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The Saskatchewan Party (SP or Sask Party) is a conservative political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan. The party was founded in 1997 by a coalition of former provincial Progressive Conservative and Liberal Party members who sought to unite opposition to the governing New Democratic Party .
The Saskatchewan United Party failed to win any seats, and lost its sole seat—held by party founder and former leader Nadine Wilson in the Saskatchewan Rivers riding—to the Saskatchewan Party candidate Eric Schmalz. [146] Of the 32,476 mail-in ballots requested, only 20,417 had been returned by October 30.
This is a list of political parties in Saskatchewan that have contested provincial general elections or have had representatives in the Legislative Assembly since the establishment of the province in 1905. In addition to the parties listed below, Saskatchewan elections have historically included candidates running as Independents, sometimes in ...
The Buffalo Party of Saskatchewan (BPSK) is a conservative, populist, and separatist provincial political party in Saskatchewan. The party was established in 2020 as Wexit Saskatchewan and contested its first election that year. The party finished with the third highest vote share in the 2020 provincial election, although no party members were ...
In 2024, Moe's Saskatchewan Party was elected to a majority government. Regina is the provincial capital. As of the most recent federal election in 2021, Saskatchewan elects 14 members to Canada's 338-member Parliament. Politics in Saskatchewan have historically been shaped by the province's heavily agricultural and mineral resource-based economy.
The Progressive Conservative Party of Saskatchewan is a conservative political party in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan.Founded in 1905 by former Northwest Territories Premier Frederick Haultain, the party was first known as the Provincial Rights Party.
The object of the political party as reported at its founding meeting in Calgary in 1932 was "the federation [joining together] of organizations whose purpose is the establishment in Canada of a co-operative commonwealth, in which the basic principle of regulating production, distribution and exchange will be the supplying of human needs ...
d The Saskatchewan Party formed in 1997 with a merger of eight former Progressive Conservative and Liberal MLAs. e Three MLAs were elected to represent Saskatchewan residents serving overseas in Belgium, France, and England during the First World War.