Warman 2024 Saskatchewan Provincial Election Results Map

Warman — 2024 Election Results

Poll-by-poll results for Warman 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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Warman

Warman is a newly created provincial constituency born out of Saskatchewan's 2022 boundary redistribution, carved from portions of the former Martensville-Warman and Biggar-Sask Valley ridings to reflect surging population growth north of Saskatoon. The city of Warman—which gained official city status in 2012—has ranked among Canada's fastest-growing municipalities for over a decade, its population climbing past 13,000 by 2024 as young families settled into subdivisions along Highway 12. The riding also takes in surrounding rural areas and smaller communities in the region. Incumbent Terry Jenson, first elected in 2020 under the old Martensville-Warman boundaries, faced a contested nomination before securing the Saskatchewan Party banner for this reconfigured seat. The October 28, 2024 contest drew five candidates, and Jenson held the riding comfortably for the Saskatchewan Party.

Candidates

  • Terry Jenson (Saskatchewan Party) — A community newspaper publisher who co-founded the Clark's Crossing Gazette with his wife Angela in 2008, Jenson previously worked in radio broadcasting in North Battleford and Prince Albert before spending over two decades in the community newspaper industry. Elected to the legislature in 2020, he served as legislative secretary to the ministers of Social Services and Immigration and Career Training before entering cabinet in May 2024 as Minister of SaskBuilds and Procurement. He won the seat with roughly two-thirds of the vote.

  • Erica Baerwald (NDP) — A Hepburn town councillor since 2020 and manager at an international relief and development organization, Baerwald served as Hepburn's representative on the Prairie Rivers Reconciliation Committee and on the Wheatland Regional Library's executive board. She ran on healthcare access and affordability in her first provincial campaign, capturing roughly a quarter of the vote.

  • Andrea Early (Saskatchewan United Party) — A mother of six and longtime Saskatchewan resident with a degree in ethics and business, Early was nominated by the Saskatchewan United Party in mid-October 2024. She campaigned on healthcare accountability and affordability, taking about seven per cent of the vote.

Local Issues

Warman's explosive growth has outpaced the infrastructure needed to support it. Warman High School reached 103 per cent capacity by September 2024, with 751 students in a building designed for fewer. Parents and school divisions had been advocating since 2022 for a new joint-use high school to serve both Warman and neighbouring Martensville, though disagreements over the proposed site—whether inside or outside city limits—remained unresolved heading into election day. The broader question of how to fund schools, roads, and recreational facilities in one of the province's fastest-expanding corridors was a persistent theme at local forums.

Healthcare access was another flashpoint. Residents voiced frustration at having to travel to Saskatoon for many medical services, and candidates debated whether the community warranted its own urgent care centre and dedicated ambulance service. The city's leadership had been lobbying for expanded healthcare infrastructure, arguing that a population pushing toward 14,000 needed more than what nearby Saskatoon facilities could provide.

Roadway safety along Highway 12—the main artery connecting Warman to Saskatoon—also featured prominently. Commuter traffic had grown alongside the population, and residents called for improvements to reduce collisions on an increasingly congested corridor. Affordability, including the cost of housing in a tight suburban market, rounded out the concerns that dominated the campaign in this young constituency.

Nearby Ridings