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Saskatoon

Tory minister Lynne Yelich loses nomination in new Saskatchewan riding

A Conservative cabinet minister has lost her bid to run for the party in a newly-created Saskatchewan riding in the next federal election.

Local sports broadcaster Kevin Waugh will represent Conservatives in Saskatoon-Grasswood

Lynne Yelich, Minister of State (Foreign Affairs and Consular), poses for a group photo after the swearing in of the federal cabinet at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on Monday, July 15, 2013. (Patrick Doyle/Canadian Press)

A Saskatchewan sportscaster has snatched the Conservative party nomination away from a longtime Conservative MP and cabinet minister who had been seeking to run in a newly-created riding.

Kevin Waugh had only announced last month that he would challenge Minister of State for Consular Affairs Lynne Yelich for the nomination in the riding of Saskatoon-Grasswood.

Yelichhad been the MP for Blackstrap since 2000, but that riding was sliced up during the redistribution of boundaries for the upcoming federal campaign and she had decided to run in the more urban portion of the new riding.

Waugh was not immediately available for interviews following his win late Monday night.

"What can I say....Thank you everyone for your well wishes and support," he wrote on Twitter.

Though several Conservative MPs were challenged for the nomination in new ridings across the country,Yelichis only one of two to be defeated.

The other was longtime Alberta MP Rob Anders who failed to win the party's nomination in two different Calgary-area districts.

The only other cabinet minister to face a challenge was former aboriginal affairs minister and current government whip John Duncan, who eventually succeeded in winning the nomination for the new B.C. riding ofCourtenay-Alberni.

Mike Lake, parliamentary secretary for industry, was challenged for the nomination in a new Edmonton-area riding, but won the vote.

Yelichhad been rumoured to be thinking about retiring ahead of the fall vote, but announced in mid-June she would run for the nomination in the new riding.

Though the electoral battle lines were redrawn ahead of the October vote, Saskatchewan has not been allocated any more seats for the next Parliament.

But ridings that had traditionally been a mix of urban and rural communities were split more definitely between the two.

The new riding ofSaskatoon-Grasswoodis among three new urban ridings for the city of Saskatoon.

For now, 13 of the provinces' 14 ridings in total are held by the Conservatives, and one by longtime Liberal RalphGoodale.

But most of the contests have historically been between the Conservatives and the NDP.

Still, that party didn't win a single seat in the province in the last election, a blow considering it was born in Saskatchewan in the1960s.