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Workers open, count and verify the first set of mail-in ballots in the second preliminary count for the 2024 provincial election. Oct. 30, 2024 (Lisa Schick/980 CJME)

Saskatoon Westview goes to Sask. NDP after second count

Oct 30, 2024 | 3:40 PM

Elections Saskatchewan is conducting its second preliminary count, and at least one riding has a different result.

The second count includes mail-in ballots which were received by Oct. 26.

Saskatoon Westview has changed hands from Saskatchewan Party’s two-term MLA David Buckingham to the Saskatchewan NDP’s April ChiefCalf. The riding’s final count was 3,464 for Sask. Party and 3,501 for NDP.

As of 12:30 p.m. on Oct. 30, the Sask. Party has 34 seats and the NDP has 27.

For a list of all the election results from the first preliminary count click here.

The final count will be on November 9.

Mail-in ballots being counted for provincial election

Two rooms downstairs were filled with tables, chairs and baskets on Wednesday, as election workers opened, counted and sorted more than 20,000 mail-in ballots for the provincial election.

Dr. Michael Boda, Saskatchewan’s Chief Electoral Officer, explained the ballots being counted Wednesday in the second preliminary count were the mail-in ballots that were received before Oct. 26.

Those received between Oct. 26 and Nov. 7 will be counted in the final count on Nov. 9. along with ballots collected from hospitals and remand centres.

“In 2020, we saw about 94 per cent of those (mail-in ballots) returned. That’s likely very high due to the fact that it was a COVID election in 2020,” said Boda.

At the beginning of Wednesday, there were nine constituencies where it was mathematically possible for the second-place candidate to pull into the lead with mail-in ballots that day.

After all the official counts, Boda said some recounts could be done, but it’s a bit more complicated in Saskatchewan than elsewhere — it’s not a fixed number of ballots or percentage.

Boda said there would be an automatic recount if there were a tie, but then the candidates would be the ones asking for it, not the chief electoral officer.

Between the number of rejected ballots and the number that were objected to, if the margin of victory were within that, Boda said candidates would also call for a recount.

Or, Boda said a candidate could also just go to a judge and ask for a recount.

The provincial government said ‘no’ to using electronic vote counters in the general election, so the ballots were counted by hand again. Boda said Elections Sask. made adjustments for that decision, bringing on more workers so they wouldn’t be counting until 3 a.m.

“We had run the calculations very carefully, and we were adding teams when we saw there were more ballots,” said Boda.

In 2020, Elections Saskatchewan had a lot of difficulty finding people to work the election, but Boda said it started early this time and created a community of people ahead of time, so there was no trouble finding workers this year.

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