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Reading: Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre will run in a different riding next federal election: party
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Today in Canada > News > Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre will run in a different riding next federal election: party
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Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre will run in a different riding next federal election: party

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Last updated: 2026/01/20 at 7:02 PM
Press Room Published January 20, 2026
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Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre will run in a different riding next federal election: party
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Edmonton·New

The party confirmed Damien Kurek — who held the seat previously — would run in the Battle River-Crowfoot riding in the next election. Kurek gave up his seat last year so Poilievre could run in that electoral district.

The party confirmed Damien Kurek — who held the seat previously — would run in the Alberta riding

Emily Rae Pasiuk · CBC News · Posted: Jan 20, 2026 6:41 PM EST | Last Updated: 21 minutes ago

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Pierre Poilievre
Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre will run in a different riding next federal election, but the party has not said where he might land. (CBC)

The Conservative Party of Canada has confirmed that Pierre Poilievre will not run in the Battle River-Crowfoot riding in the next federal election.

The party leader lost his long-held seat in the Ontario riding of Carleton in April’s federal election to Liberal candidate Bruce Fanjoy.

The CPC confirmed on Tuesday that Damien Kurek — who held the Battle River-Crowfoot seat previously — would run in the riding again in the next election.

Kurek gave up his seat last year so Poilievre could run there in a byelection.

Radio-Canada asked the CPC where Poilievre might run in the next election, and those questions went unanswered.

The party also confirmed in an email that Kurek’s nomination is guaranteed; the CPC’s National Council passed a motion exempting him from a formal nomination process.

Battle River-Crowfoot has historically been a conservative stronghold, and notably houses municipalities like Camrose, Drumheller and Wainwright. Poilievre won handily in a byelection with just over 80 per cent of the vote.

Last year’s byelection had 214 candidates, making it the largest number of candidates on a federal ballot in Canadian history. 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Emily Rae Pasiuk is a reporter for CBC Edmonton with a keen interest in Alberta’s energy sector, the intersection between politics and daily life, and breaking news. Emily reported in Saskatchewan for three years before moving to Edmonton in 2020. Tips? Ideas? Reach her at [email protected].

With files from Radio-Canada’s Emmanuel Prince-Thauvette

Corrections and clarifications·Submit a news tip·

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