Saskatchewan
Liberal MP Ralph Goodale held Regina-Wascana for more than 25 years. Can the Liberals win it back?
Experts agree that the Liberals could be competitive, but change of actually winning unclear
Alexander Quon · CBC
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As the federal election looms, experts say they expect the Conservative Party of Canada to maintain its strong grip on Saskatchewan, but the Liberals could potentially break through in a handful of ridings.
Saskatchewan's 14 federal electoral districts have been entirely blue since 2019.
Experts have already highlightedDesnethé-Missinippi-Churchill Riveras district that could potentiallychange hands this election.
One of the other Saskatchewan seats that could be vulnerable to a surging Liberal Partyis Regina-Wascana.
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Daniel Westlake, an assistant professor of political studies at the University of Saskatchewan, andÉric Grenier,a polls analyst and the creator ofthewrit.ca, agreed in separate interviews thatthe Liberals could put up a real fight in the district.
"It was really, aside from the northern riding [ofDesnethé-Missinippi-Churchill River], the only place where the Liberals were marginally competitive," Greniersaid.
What's not clear is whether that competitiveness could translate to a win.
The experts saidthat although the Liberals may have held Regina-Wascana for 25 years, that may have been due to the enduring popularity of Ralph Goodale,rather than significant support for the Liberals.
"I think it's going to be hard for the Liberals to win the riding with the candidate that doesn't have the kind of provincial popularity of Goodale," Westlakesaid.
The Ralph Goodale effect
For 25 years, Regina-Wascana was held by one man: Liberal MP Ralph Goodale.
From 1994 to 2019, Goodalewas a resolute feature at communityevents in Regina.
In Ottawa, he served in the governments of Jean Chrétien,Paul MartinandJustin Trudeau in a variety of portfolios, including as minister of public safety and minister of finance.
Then, during the 2019 federal election,the Conservative Party rode a blue wave to sweep all 14 federal seats in Saskatchewan.Goodalewas defeated by Conservative candidate Michael Kram, who remains the incumbent MP.
Goodale, the current high commissioner to the United Kingdom, remains the most recent Liberal MP from Saskatchewan.
Not having a popular, big-name candidate like Goodale makes any attempt to win Regina-Wascana a challenge for the Liberals.
Westlakesaid he has spoken to Liberal campaigners in Regina-Wascana and taken one thing away from those conversations.
"Alot of that vote when the Liberals were winning that ridingwas a Ralph Goodale vote," Westlake said.
Greniersaidthere have been few Regina-specific polls, so that makes riding-by-ridingpredictions difficult.
A recent poll commissioned by the Saskatchewan Urban Municipalities Association (SUMA) and conducted by Rubicon Strategy shows thatConservative support remains high across the province.
So although the Liberals are picking up support in the cities, Grenier said it's unlikely to translate to a win.
"You would still consider that the Conservative would be the favourite to hold it, just based on how they are still leading by significant margin in every poll that we've seen," Greniersaid.
NDPgains in provincial electionunlikely to translate: experts
The results of last year's provincial election — where the NDP swept all but one urban riding — are unlikely to translate to a similar result in the federal election, the expert said.
One of the central reasons is electoral geography.
In the provincial election, there are a lot of ridings that are smaller and located in the core of Regina or Saskatoon.
"Ridings are a lot larger geographically at the federal level, which means you really have these ridingsthat are mixed suburban-city centre ridings," Westlakesaid.
A lot of those suburban votes will be conservative-leaning, he said.
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Both experts agreed the the electorate will often vote differently inprovincial and federal elections.
The provincial result was driven by an anti-incumbent vote, according to Westlake, and the Liberals are the incumbents in this federal election.
Another reason is that thepotential for a vote split among progressive voters,which wasn't a factorin the provincial election, Westlake said. At the federal level, progressive voters may be split between the Liberals and the NDP, which makes winning seats more challenging.
"Pullall those three things together and you've got a federal election that's more challenging for both the Liberals and the NDP," Westlakesaid.
Overview
The 52 square kilometres ofRegina-Wascanacovera southeast portion of Regina with a population of89,063 people, according to Elections Canada.
The easiest way to understand the riding's boundaries is to imagine standing at the intersection of Albert St. and Saskatchewan Dr. If you were to travelsouth on Albert St. and East on Saskatchewan Drive until you hit the edge of the City of Regina limits you'll have covered Regina-Wascana.
Five candidates will be on the ballot in Regina-Wascana when votes are cast on April 28, according to Elections Canada:
- Peter Bruce - People's Party of Canada.
- Kimberly Epp - Green Party.
- Michael Kram - Conservative.
- Kaitlyn Stadnyk - NDP.
- Jeffery Walters - Liberal.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Alexander Quon
Reporter
Alexander Quon has been a reporter with CBC Saskatchewan since 2021 and is happy to be back working in his hometown of Regina after half a decade in Atlantic Canada. He has previously worked with the CBC News investigative unit in Nova Scotia and Global News in Halifax. Alexander specializes in municipal political coverage and data-reporting. He can be reached at: alexander.quon@cbc.ca.
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