a sliver of the old Lumsden-Morse. It stretches through south-central Regina on either side of Albert Street, taking in established residential areas and newer developments south of the city's commercial core. The riding ranks among the most ethnically diverse in the province, home to families from South Asia, the Philippines, East Africa, and beyond — a demographic reality that both major parties acknowledged by fielding candidates who spoke to the immigrant experience. Aleana Young, the NDP incumbent who had represented the old Regina University seat since 2020, moved into the new boundaries and sought re-election as one of the opposition's most visible critics of the Saskatchewan Party government.

Candidates

Aleana Young (NDP) — Young first entered public life as a trustee with the Regina Public School Division, where she also served as vice-president of the Saskatchewan School Boards Association. She owned and operated a gourmet cheese shop before her election to the legislature in 2020. Inside the Assembly she became the NDP's critic for the economy, Crown corporations, and SaskPower, earning attention for persistent questioning on electricity rates and Crown dividend policy. Outside the chamber she championed fertility-treatment funding — Saskatchewan being one of only two provinces with no public support — and served as opposition whip heading into the 2024 campaign.

Khushdil (Lucky) Mehrok (Saskatchewan Party) — Mehrok immigrated to Canada from India and settled in Indian Head in 2006. He and his family built a motel business that expanded across multiple locations in the province, and he later launched a distribution company serving small enterprises. Making his first run for elected office, Mehrok spoke to the immigrant entrepreneurial experience and emphasized the Saskatchewan Party's record on economic growth.

Local Issues

Affordability dominated conversations in Regina South Albert during the campaign. Many residents juggle shift work or run small businesses in the retail and service sectors that line Albert Street, and the cost-of-living pressures that intensified after 2021 — rising food prices, higher utility bills, and climbing rents — hit particularly hard in a constituency where median household incomes sit below the citywide average. The NDP's pledge to remove the provincial sales tax from children's clothing and to cap utility-rate increases resonated with voters navigating tight budgets.

Healthcare access was a persistent concern. Residents reported difficulty finding family physicians willing to take new patients, a problem magnified by rapid population growth driven by immigration. Young highlighted that the province trailed national benchmarks for physician-to-population ratios and pressed for expanded walk-in and after-hours clinic capacity.

Education also featured prominently, particularly the strain on Regina's south-side schools. Enrolment growth outpaced classroom space, and teachers' unions warned that complexity in classrooms — including growing numbers of English-language learners — required additional educational assistants and support staff. The riding's diversity made the debate over the government's Parents' Bill of Rights especially charged, as newcomer families navigated a school system grappling with competing demands for inclusion and parental authority.

Nearby Ridings