Calgary Centre, AB 2021 Federal Election Results Map

Calgary Centre — 2021 Election Results

Poll-by-poll results for Calgary Centre in the 2021 Canadian federal election. The Conservative candidate won this riding. Explore detailed voting data, candidate results, and turnout statistics at the poll level.

Riding information

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Calgary Centre

Calgary Centre is the urban heart of Alberta's largest city, encompassing the downtown core, the Beltline, and a ring of established inner-city neighbourhoods stretching south and west from the Bow River. The riding includes Eau Claire, Chinatown, Downtown East Village, Inglewood, Ramsay, Mission, Cliff Bungalow, Mount Royal, Elbow Park, Scarboro, Sunalta, Bankview, South Calgary, Killarney-Glengarry, Altadore, Parkhill, Erlton, and the former CFB Currie lands — a cross-section of Calgary that ranges from glass office towers to century-old bungalows along the Elbow River.

Candidates

Greg McLean (Conservative) — A chartered investment manager and portfolio manager registered with the Alberta Securities Commission, McLean spent 20 years in finance working with oil-and-gas firms and technology startups. He holds a Bachelor of Commerce from the University of Alberta and an MBA from the Ivey School of Business. Earlier in his career he spent six years advising federal cabinet ministers Harvie Andre and Jean Corbeil. First elected in 2019 — defeating then-cabinet minister Kent Hehr — he served as the Conservative shadow minister for Natural Resources.

Sabrina Grover (Liberal) — A community organizer, entrepreneur, and public-relations professional, Grover began her career at the Calgary Real Estate Board and the Canadian Real Estate Association, where she helped develop affordable-housing policy. She later served on the global advocacy team of Nutrition International, working to improve health outcomes in Africa and Asia. She also owns Provoke Public Relations, a firm that has worked with startups, nonprofits, and First Nations governments.

Juan Estevez Moreno (NDP) — Born in Colombia and raised in Canada from the age of seven, Estevez Moreno worked retail and blue-collar jobs to put himself through the University of Lethbridge, where he earned a bachelor's degree in finance and marketing in 2018. He campaigned as a community activist focused on income inequality, housing affordability, LGBTQ+ rights, and climate action.

Austin Mullins (Green Party) — Mullins represented the Green Party in Calgary Centre, advocating for aggressive climate targets, transit investment, and a just transition for energy workers — issues that resonate with the riding's younger, downtown-dwelling electorate.

About the Riding

Calgary Centre is unlike any other riding in Alberta. Its demographics skew young, well-educated, and relatively high-income, yet its housing stock — dominated by condominiums and apartment towers in the Beltline and downtown — gives it one of the lowest homeownership rates in western Canada. The riding is the commercial and cultural hub of the Calgary metropolitan area, home to the Calgary Tower, the Glenbow Museum, the National Music Centre, and a dense cluster of corporate head offices in the energy, finance, and technology sectors.

The Beltline and East Village have undergone dramatic redevelopment over the past decade, attracting restaurants, breweries, and creative-industry firms to formerly industrial blocks. South of 17th Avenue, the riding transitions into tree-lined streets and established single-family neighbourhoods such as Mount Royal, Elbow Park, and Scarboro — some of the wealthiest postal codes in the province.

Politically, Calgary Centre is the most competitive riding in the city. The Conservatives hold a structural advantage, but the Liberals have mounted serious challenges — Kent Hehr won the seat for the Liberals in 2015 — and the NDP and Greens draw meaningful support from the young professional and creative-class populations concentrated downtown. Issues such as transit expansion, housing affordability, and energy-sector transition tend to dominate local debate.

Census Data (2016)

Population by Age & Sex

Residence Type

Income Distribution

Nearby Ridings