Regina—Lewvan

Regina—Lewvan is a federal riding in Saskatchewan, made up of those parts of the former Palliser and Regina—Lumsden—Lake Centre ridings within the city limits of Regina.[3]

Regina—Lewvan
Saskatchewan electoral district
Regina—Lewvan in relation to other Saskatchewan federal electoral districts as of the 2013 Representation Order. Dotted line shows Regina city limits.
Federal electoral district
LegislatureHouse of Commons
MP
 
 
 
Warren Steinley
Conservative
District created2013
First contested2015
District webpageprofile, map
Demographics
Population (2011)[1]79,587
Electors (2011)61,879
Area (km²)[2]58
Pop. density (per km²)1,372.2
Census divisionsDivision No. 6
Census subdivisionsRegina

Regina—Lewvan was created in the 2012 federal electoral boundaries redistribution and is legally defined in the 2013 representation order. It was first contested in the 42nd Canadian federal election, held on 19 October 2015.[4]

Members of Parliament

This riding has elected the following Members of Parliament:

Parliament Years Member Party
Regina—Lewvan
Riding created from Palliser and Regina—Lumsden—Lake Centre
42nd  2015–2018     Erin Weir New Democratic
 2018–2018     Independent
 2018–2019     Co-operative Commonwealth
43rd  2019–present     Warren Steinley Conservative

Election results

Graph of election results in Regina—Lewvan (minor parties that never got 2% of the vote or didn't run consistently are omitted)
2019 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
ConservativeWarren Steinley26,83752.86+17.92
New DemocraticJigar Patel14,45428.47-6.74
LiberalWinter Fedyk6,62513.05-14.43
GreenNaomi Hunter2,0354.01+3.01
People'sTrevor Wowk5641.11
IndependentDon Morgan1980.39
National Citizens AllianceIan Bridges590.11
Total valid votes/Expense limit 51,614100.0  
Total rejected ballots 312
Turnout 51,92675.88
Eligible voters 68,435
Conservative gain from New Democratic Swing +12.33
Source: Elections Canada[5] Canadian Broadcasting Corporation[6]
2015 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
New DemocraticErin Weir16,84335.21-9.97$92,223.66
ConservativeTrent Fraser16,71134.94-8.93$72,236.17
LiberalLouis Browne13,14327.48+19.28$70,367.24
GreenTamela Friesen8391.75-1.00$1,285.24
LibertarianWojciech K. Dolata2980.62$5,634.21
Total valid votes/Expense limit 47,83499.62 $198,699.60
Total rejected ballots 1810.38
Turnout 48,01577.64
Eligible voters 64,325
New Democratic notional hold Swing −0.52
Source: Elections Canada[7][8]
2011 federal election redistributed results[9]
Party Vote %
  New Democratic17,40045.18
  Conservative16,89443.87
  Liberal3,1578.20
  Green1,0602.75
gollark: But won't that just result in one of the bots losing out?
gollark: Hmmmm...
gollark: So the optimal approach would probably either be something like long-term boring trading humans won't do which works on large amounts of the market, or relatively high-speed reaction to new memes.
gollark: I've been considering bots, and they have some advantages:- they can respond faster than humans, probably- they can process vast amounts of financial databut some disadvantages:- they can't practically actually react to the content of a meme, only some metadata- I think there's comment rate limiting so they can't post that often
gollark: Hmm, yes, and it's more based on "popular meme creator who pings someone on an important server" than "good meme", I guess.

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.