Regina: how did your neighbours vote in the 2011 federal election?
Check out our interactive guide to poll-by-poll results
Regina's poll by poll election results shows it's the unicorn of Saskatchewan voting areas.
Nowhere else in Saskatchewan is there such a concentration of Liberal voters. It's those voters that propelled Ralph Goodale to a win in the last election.
CBC News has created a colour-coded map showing voting results of each of the 2,533 voting stations across Saskatchewan during the 2011 federal election.
The New Democratic Party dominated much of the city, but because the old electoral map sliced up the city like a pizza and added those urban votes into large pools of rural voters, the NDP ended up with zero seats.
Meanwhile, it's not like the Conservatives weren't a force in Regina in 2011 — quite the contrary. Large chunks of Regina's northwest were won by the Tories.
The party ended up winning 13 of the province's 14 seats.
Zoom in and click to find out which party your neighbourhood supported. Blue represents polls won by the Conservatives in 2011. Orange represents polls won by the NDP. Red represents areas where Liberals dominated. Purple means a tie.
In 2013, Canada's electoral boundaries commissions oversaw a redrawing of Canada's electoral districts. For Saskatchewan, the number of seats remains 14, however the lines have been radically redrawn so that Regina and Saskatoon have fewer urban-rural ridings and more all-urban ridings.
NDP might have won 2 seats
According to Elections Canada, had the redistributed ridings been used in 2011, the NDP would have won in two all-urban ridings: Regina–Lewvan and Saskatoon West.
(Note: Map does not take into account mobile stations or mail-in ballot results.)