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2015 Alberta general election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromAlberta general election, 2015)
29th general election of Alberta, Canada
2015 Alberta general election

← 2012May 5, 20152019 →

87 seats in theLegislative Assembly of Alberta
44 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Turnout57.0%[1]
 First partySecond partyThird party
 
LeaderRachel NotleyBrian JeanJim Prentice
PartyNew DemocraticWildroseProgressive Conservative
Leader sinceOctober 18, 2014March 28, 2015September 6, 2014
Leader's seatEdmonton-StrathconaFort McMurray-ConklinCalgary-Foothills(disclaimed re-election)
Last election4 seats, 9.85%17 seats, 34.28%61 seats, 43.97%
Seats before4570
Seats won54219[a]
Seat changeIncrease50Increase16Decrease61
Popular vote604,518360,511413,610[b]
Percentage40.62%24.22%27.79%
SwingIncrease30.77ppDecrease10.06ppDecrease16.17pp

 Fourth partyFifth party
 
LeaderDavid SwannGreg Clark
PartyLiberalAlberta Party
Leader sinceFebruary 1, 2015September 21, 2013
Leader's seatCalgary-Mountain ViewCalgary-Elbow
Last election5 seats, 9.89%0 seats, 1.31%
Seats before50
Seats won11
Seat changeDecrease4Increase1
Popular vote62,15333,221
Percentage4.18%2.23%
SwingDecrease5.71ppIncrease0.92pp

Popular vote by riding. As this is a first-past-the-post election, seat totals are not determined by total popular vote, but instead by results in each riding. Riding names are listed at the bottom.

Premier before election

Jim Prentice
Progressive Conservative

Premier after election

Rachel Notley
New Democratic

The2015 Alberta general election was held on May 5, following a request of PremierJim Prentice to the Lieutenant Governor of AlbertaDonald Ethell to dissolve theLegislative Assembly on April 7. This election elected members to the29th Alberta Legislature. It was only the fourth time in provincial history that saw a change of governing party, and was the last provincial election for both theAlberta Progressive Conservative andWildrose parties, which merged in 2017 to form theUnited Conservative Party (although each ran a token candidate in the2019 election).

The provincial Election Actfixed the election date to a three-month period between March 1 and May 31 in the fourth calendar year after the preceding election day – in this case, April 23, 2012. However, the act does not affect the powers of the Lieutenant Governor todissolve the Legislature before this period.[2]

As a result of the election, theAlberta New Democratic Party (NDP) were elected to amajority government under leaderRachel Notley. The NDP formed government for the first time in Alberta history since the NDP's founding in the early 1960s.

The 2015 election is sometimes called the "Orange Chinook", a reference to the province's dramatic swing to the NDP, the NDP's orange colour and the weather shifts occasioned by strongChinook winds that southern Alberta commonly experiences.[3][4]

The NDP win ousted the PCs, who were reduced to third place in seats. Prentice resigned as PC leader and MLA forCalgary-Foothills on election night.[5]

The Progressive Conservatives (PCs) had a majority in theoutgoing Assembly and had won every provincial election since the1971 election, making them the longest-serving provincial government in Canadian history – being in office for 44 years. This was only the fourth change of governing party in Alberta since becoming a province in 1905, and one of the worst defeats a provincial government has suffered in Canada. 31 PC MLAs lost re-election to the legislature, the largest number in one election in Alberta history. It also marked the first time in almost 80 years that a left-of-centre political party had formed government in Alberta since the defeat of theUnited Farmers of Alberta in 1935 and the Depression-era radical monetary reform policies of William Aberhart's Social Credit government.[6]

The Wildrose Party under leaderBrian Jean remained theOfficial Opposition, gaining four seats since2012 despite winning 81,814 fewer votes and a 10.1% lower share of the popular vote than in the previous election. TheAlberta Liberal Party andAlberta Party each won a single seat with Alberta Party leaderGreg Clark becoming the party's first MLA. The Alberta Liberal Party lost four seats, only returning interim leaderDavid Swann to the Legislative Assembly.

Following the election, Notley and her cabinet were sworn in on May 24.[7]

Overall, across the province, 1,488,248 valid votes were cast in this election.[8]

Background

[edit]
Main article:28th Alberta Legislative Assembly

In the2012 general election the PCs lost a portion of their caucus, but were able to continue as majority government, despite their share of the popular vote decreasing to under 50%. TheWildrose Party formed theofficial opposition for the first time, while the other two parties in the Assembly, theAlberta Liberal Party andAlberta New Democratic Party (NDP), both held official party status with five and four seats respectively.[9] On September 4, 2014, the PCs became the longest serving political dynasty in Canadian history, at 43 years, 5 days.[10]

Prentice, who succeeded former premier and interim leader of the Progressive ConservativesDave Hancock in September 2014, was not obligated to call an election until 2016. However, seeking a new mandate to pass his budget, he asked Lieutenant GovernorDonald Ethell to dissolve the legislature on April 7. In accordance with Canadian constitutional practice, Ethell granted the request, beginning a month long campaign.[11] The early election call was criticized by some as unethical, as it violated the fixed election dates specified in theElections Act, but it was constitutionally valid and followed the general practice of the reserve powers of the Crown, specifically the constitutional convention of following the advice of the premier.[12]

Results

[edit]

The NDP received the most votes (more votes than any other party) overall and in 54 districts (more than half the districts), though did not receive a majority of the vote overall nor in many districts. It received 40.6 percent of the vote and captured 62 percent of the seats in the Legislature.

Due toFirst-past-the-post voting, the NDP swept the Edmonton seats, won a majority of the seats in Calgary and just less than half of seats in rural Alberta.[13] NDP MLAs were elected in all 21 Edmonton districts, 15 of the 26 Calgary districts and 18 of the 40 districts outside the major cities.[14]

NDP candidates received over 50% of the votes in each Edmonton riding as well as the ridings of Sherwood Park, St. Albert and Lethbridge-West. All opposition (non-NDP) candidates received less than half the votes in the riding where they ran, except for the Wildrose candidates in Cypress-Medicine Hat, Strathmore-Brooks and Olds-Disbury, each of whom captured a majority of the district votes.

The election produced some very close races and small leads for some winning candidates. In Calgary Glenmore the winning candidate won with a lead of six votes over her leading contender. In Calgary McCall an NDP candidate won with less than 30 percent of the vote; in Calgary Shaw an NDP candidate won with but 31 percent of the vote; in Calgary South-East a PC won with only 32.5 percent of the votes cast.

In many ridings the combined votes of the Progressive Conservative and the Wildrose candidates surpassed that of the NDP.

In some ridings such as Red Deer North, Spruce Grove-St. Albert, Calgary-Buffalo, Calgary-Varsity, Lethbridge East and Lethbridge West, the combined vote of the NDP and the Liberal candidates totalled more than 50 percent of the district's votes, thus overwhelming the combined vote of the Conservative and Wild Rose candidate. This also held true for Calgary Mountain View where a Liberal was elected.

In many ridings no Liberal ran, which probably aided the NDP victory in those ridings. These included Lesser Slave Lake, Peace River, Edmonton-McClung, Sherwood Park, West Yellowhead and Whitecourt.

PartyVotesSeats
New Democratic604,518
40.6%
Increase 30.8pp
54 / 87 (62%)
Progressive Conservative413,610
27.8%
Decrease 16.2pp
9 / 87 (10%)
Wildrose360,511
24.2%
Decrease 10.1pp
21 / 87 (24%)
Liberal62,153
4.2%
Decrease 5.7pp
1 / 87 (1%)
Alberta Party33,221
2.2%
Increase 0.9pp
1 / 87 (1%)
Popular vote
New Democratic
40.62%
PC
27.79%
Wildrose
24.22%
Liberal
4.18%
Alberta Party
2.23%
Others
0.96%
Seats
New Democratic
62.07%
Wildrose
24.14%
PC
11.49%
Liberal
1.15%
Alberta Party
1.15%
Summary of the May 5, 2015Legislative Assembly of Alberta election results[15]
PartyParty leaderNumber of
candidates
SeatsPopular vote*
2012Dissol.2015% of Seats#%Change (pp)
New DemocraticRachel Notley87445462.1604,51840.62+30.77
WildroseBrian Jean861752124.1360,51124.22–10.06
Progressive ConservativeJim Prentice876170910.3413,61027.79–16.17
LiberalDavid Swann565511.162,1534.18–5.71
Alberta PartyGreg Clark3611.133,2212.23+0.92
Green[16]Janet Keeping247,2150.48+0.09
Social CreditLen Skowronski68340.06+0.03
CommunistNaomi Rankin21820.01=
Alberta First[17]Bart Hampton1720.005=
 Independent1515,9320.40+0.13
 Vacant21**1.1
Total400878787100.0%1,488,248100.00%
* The total popular vote includes votes from voidedCalgary-Foothills election.
** Incumbent PremierJim Prentice disclaimed his victory in Calgary-Foothills.[18] According to section 139 of theAlberta Elections Act,[19] if a winning candidate disclaims their right to become an MLA before the end of the appeal period for the official results, that riding's election is declared void.
Elections to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta – seats won/lost by party, 2012–2015
Party2012Gain from (loss to)2015
NDPWRPCLibAlb
New Democratic4244454
Wildrose17(2)7(1)21
Progressive Conservative61(44)1(7)(1)9
Liberal5(4)1
Alberta Party011
Total87(50)3(7)52(1)4(1)86

The election resulted in amajority government led by theNew Democratic Party.

The result inCalgary-Glenmore remained unresolved on election night, as incumbent PC MLALinda Johnson and NDP challengerAnam Kazim finished the vote count in an exact tie of 7,015 votes each,[20] necessitating arecount process.[20] On May 15, the recount determined NDP candidate Anam Kazim won the riding by six votes.

The Alberta NDP had been leading in most polls since late April. They had been expected to do well inEdmonton, which historically had been more favourable to centre-left parties and candidates than Alberta in general. However, in a result that exceeded even the most optimistic projections for the NDP, Edmonton swung dramatically to support Notley, who represents an Edmonton riding. The NDP took every seat in the city, all by very large margins (4,000 votes or more with absolute majority support). The NDP also won 15 of the 25 seats inCalgary, the power base of the PCs for most of the previous four decades. The NDP also swept the province's third and fourth-largest cities,Lethbridge andRed Deer. NDP support remained relatively lower in rural Alberta, where they won only a handful of ridings inthe north of the province, as well as some rural ridings around Edmonton.[21]

Notley later said that she had known a week before the election that the NDP would win. She told theCanadian Press that she had been sitting in a hotel room in either Calgary or Lethbridge when she saw a very credible poll showing the NDP was poised to rebound from a mere four seats in the legislature – the minimum forofficial party status – to an outright majority. She was stunned at first, but recovered long enough to drop her plans for a whirlwind schedule to close out the campaign. Her original plan would have not only resulted in her looking extremely haggard in her first speech as premier-elect, but would have left her without time to begin a transition.[22]

The PCs finished second in the popular vote, 53,099 votes ahead of the Wildrose. However, their caucus was decimated due to a near-total collapse in the major cities, as well as a more pronounced split in the right-of-centre vote. They were completely shut out in Edmonton, Lethbridge, and Red Deer, and lost 12 of their 20 seats in Calgary. Since the first-past-the-post system awards seats solely on the basis of plurality district contests (not by proportional representation), the PCs were knocked down to third place with 10 seats, and only two outside Calgary. This was further reduced to nine when Prentice disclaimed victory in his riding. The PCs were reduced to their smallest presence in the Legislative Assembly since 1967. With a few exceptions, their support in the cities transferred to the NDP, while their rural support moved to the Wildrose. All but three members of Prentice's cabinet were defeated.

The Wildrose had its legislative caucus greatly reduced in 2014 when then-leader and Leader of the Official OppositionDanielle Smith and all but 5 Wildrose MLAs crossed the floor to sit with the governing PCs. In the 2015 general election, the party rebounded to 21 seats and retained Official Opposition status. All of their gains were in rural ridings taken from the PCs, and they failed to win a seat in Edmonton or Calgary.

Greg Clark, leader of theAlberta Party, won the first ever seat for his party in the Legislative Assembly. He won the seat ofCalgary-Elbow.

For the first time the NDP won a majority of seats in Calgary, taking 15 of the city's 26 seats. This centre-left success was deepened by a Liberal candidate and an Alberta Party candidate also scoring wins in that city. Such had not happened since 1921, when Labour candidates and Independents took seats there.[23]

Results by riding

[edit]

Bold indicatescabinet members, andparty leaders areitalicized. Candidate names appear as they appeared on the ballot.

Colour band in gulley indictes winner of the election.

All results are sourced fromElections Alberta.[24]

Northern Alberta

[edit]
Electoral districtCandidatesIncumbent
PCWildroseLiberalNDPAlberta PartyOther
Athabasca-Sturgeon-RedwaterJeff Johnson
5,016 - 29.9%
Travis Olson
4,973 - 29.6%
Colin Piquette
6,797 - 40.5%
Jeff Johnson
Barrhead-Morinville-WestlockMaureen Kubinec
4,876 - 26.6%
Glenn van Dijken
7,206 - 39.3%
Tristan Turner
6,232 - 34.0%
Maureen Kubinec
Bonnyville-Cold LakeCraig Copeland
3,594 - 30.4%
Scott Cyr
5,452 - 46.2%
Josalyne Head
2,136 - 18.1%
Rob Fox
628 - 5.3%
Genia Leskiw
Dunvegan-Central Peace-NotleyRhonda Clarke-Gauthier
2,766 - 28.8%
Kelly Hudson
3,147 - 32.8%
Margaret McCuaig-Boyd
3,692 - 38.4%
Hector Goudreau
Fort McMurray-ConklinDon Scott
1,502 - 22.3%
Brian Jean
2,950 - 43.9%
Melinda Hollis
204 - 3.0%
Ariana Mancini
2,071 - 30.8%
Don Scott
Fort McMurray-Wood BuffaloMike Allen
2,486 - 25.9%
Tany Yao
3,835 - 40.0%
Robin Le Fevre
345 - 3.6%
Stephen Drover
2,915 - 30.4%
Mike Allen
Grande Prairie-SmokyEverett McDonald
4,968 - 30.8%
Todd Loewen
5,343 - 33.2%
Kevin McLean
787 - 4.9%
Todd Russell
5,009 - 31.1%
Everett McDonald
Grande Prairie-WapitiWayne Drysdale
6,229 - 35.6%
Laila Goodridge
4,175 - 23.8%
Mary Dahr
5,062 - 28.9%
Rory Tarant
2,048 - 11.7%
Wayne Drysdale
Lac La Biche-St. Paul-Two HillsDarrell Younghans
3,004 - 24.4%
David Hanson
4,763 - 38.7%
Catherine Harder
4,214 - 34.2%
Brian Deheer (Green)
339 - 2.8%
Shayne Saskiw
Lesser Slave LakePearl Calahasen
1,944 - 21.5%
Darryl Boisson
3,198 - 35.3%
Danielle Larivee
3,915 - 43.2%
Pearl Calahasen
Peace RiverFrank Oberle
3,529 - 36.4%
Nathan Steinke
1,979 - 20.4%
Debbie Jabbour
3,821 - 39.4%
Sherry Hilton
376 - 3.9%
Frank Oberle

Central Edmonton

[edit]
Electoral districtCandidatesIncumbent
PCWildroseLiberalNDPAlberta PartyOther
Edmonton-Beverly-ClareviewTony Caterina
2,524 - 15.5%
Stephanie Diacon
1,248 - 7.6%
Tomi Yellowface
359 - 2.2%
Deron Bilous
12,049 - 73.8%
Owais Siddiqui
147 - 0.9%
Deron Bilous
Edmonton-CalderThomas "Tom" Bradley
3,222 - 17.8%
Andrew Altimas
1,565 - 8.6%
Amit "Sunny" Batra
527 - 2.9%
David Eggen
12,837 - 70.7%
David Eggen
Edmonton-CentreCatherine Keill
2,228 - 13.5%
Joe Byram
772 - 4.7%
Laurie Blakeman[c]
4,199 - 25.4%
David Shepherd
8,983 - 54.4%
Greg Keating (Ind.)
295 - 1.8%
Rory Joe Koopmans (Ind.)
40 - 0.2%
Laurie Blakeman
Edmonton-GlenoraHeather Klimchuk
3,145 - 17.3%
Don Koziak
1,394 - 7.6%
Karen Sevcik
553 - 3.0%
Sarah Hoffman
12,473 - 68.4%
Chris Vilcsak
463 - 2.5%
David Parker (Green)
195 - 1.1%
Heather Klimchuk
Edmonton-Gold BarDavid Dorward
4,147 - 18.6%
Justin J. James
1,422 - 6.4%
Ronald Brochu
702 - 3.2%
Marlin Schmidt
15,349 - 68.9%
Cristina Stasia
662 - 3.0%
David Dorward
Edmonton-Highlands-NorwoodJonathan Weiqun Dai
1,778 - 12.0%
Joshua Loeppky
967 - 6.5%
Matthew R. Smith
494 - 3.3%
Brian Mason
11,555 - 78.1%
Brian Mason
Edmonton-Mill CreekGene Zwozdesky
3,848 - 23.9%
Saqib Raja
1,365 - 8.5%
Harpreet Gill
1,896 - 11.8%
Denise Woollard
9,025 - 55.9%
Gene Zwozdesky
Edmonton-Mill WoodsSohail Quadri
2,920 - 19.1%
Baljit Sall
1,437 - 9.4%
Roberto Maglalang
850 - 5.6%
Christina Gray
9,930 - 64.9%
Aura Leddy (Ind.)
129 - 0.8%
Naomi Rankin
(Communist)
44 - 0.3%
Sohail Quadri
Edmonton-RiverviewSteve Young
3,732 - 19.3%
Ian Crawford
1,350 - 7.0%
Donna Wilson
1,416 - 7.3%
Lori Sigurdson
12,108 - 62.8%
Brandon Beringer
487 - 2.5%
Sandra Wolf Lange (Green)
135 - 0.7%
Glenn Miller (Ind.)
59 - 0.3%
Steve Young
Edmonton-RutherfordChris LaBossiere
3,940 - 22.5%
Josef Pisa
1,644 - 9.4%
Michael Chan
741 - 4.2%
Richard Feehan
11,214 - 63.9%
Fred Horne
Edmonton-StrathconaShelley Wegner
2,242 - 13.6%
Steve Kochan
658 - 4.0%
Rachel Notley
13,592 - 82.4%
Rachel Notley

Suburban Edmonton

[edit]
Electoral districtCandidatesIncumbent
PCWildroseLiberalNDPAlberta PartyOther
Edmonton-Castle DownsThomas Lukaszuk
4,182 - 23.1%
Gerrit Roosenboom
1,383 - 7.6%
Todd Ross
880 - 4.9%
Nicole Goehring
11,689 - 64.5%
Thomas Lukaszuk
Edmonton-DecoreJanice Sarich
2,847 - 18.4%
Dean R. Miller
1,289 - 8.3%
Bradley Lawrence Whalen
691 - 4.5%
Chris Nielsen
10,531 - 67.9%
Trey Capnerhurst (Green)
150 - 1.0%
Janice Sarich
Edmonton-EllerslieHarman Kandola
3,549 - 19.8%
Jackie Lovely
2,499 - 13.9%
Mike McGowan
839 - 4.7%
Rod Loyola
11,034 - 61.6%
Naresh Bhardwaj§
Edmonton-ManningGurcharan Garcha
2,599 - 15.1%
Atiq Rehman
1,475 - 8.6%
Adam Mounzer
776 - 4.5%
Heather Sweet
12,376 - 71.8%
Peter Sandhu§
Edmonton-McClungDavid Xiao
4,408 - 25.9%
Steve Thompson
2,373 - 14.0%
Lorne Dach
9,412 - 55.4%
John Hudson
808 - 4.8%
David Xiao
Edmonton-MeadowlarkKatherine O'Neill
3,924 - 22.8%
Amber Maze
1,972 - 11.5%
Dan Bildhauer
1,507 - 8.8%
Jon Carson
9,796 - 57.0%
Raj Sherman
Edmonton-South WestMatt Jeneroux
6,316 - 27.8%
Cole Kander
2,290 - 10.1%
Rudy Arcilla
1,199 - 5.3%
Thomas Dang
12,352 - 54.4%
Krishna Tailor
543 - 2.4%
Matt Jeneroux
Edmonton-WhitemudStephen Mandel
7,177 - 32.2%
Chad Peters
1,423 - 6.4%
Steven Townsend
629 - 2.8%
Bob Turner
12,805 - 57.4%
Kathryn Jackson (Green)
182 - 0.8%
John Baloun (Ind.)
73 - 0.3%
Stephen Mandel
Sherwood ParkCathy Olesen
5,655 - 25.9%
Linda Osinchuk
4,815 - 22.1%
Annie McKitrick
11,365 - 52.0%
Cathy Olesen
St. AlbertStephen Khan
6,340 - 27.9%
Shelley Biermanski
2,858 - 12.6%
Bill Alton
778 - 3.4%
Marie Renaud
12,220 - 53.9%
Trevor Love
493 - 2.2%
Stephen Khan

West Central Alberta

[edit]
Electoral districtCandidatesIncumbent
PCWildroseLiberalNDPAlberta PartyOther
Drayton Valley-DevonDiana J. McQueen
5,182 - 30.5%
Mark Smith
6,284 - 37.0%
Katherine Swampy
4,816 - 28.4%
Connie Jensen
416 - 2.5%
Jennifer R. Roach (Green)
276 - 1.6%
Diana McQueen
Innisfail-Sylvan LakeKerry Towle
5,136 - 28.0%
Don MacIntyre
7,829 - 42.7%
Patricia Norman
4,244 - 23.1%
Danielle Klooster
1,135 - 6.2%
Kerry Towle
Olds-Didsbury-Three HillsWade Bearchell
5,274 - 26.3%
Nathan Cooper
10,692 - 53.4%
Glenn R. Norman
3,366 - 16.8%
Jim Adamchick
685 - 3.4%
Bruce Rowe
Red Deer-NorthChristine Moore
3,836 - 22.7%
S.H. "Buck" Buchanan
4,173 - 24.7%
Michael Dawe[d]
3,262 - 19.3%
Kim Schreiner
4,969 - 29.4%
Krystal Kromm
683 - 4.0%
Mary Anne Jablonski
Red Deer-SouthDarcy Mykytyshyn
5,414 - 27.6%
Norman Wiebe
4,812 - 24.6%
Deborah Checkel
738 - 3.8%
Barb Miller
7,024 - 35.9%
Serge Gingras
1,035 - 5.3%
Ben Dubois (Green)
274 - 1.4%
Patti Argent (Ind.)
232 - 1.2%
William Berry (Ind.)
60 - 0.3%
Cal Dallas
Rimbey-Rocky Mountain House-SundreTammy Coté
5,296 - 31.8%
Jason Nixon
6,670 - 40.1%
Hannah Schlamp
2,791 - 16.8%
Joe Anglin (Ind.)
1,871 - 11.3%
Joe Anglin
Spruce Grove-St. AlbertRus Matichuk
6,362 - 25.6%
Jaye Walter
4,631 - 18.7%
Reg Lukasik
916 - 3.7%
Trevor Horne
11,546 - 46.5%
Gary Hanna
1,081 - 4.4%
Brendon Greene (Green)
269 - 1.1%
Vacant
Stony PlainKen Lemke
4,944 - 25.7%
Kathy Rondeau
5,586 - 29.1%
Mike Hanlon
657 - 3.4%
Erin Babcock
7,268 - 37.8%
Sandy Simmie
538 - 2.8%
Matt Burnett (Green)
220 - 1.1%
Ken Lemke
West YellowheadRobin Campbell
3,433 - 32.3%
Stuart Taylor
3,055 - 28.8%
Eric Rosendahl
4,135 - 38.9%
Robin Campbell
Whitecourt-Ste. AnneGeorge VanderBurg
4,721 - 31.1%
John Bos
4,996 - 33.0%
Oneil Carlier
5,442 - 35.9%
George VanderBurg

East Central Alberta

[edit]
Electoral districtCandidatesIncumbent
PCWildroseLiberalNDPAlberta PartyOther
Battle River-WainwrightBlake Prior
5,057 - 31.2%
Wes Taylor
6,862 - 42.3%
Ron Williams
500 - 3.1%
Gordon Naylor
3,807 - 23.5%
Vacant
Drumheller-StettlerJack Hayden
5,388 - 33.9%
Rick Strankman
7,570 - 47.7%
Emily Shannon
2,927 - 18.4%
Rick Strankman
Fort Saskatchewan-VegrevilleJacquie Fenske
5,527 - 28.3%
Joe Gosselin
3,959 - 20.2%
Peter Schneider
475 - 2.4%
Jessica Littlewood
8,983 - 45.9%
Derek Christensen
324 - 1.7%
Allison Anderson (Green)
285 - 1.5%
Jacquie Fenske
Lacombe-PonokaPeter Dewit
5,018 - 27.6%
Ron Orr
6,502 - 35.7%
Doug Hart
5,481 - 30.1%
Tony Jeglum
1,206 - 6.6%
Rod Fox§
Leduc-BeaumontGeorge Rogers
6,225 - 28.3%
Sharon Smith
6,543 - 29.7%
Shaye Anderson
8,321 - 37.8%
Bert Hoogewoonink
612 - 2.8%
Josh Drozda (Green)
301 - 1.4%
George Rogers
Strathcona-Sherwood ParkDave Quest
6,623 - 30.1%
Rob Johnson
5,286 - 24.0%
Estefania Cortes-Vargas
9,376 - 42.6%
Lynne Kaiser
721 - 3.3%
Dave Quest
Vermilion-LloydminsterRichard Starke
5,935 - 47.4%
Danny Hozack
4,171 - 33.3%
Saba Mossagizi
2,428 - 19.4%
Richard Starke
Wetaskiwin-CamroseVerlyn Olson
5,951 - 34.7%
Bill Rock
3,685 - 21.5%
Bruce Hinkley
7,531 - 43.9%
Verlyn Olson

Central Calgary

[edit]
Electoral districtCandidatesIncumbent
PCWildroseLiberalNDPAlberta PartyOther
Calgary-AcadiaJonathan Denis
4,602 - 29.0%
Linda Carlson
4,985 - 31.4%
Nicholas Borovsky
765 - 4.8%
Brandy Payne
5,506 - 34.7%
Jonathan Denis
Calgary-BuffaloTerry Rock
3,738 - 28.1%
Leah Wamboldt
1,351 - 10.2%
David Khan
3,282 - 24.7%
Kathleen Ganley
4,671 - 35.1%
Sabrina Lee Levac (Green)
263 - 2.0%
Kent Hehr
Calgary-CrossRick Hanson
4,501 - 35.3%
Moiz Mahmood
2,060 - 16.2%
Manjot Singh Gill
1,194 - 9.4%
Ricardo Miranda
4,602 - 36.1%
Peter Meic (Green)
236 - 1.9%
Katherine Le Rougetel (Ind.)
143 - 1.1%
Yvonne Fritz
Calgary-CurrieChristine Cusanelli
4,577 - 24.7%
Terry DeVries
3,769 - 20.3%
Shelley Wark-Martyn
1,441 - 7.8%
Brian Malkinson
7,387 - 39.8%
Tony Norman
1,006 - 5.4%
Nelson Berlin (Green)
373 - 2.0%
Christine Cusanelli
Calgary-EastMoe Amery
3,971 - 28.3%
Ali Waissi
3,633 - 25.9%
Naser Al-Kukhun
806 - 5.7%
Robyn Luff
5,506 - 39.2%
Bonnie Devine (Communist)
138 - 1.0%
Moe Amery
Calgary-ElbowGordon Dirks
6,254 - 30.3%
Megan Brown
1,786 - 8.7%
John Roggeveen
565 - 2.7%
Catherine Welburn
3,256 - 15.8%
Greg Clark
8,707 - 42.2%
Larry R. Heather (Social Credit)
67 - 0.3%
Gordon Dirks
Calgary-Fish CreekRichard Gotfried
6,198 - 32.9%
Blaine Maller
5,568 - 29.6%
Jill Moreton
6,069 - 32.2%
Allison Wemyss
850 - 4.5%
Martin Owen (Social Credit)
148 - 0.8%
Heather Forsyth
Calgary-FortAndy Bao Nguyen
3,204 - 22.7%
Jeevan Mangat
3,003 - 21.3%
Said Abdulbaki
476 - 3.4%
Joe Ceci
7,027 - 49.8%
Vic Goosen
410 - 2.9%
Wayne Cao
Calgary-GlenmoreLinda Johnson
7,015 - 33.2%
Chris Kemp-Jackson
5,058 - 23.9%
David Waddington
1,345 - 6.4%
Anam Kazim
7,021 - 33.2%
Terry Lo
719 - 3.4%
Linda Johnson
Calgary-KleinKyle Fawcett
4,878 - 26.8%
Jeremy Nixon
4,206 - 23.0%
David Gamble
1,104 - 6.0%
Craig Coolahan
8,098 - 44.3%
Noel Keough[e] (Green)
0 - 0.0%
Kyle Fawcett
Calgary-Mountain ViewMark Hlady
4,699 - 23.9%
Terry Wong
2,070 - 10.5%
David Swann
7,204 - 36.7%
Marc Andrew Chikinda
5,673 - 28.9%
David Swann
Calgary-VarsitySusan Billington
5,700 - 30.2%
Sharon Polsky
2,598 - 13.8%
Pete Helfrich
1,862 - 9.9%
Stephanie McLean
8,297 - 43.9%
Carl Svoboda (Green)
424 - 2.2%
Donna Kennedy-Glans

Suburban Calgary

[edit]
Electoral districtCandidatesIncumbent
PCWildroseLiberalNDPAlberta PartyOther
Calgary-BowByron Nelson
5,419 - 33.0%
Trevor Grover
3,752 - 22.8%
Matt Gaiser
682 - 4.2%
Deborah Drever
5,669 - 34.5%
Jonathon Himann
459 - 2.8%
David Reid (Green)
448 - 2.7%
Alana DeLong
Calgary-FoothillsJim Prentice[f]
7,163 - 40.3%
Keelan Frey
3,216 - 18.1%
Ali Bin Zahid
1,271 - 7.2%
Anne Wilson
5,748 - 32.4%
Janet Keeping (Green)
363 - 2.0%
Jim Prentice
Calgary-GreenwayManmeet Bhullar
5,337 - 42.8%
Devinder Toor
2,627 - 21.1%
Don Monroe
4,513 - 36.2%
Manmeet Bhullar
Calgary-HawkwoodJason Luan
6,378 - 31.2%
Jae Shim
4,448 - 21.7%
Harbaksh Singh Sekhon
736 - 3.6%
Michael Connolly
7,443 - 36.4%
Beth Barberree
925 - 4.5%
Polly Knowlton Cockett (Green)
455 - 2.2%
Len Skowronski (Social Credit)
90 - 0.4%
Jason Luan
Calgary-HaysRic McIver
6,671 - 38.3%
Bob Mailloux
4,562 - 26.2%
Shawn Emran
722 - 4.1%
Carla Drader
5,138 - 29.5%
Graham MacKenzie (Green)
250 - 1.4%
Zachary Doyle (Social Credit)
93 - 0.5%
Ric McIver
Calgary-LougheedDave Rodney
5,939 - 35.0%
Mark Mantei
4,781 - 28.2%
Leila Keith
817 - 4.8%
Mihai Ion
5,437 - 32.0%
Dave Rodney
Calgary-Mackay-Nose HillNeil Brown
4,587 - 27.4%
Kathy Macdonald
4,914 - 29.3%
Prab Lashar
768 - 4.6%
Karen M. McPherson
6,177 - 36.9%
Sandy Kevin Aberdeen (Green)
316 - 1.9%
Neil Brown
Calgary-McCallJagdeep Kaur Sahota
2,317 - 18.2%
Happy Mann
3,367 - 26.4%
Avinash S. Khangura
2,224 - 17.5%
Irfan Sabir
3,812 - 29.9%
Burhan Khan (Ind.)
1,010 - 7.9%
Darshan Kang
Calgary-North WestSandra Jansen
6,320 - 32.7%
Jeff Callaway
5,163 - 26.7%
Neil Marion
935 - 4.8%
Karen Mills
5,724 - 29.6%
Chris Blatch
1,176 - 6.1%
Sandra Jansen
Calgary-Northern HillsTeresa Woo-Paw
5,343 - 30.7%
Prasad Panda
4,392 - 25.3%
Harry Lin
1,000 - 5.8%
Jamie Kleinsteuber
6,641 - 38.2%
Teresa Woo-Paw
Calgary-ShawJeff Wilson
5,348 - 30.7%
Brad Leishman
5,301 - 30.4%
Alexander Barrow
668 - 3.8%
Graham Sucha
5,449 - 31.2%
Evert Smith
661 - 3.8%
Jeff Wilson
Calgary-South EastRick Fraser
7,663 - 32.5%
Brandon Lunty
6,892 - 29.2%
Gladwin Gill
1,304 - 5.5%
Mirical Macdonald
7,358 - 31.2%
Jordan Mac Isaac (Green)
374 - 1.6%
Rick Fraser
Calgary-WestMike Ellis
8,312 - 46.8%
Gerard Lucyshyn
4,512 - 25.4%
Mizanur Rahman
4,940 - 27.8%
Mike Ellis
Chestermere-Rocky ViewBruce McAllister
7,454 - 36.0%
Leela Sharon Aheer
7,676 - 37.0%
William James Pelech
3,706 - 17.9%
Jamie Lall (Ind.)
1,093 - 5.3%
Coral Bliss Taylor (Green)
405 - 2.0%
Matt Grant (Ind.)
391 - 1.9%
Bruce McAllister

Southern Alberta

[edit]
Electoral districtCandidatesIncumbent
PCWildroseLiberalNDPAlberta PartyOther
AirdriePeter Brown
6,181 - 28.9%
Angela Pitt
7,499 - 35.1%
Chris Noble
6,388 - 29.9%
Jeremy Klug
912 - 4.3%
Jeff Willerton (Ind.)
399 - 1.9%
Rob Anderson
Banff-CochraneRon Casey
5,555 - 28.2%
Scott Wagner
5,692 - 28.9%
Cameron Westhead
8,426 - 42.8%
Ron Casey
Cardston-Taber-WarnerBrian Brewin
4,356 - 35.5%
Grant Hunter
5,126 - 41.8%
Aaron Haugen
2,407 - 19.6%
Delbert Bodnarek
378 - 3.1%
Gary Bikman§
Cypress-Medicine HatBob Olson
3,389 - 21.6%
Drew Barnes
8,544 - 54.6%
Eric Musekamp
528 - 3.4%
Bev Waege
3,201 - 20.4%
Drew Barnes
HighwoodCarrie Fischer
6,827 - 33.0%
Wayne Anderson
8,504 - 41.1%
Leslie Mahoney
3,937 - 19.0%
Joel Windsor
892 - 4.3%
Martin Blake (Green)
390 - 1.7%
Jeremy Fraser (Social Credit)
187 - 0.9%
Danielle Smith§
Lethbridge-EastTammy L. Perlich
4,743 - 25.3%
Kent Prestage
3,918 - 20.9%
Bill West
1,201 - 6.4%
Maria Fitzpatrick
8,918 - 47.5%
Bridget Pastoor
Lethbridge-WestGreg Weadick
3,938 - 21.0%
Ron Bain
3,063 - 16.3%
Sheila Pyne
634 - 3.4%
Shannon Phillips
11,144 - 59.3%
Greg Weadick
Little BowIan Donovan
4,793 - 35.3%
David Schneider
4,803 - 35.4%
Helen McMenamin
377 - 2.8%
Bev Muendel-Atherstone
3,364 - 24.8%
Caleb Van Der Weide (Social Credit)
249 - 1.8%
Ian Donovan
Livingstone-MacleodEvan P. Berger
6,404 - 34.7%
Pat Stier
7,362 - 39.9%
Alida Hess
464 - 2.5%
Aileen Burke
4,338 - 22.9%
Pat Stier
Medicine HatBlake Pedersen
3,427 - 21.1%
Val Olson
5,790 - 35.6%
Bob Wanner
6,160 - 37.9%
Jim Black
731 - 4.5%
David Andrew Phillips (Ind.)
137 - 0.8%
Blake Pedersen
Strathmore-BrooksMolly Douglass
4,452 - 27.0%
Derek Fildebrandt
8,652 - 52.5%
Ali Abdulbaki
200 - 1.2%
Lynn MacWilliam
2,463 - 15.0%
Einar B. Davison
304 - 1.8%
Mike Worthington (Green)
322 - 2.0%
Glen Dundas (Alberta First)
72 - 0.4%
Jason Hale

Defeated incumbents

[edit]
PartyNameConstituencyOffice held at electionYear electedDefeated byParty
Progressive
Conservative
Mike AllenFort McMurray-Wood Buffalo2012Tany YaoWildrose Party
Moe AmeryCalgary East1993Robyn LuffNew Democratic Party
Pearl CalahasenLesser Slave LakeLongest-serving MLA at dissolution1989Danielle LariveeNew Democratic Party
Jonathan DenisCalgary-AcadiaMinister of Justice and Solicitor General2008Brandy PayneNew Democratic Party
Gordon DirksCalgary-ElbowMinister of Education2014Greg ClarkAlberta Party
Ian DonovanLittle Bow2012Dave SchneiderWildrose Party
David DorwardEdmonton-Gold BarAssociate Minister of Aboriginal Relations2012Marlin SchmidtNew Democratic Party
Jacquie FenskeFort Saskatchewan-Vegreville2012Jessica LittlewoodNew Democratic Party
Matt JenerouxEdmonton-South West2012Thomas DangNew Democratic Party
Jeff JohnsonAthabasca-Sturgeon-RedwaterMinister of Seniors2008Colin PiquetteNew Democratic Party
Linda JohnsonCalgary-Glenmore2012Anam KazimNew Democratic Party
Stephen KhanSt. AlbertMinister of Service Alberta2012Marie RenaudNew Democratic Party
Heather KlimchukEdmonton-GlenoraMinister of Human Services2008Sarah HoffmanNew Democratic Party
Maureen KubinecBarrhead-Morinville-WestlockMinister of Culture and Tourism2012Glenn van DijkenWildrose Party
Thomas LukaszukEdmonton-Castle Downs2001Nicole GoehringNew Democratic Party
Stephen MandelEdmonton-WhitemudMinister of Health2014Bob TurnerNew Democratic Party
Bruce McAllisterChestermere-Rocky View2012Leela AheerWildrose Party
Everett McDonaldGrande Prairie-Smoky2012Todd LoewenWildrose Party
Frank OberlePeace RiverMinister of Energy, Government House Leader2004Debbie JabbourNew Democratic Party
Cathy OlesenSherwood Park2012Annie McKitrickNew Democratic Party
Blake PedersenMedicine Hat2012Bob WannerNew Democratic Party
Sohail QuadriEdmonton-Mill Woods2012Christina GrayNew Democratic Party
George RogersLeduc-Beaumont2004Shaye AndersonNew Democratic Party
Janice SarichEdmonton-Decore2008Chris NielsenNew Democratic Party
Don ScottFort McMurray-ConklinMinister of Innovation and Advanced Education, Deputy House Leader2012Brian JeanWildrose Party
Kerry TowleInnisfail-Sylvan Lake2012Don MacIntyreWildrose Party
Jeff WilsonCalgary-Shaw2012Graham SuchaNew Democratic Party
Teresa Woo-PawCalgary-Northern Hills2008Jamie KleinsteuberNew Democratic Party
David XiaoEdmonton-McClung2008Lorne DachNew Democratic Party
Steve YoungEdmonton-Riverview2012Lori SigurdsonNew Democratic Party
Gene ZwozdeskyEdmonton-Mill CreekSpeaker1993Denise WoollardNew Democratic Party
LiberalLaurie BlakemanEdmonton-Centre1997David ShepherdNew Democratic Party
IndependentJoe AnglinRimbey-Rocky Mountain House-Sundre2012Jason NixonWildrose Party

MLAs who did not run again

[edit]
Progressive Conservative
Wildrose
Liberal

Timeline

[edit]

2012

[edit]

2013

[edit]

2014

[edit]

2015

[edit]

Opinion polls

[edit]

The following is a summary of publishedpolls of voter intentions.

Date of PollingPolling FirmMargin of Error
(19 times out of 20)
PCWildroseLiberalNDPAlbertaOtherUndecided
May 5, 2015Election 201527.824.24.240.62.21.0
May 4, 2015Forum Research±3 pp232344532
May 1–4, 2015Insights West±3.1 pp2327442329
Apr. 29–May 3, 2015EKOS Research Associates±3.4 pp22.524.05.644.32.21.4
May 2, 2015Forum Research±3 pp212454253
April 29, 2015Mainstreet Research±1.85 pp2126544314
April 27–29, 2015Ipsos-Reid±4.1 pp242693731
April 25–29, 2015EKOS Research Associates±3.7 pp23.121.36.342.24.62.6
April 26–28, 2015ThinkHQ±2.1 pp202793941
April 26–28, 2015Leger Marketing±2.8 pp30246381116
April 25–28, 2015Return On Insight±3.6 pp242110384
April 23, 2015Televised leaders' debate
April 23, 2015Mainstreet Research±1.49 pp2632831421
April 22–23, 2015Forum Research±3 pp202573865
April 20, 2015Mainstreet Research±1.78 pp2535431419
April 13, 2015Mainstreet Research±1.76 pp24311030523
April 7–9, 2015Forum Research±2 pp2730122822
April 7, 2015Dissolution of the28th Alberta Legislative Assembly, campaign begins
April 7, 2015Mainstreet Research±1.78 pp27311226324
April 2–6, 2015ThinkHQ±2.3 pp2531122651
March 27–30, 2015Insights West±3.9 pp3127142225
March 29, 2015Mainstreet Research±1.8 pp30301718520
March 28, 2015Brian Jeanbecomes leader of theWildrose Party
February 13–23, 2015Environics461618174
February 1, 2015David Swann becomes interim leader of theLiberal Party
January 26, 2015Raj Sherman resigns as leader of theLiberal Party
December 28–30, 2014Insights West421419187
December 21, 2014Heather Forsyth becomes interim leader of theWildrose Party
December 21, 2014Mainstreet Research442014184
December 17, 2014Danielle Smith resigns as leader of theWildrose Party, crosses the floor with 8 caucus members to thePCs
Nov. 28–Dec. 1, 2014Insights West352915165
October 18, 2014Rachel Notleybecomes leader of theNew Democratic Party
October 4–9, 2014Lethbridge College32.630.812.816.87.0
September 6, 2014Jim Prenticebecomes leader of theProgressive Conservative Association andPremier
Aug. 27–Sep. 2, 2014Leger Marketing293318164
June 23–26, 2014Leger Marketing263120194
April 29, 2014Brian Mason resigns as leader of theNew Democratic Party, becomes interim leader
April 23–26, 2014Insights West215011162
March 20, 2014Alison Redford resigns asPremier and leader of theProgressive Conservative Association,Dave Hancock becomes interim leader and Premier
March 10–16, 2014ThinkHQ1946161531
March 3–9, 2014Angus Reid234615134
February 24–27, 2014Leger Marketing2538161532
February 14–23, 2014Environics363318122
October 5–6, 2013Lethbridge College36.129.415.712.21.15.6
September 11–17, 2013Leger Marketing333415153
April 9–12, 2013Leger Marketing293717143
February 12–16, 2013ThinkHQ2638131634
January 14–20, 2013Leger Marketing402812136
October 10–23, 2012Environics452913121
September 29–30, 2012Lethbridge College44.623.911.114.03.03.4
August 10–22, 2012Environics432614133
June 11, 2012Forum Research393691222
April 23, 2012Election 2012±0.0 pp44.034.39.99.81.30.7

Media endorsements

[edit]

The following media outlets endorsed the Progressive Conservatives during the campaign:

No media endorsements were made for any of the other parties.

Footnotes

[edit]
  1. ^The Progressive Conservative Association won a plurality of votes in 10 ridings. However, Jim Prentice disclaimed his victory inCalgary-Foothills, voiding the election and leaving the Progressive Conservatives with 9 seats in the official results.
  2. ^Includes votes from the voided election in the riding ofCalgary-Foothills
  3. ^Blakeman was also endorsed by theAlberta Party and theGreen Party of Alberta.
  4. ^Dawe was also endorsed by theGreen Party of Alberta.
  5. ^Withdrew.
  6. ^Prentice disclaimed his victory on election night, leaving the seat vacant.

References

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^"General Elections «".Archived from the original on April 13, 2019. RetrievedApril 16, 2019.
  2. ^Election Act, R.S.A. 2000, c. E-1, s. 38.1, as amended by S.A. 2011, c. 19
  3. ^Bratt, Duane (December 25, 2015)."NDP: The year of Alberta's Orange chinook".The Globe and Mail.Archived from the original on May 29, 2018. RetrievedApril 5, 2018.
  4. ^Casey, Sean (June 20, 2014)."Could the "Orange Chinook" Extend into the October Election - Federal Election Tracker by Global Public Affairs". Globalelectioninsights.ca. Archived fromthe original on April 5, 2018. RetrievedMay 30, 2018.
  5. ^"Jim Prentice resignation as MLA too fast, strategist says"Archived May 7, 2015, at theWayback Machine.CBC News, May 6, 2015.
  6. ^Betke, Carl (1979).Society and Politics in Alberta. Methuen. pp. 130–145.
  7. ^Notley, 11 cabinet ministers to be sworn in Sunday at legislatureArchived May 27, 2015, at theWayback Machine.Edmonton Journal, May 20, 2015.
  8. ^"Election Results".
  9. ^Stolte, Elise (April 23, 2012)."Alberta Election 2012: NDP picks up support, falls short of goal". Edmonton Journal. Archived fromthe original on April 26, 2012. RetrievedMay 6, 2012.
  10. ^"Alberta PCs win historic 12th straight majority".CTV News. Calgary. April 23, 2012. Archived fromthe original on September 5, 2014. RetrievedMay 11, 2012.
  11. ^Giovannetti, Justin (April 7, 2015)."Jim Prentice seeks mandate on May 5 in cautious Alberta election bid".The Globe and Mail.Archived from the original on May 6, 2015. RetrievedMay 7, 2015.
  12. ^Bratt, Duane (April 10, 2015)."Alberta election may be unethical, but it's not illegal".The Globe and Mail.Archived from the original on March 14, 2016. RetrievedMarch 12, 2016.
  13. ^Rachel Maclean (May 5, 2015)."Alberta election 2015 results: NDP wave sweeps across province in historic win".CBC. RetrievedDecember 28, 2022.
  14. ^"Alberta election results 2015: A riding-by-riding breakdown of the vote".
  15. ^"Unofficial Results". Archived fromthe original on April 26, 2012. RetrievedJuly 18, 2015.
  16. ^Results compared to theEvergreen Party's results in2012
  17. ^Results compared to theSeparation Party's results in2012
  18. ^Office of the Chief Electoral Officer (June 5, 2015). "Notice: Members Elected to Serve in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta".The Alberta Gazette, Part I.111 (11): 391.
  19. ^RSA 2000, c E-1
  20. ^abToneguzzi, Mario (May 5, 2015)."Calgary-Glenmore tied after all polls tallied".Calgary Herald.Archived from the original on September 24, 2019. RetrievedDecember 20, 2023.
  21. ^Dyck, Rand (2015).Provincial Politics in Canada (Revised 2015 ed.). pp. 241–28.
  22. ^Bennett, Dean (May 10, 2015)."Notley says she knew NDP would win Alberta election a week before vote".CTV News. Edmonton.The Canadian Press.Archived from the original on September 7, 2020. RetrievedMay 12, 2015.
  23. ^A Report on Alberta Elections, 1905-1982
  24. ^"Provincial Results".Elections Alberta.Archived from the original on August 1, 2017. RetrievedAugust 11, 2017.
  25. ^abcdeHenton, Darcy (February 7, 2015)."Retiring MLAs to take home $5M in severance pay".Calgary Herald.Archived from the original on August 16, 2016. RetrievedJune 3, 2016.
  26. ^abcdefghijklmnopqMarkusoff, Jason (February 17, 2015)."After five terms, Calgary MLA Wayne Cao joins list of Tories not running again".Calgary Herald.Archived from the original on September 7, 2020. RetrievedOctober 10, 2016.
  27. ^"Key Dates". Elections Alberta. Archived fromthe original on May 4, 2012. RetrievedMay 6, 2012.
  28. ^Henton, Darcy (May 2, 2012)."Redford says she wants to fast-track twinning of Highway 63". Calgary Herald. RetrievedMay 6, 2012.[permanent dead link]
  29. ^"Parties". Elections Alberta.Archived from the original on January 18, 2012. RetrievedAugust 29, 2013.The Separation Party of Alberta made application to the Chief Electoral Officer to change the party name to "Alberta First Party". The request was received and approved, and the change was made effective May 14, 2013.
  30. ^O'Donnell, Sarah (May 14, 2013)."Edmonton Conservative MLA withdraws from caucus while ethics investigation underway". Edmonton Journal. Archived fromthe original on June 14, 2013. RetrievedMay 23, 2013.
  31. ^"Alberta MLA quits PC caucus after U.S. prostitution arrest". CBC News. July 16, 2013.Archived from the original on July 20, 2013. RetrievedJuly 20, 2013.
  32. ^"MLA Peter Sandhu back in PC caucus". CBC News. December 10, 2013.Archived from the original on February 26, 2015. RetrievedFebruary 20, 2014.
  33. ^Wood, James (March 12, 2014)."MLA won't remain a Tory 'with her as leader of the party'". Calgary Herald. Archived fromthe original on March 14, 2014. RetrievedMarch 13, 2014.
  34. ^Barrett, Jessica (March 18, 2014)."Associate minister leaves Tories, blaming culture of entitlement". Calgary Herald. Archived fromthe original on March 20, 2014. RetrievedMarch 18, 2014.
  35. ^Janus, Andrea (March 20, 2014)."Redford's replacement Dave Hancock promises 'government Albertans want'". CTV News.Archived from the original on March 23, 2014. RetrievedMarch 23, 2014.
  36. ^"Dave Hancock to be interim Alberta premier". CBC News. March 19, 2014.Archived from the original on September 17, 2020. RetrievedMarch 20, 2014.
  37. ^Bennett, Dean (May 2, 2014)."Alberta NDP to pick new leader in Edmonton". Global News.Archived from the original on May 5, 2014. RetrievedMay 4, 2014.
  38. ^Mertz, Emily (July 7, 2014)."Alberta MLA Mike Allen back in PC Caucus". Global News.Archived from the original on July 8, 2014. RetrievedJuly 7, 2014.
  39. ^Kleiss, Karen (August 6, 2014)."Alison Redford resigns seat, leaves politics". Calgary Herald. Archived fromthe original on August 8, 2014. RetrievedAugust 7, 2014.
  40. ^Hanson, Caitlin; Bellefontaine, Michelle; Trynacity, Kim (September 6, 2014)."Alberta PC leadership vote: Jim Prentice wins on 1st ballot".CBC News.Archived from the original on September 7, 2014. RetrievedSeptember 6, 2014.
  41. ^Bennett, Dean (September 12, 2014)."Outgoing Alberta premier Dave Hancock resigns MLA seat".The Globe and Mail.The Canadian Press.Archived from the original on September 15, 2014. RetrievedSeptember 12, 2014.
  42. ^Ibrahim, Mariam (September 15, 2014)."Prentice promises 'new way of doing things' as smaller cabinet sworn in". Edmonton Journal. Archived fromthe original on October 6, 2014. RetrievedSeptember 17, 2014.
  43. ^"Kennedy-Glans returns to Alberta PC caucus".Global News.The Canadian Press. September 17, 2014.Archived from the original on September 23, 2014. RetrievedSeptember 18, 2014.
  44. ^Howell, Trevor (September 30, 2014)."Prentice to run in Calgary-Foothills as four byelections called". Calgary Herald. Archived fromthe original on October 6, 2014. RetrievedOctober 1, 2014.
  45. ^Bennett, Dean (October 18, 2014)."Rachel Notley becomes new leader of Alberta NDP". Global News.Archived from the original on October 19, 2014. RetrievedOctober 19, 2014.
  46. ^"Alberta byelections swept by Jim Prentice's Progressive Conservative Party". CBC News. October 27, 2014.Archived from the original on October 28, 2014. RetrievedOctober 29, 2014.
  47. ^"Joe Anglin quits Wildrose caucus, will sit as independent". CBC News. November 2, 2014.Archived from the original on November 3, 2014. RetrievedNovember 2, 2014.
  48. ^Ibrahim, Mariam; Kleiss, Karen."Wildrose MLAs Kerry Towle and Ian Donovan cross floor to join Tories". Edmonton Journal.Archived from the original on February 2, 2015. RetrievedNovember 24, 2014.
  49. ^Bartko, Karen (December 17, 2014)."Cabinet minister has 'open mind' to Wildrose floor crossings". Global Edmonton.Archived from the original on December 18, 2014. RetrievedDecember 17, 2014.
  50. ^"Wildrose turns to Heather Forsyth as party reels from defections". CBC News. December 21, 2014.Archived from the original on December 23, 2014. RetrievedDecember 21, 2014.
  51. ^Bellefontaine, Michelle (January 26, 2015)."Raj Sherman stepping down as Alberta Liberal leader". CBC News.Archived from the original on September 17, 2020. RetrievedJanuary 26, 2015.
  52. ^"Doug Horner resigning as MLA at end of January". CBC News. January 22, 2015.Archived from the original on September 25, 2020. RetrievedJanuary 27, 2015.
  53. ^"David Swann chosen as interim leader of Alberta Liberals". CBC News. February 1, 2015.Archived from the original on February 3, 2015. RetrievedFebruary 1, 2015.
  54. ^"Official Poll Results".Elections Alberta. May 15, 2015. Archived fromthe original on May 18, 2015. RetrievedMay 16, 2015.
  55. ^Calgary Herald Editorial Board (May 2, 2015)."Our choice: Prentice deserves another mandate".Calgary Herald.Archived from the original on June 14, 2018. RetrievedOctober 4, 2018.
  56. ^Calgary Sun Editorial Board (May 2, 2015)."Editorial: Alberta PC party the only viable choice". Calgary Sun.Archived from the original on May 5, 2015. RetrievedMay 3, 2015.
  57. ^Mcintosh, Jeff (May 1, 2015)."For Alberta, Jim Prentice is the best choice". The Globe and Mail.Archived from the original on December 27, 2015. RetrievedAugust 23, 2017.
  58. ^"Saturday's Editorial: In this election, we are picking a CEO for the province". Edmonton Journal. May 2, 2015. Archived fromthe original on May 6, 2015. RetrievedMay 2, 2015.
  59. ^"Editorial: Alberta PC party the only viable choice". Edmonton Sun. May 2, 2015.Archived from the original on May 5, 2015. RetrievedMay 4, 2015.

Works cited

[edit]

External links

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