2015 Alberta general election




















2015 Alberta general election







← 2012
May 5, 2015
2019 →

← outgoing members


elected members →




87 seats in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta
44 seats needed for a majority
Opinion polls
Turnout 54.2%


















































































































































 
First party
Second party
Third party
 

Rachel Notley crop.jpg

Brian Jean April 28 2015.jpg

Jim Prentice.jpg
Leader

Rachel Notley

Brian Jean

Jim Prentice
Party

New Democratic

Wildrose

Progressive Conservative
Leader since

October 18, 2014

March 28, 2015

September 6, 2014
Leader's seat

Edmonton-Strathcona

Fort McMurray-Conklin

Calgary-Foothills (disclaimed re-election)
Last election
4 seats, 9.82%
17 seats, 34.29%
61 seats, 43.95%
Seats before
4
5
70
Seats won
54
21
9[a]
Seat change

Increase50

Increase16

Decrease61
Popular vote
604,515
360,511
413,607[b]
Percentage
40.57%
24.23%
27.80%
Swing

Increase30.75pp

Decrease10.06pp

Decrease16.15pp

 
Fourth party
Fifth party
 

David Swann - April 12, 2010.jpg

Greg Clark, Leader of the Alberta Party, 2014.jpg
Leader

David Swann

Greg Clark
Party

Liberal

Alberta Party
Leader since
February 1, 2015

September 21, 2013
Leader's seat

Calgary-Mountain View

Calgary-Elbow
Last election
5 seats, 9.89%
0 seats, 1.31%
Seats before
5
0
Seats won
1
1
Seat change

Decrease4

Increase1
Popular vote
62,153
33,221
Percentage
4.19%
2.29%
Swing

Decrease5.70pp

Increase0.98pp




Alberta Election Map 2015.svg
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-designate

Rachel Notley
New Democratic




The 29th general election of Alberta, Canada, took place on May 5, 2015, following a request of Premier Jim Prentice to the Lieutenant Governor of Alberta Donald Ethell to dissolve the Legislative Assembly on April 7, 2015. This election elected members to the 29th Alberta Legislature. It was only the fourth time in provincial history that saw a change of government, and was the last provincial election for both the Alberta Progressive Conservative and Wildrose Parties, which would merge in 2017 to form the United Conservative Party.


The provincial Election Act fixed 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 to dissolve the Legislature before this period.[1]


The Progressive Conservative Association of Alberta (PCs) had a majority in the outgoing Assembly. As a result of the election, the Alberta New Democratic Party (NDP) were elected to a majority government under leader Rachel Notley. The NDP formed Government for the first time in Alberta history, ousting the PCs, who were reduced to third place in seats. Prentice resigned as PC leader and MLA for Calgary-Foothills on election night.[2] The Progressive Conservatives had won every provincial election since the 1971 election, making them the longest-serving provincial government in Canadian history. This was only the fourth change of government in Alberta since Alberta became a province in 1905, and one of the worst defeats a provincial government has suffered in Canada. It also marked the first time a left-of-centre political party had formed government in Alberta since the defeat of the United Farmers of Alberta in 1935 and the Depression-era radical monetary reform policies of William Aberhart's Social Credit government.[3]


The Wildrose Party under leader Brian Jean remained the Official Opposition, gaining four seats since 2012 despite winning 82,000 fewer votes and a 10.7% lower share of the popular vote than in the previous election. The Alberta Liberal Party and Alberta Party each won a single seat with Alberta Party leader Greg Clark becoming the party's first MLA. The Alberta Liberal Party lost four seats, only returning interim leader David Swann to the Legislative Assembly.


The election is sometimes called the "Orange Chinook", a reference to the province's dramatic swing to the NDP, as well as the NDP's orange colour.[4][5]


Following the election, Notley and her cabinet were sworn in on May 24, 2015.[6]




Contents






  • 1 Background


  • 2 Results


  • 3 Results by riding


    • 3.1 Northern Alberta


    • 3.2 Central Edmonton


    • 3.3 Suburban Edmonton


    • 3.4 West Central Alberta


    • 3.5 East Central Alberta


    • 3.6 Central Calgary


    • 3.7 Suburban Calgary


    • 3.8 Southern Alberta




  • 4 Defeated incumbents


  • 5 MLAs who did not run again


  • 6 Timeline


  • 7 Opinion polls


  • 8 Media endorsements


  • 9 Footnotes


  • 10 References


  • 11 External links





Background



In the 2012 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%. The Wildrose Party formed the official opposition for the first time, while the other two parties in the Assembly, the Alberta Liberal Party and Alberta New Democratic Party (NDP), both held official party status with five and four seats respectively.[7] On September 4, 2014, the PCs became the longest serving political dynasty in Canadian history, at 43 years, 5 days.[8]


Prentice, who succeeded former premier and interim leader of the Progressive Conservatives Dave 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 Governor Donald Ethell to dissolve the legislature on April 7. In accordance with Canadian constitutional practice, Ethell granted the request, beginning a month long campaign.[9] The early election call was criticized by some as unethical, as it violated the fixed election dates specified in the Elections 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.[10]



Results


The NDP received the most votes, receiving 40.5 percent of the vote and capturing 62 percent of the seats.


NDP candidates received over 50% of the votes in all Edmonton ridings as well as the ridings of Sherwood Park, St. Albert and Lethbridge-West. All opposition candidates won with 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 over a majority of its respective 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 his 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 P-C 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.
























54

21

9

1

1

1

NDP

Wildrose

PC

LIB

AP

*















































Party
Votes
Seats


New Democratic
603,459



40.6%



Increase 30.8%


54 / 87 (62%)




Progressive Conservative
412,958



27.8%



Decrease 16.2%


10 / 87 (11%)




Wildrose
360,124



24.2%



Decrease 10.1%


21 / 87 (24%)




Liberal
62,171



4.2%



Decrease 5.7%


1 / 87 (1%)




Alberta Party
33,867



2.3%



Increase 1.0%


1 / 87 (1%)












































































































































































e • d Summary of the May 5, 2015 Legislative Assembly of Alberta election results[11]
Party
Party leader
Number of
candidates
Seats
Popular vote*

2012

Dissol.
2015
% of Seats
#
%
Change (pp)


New Democratic

Rachel Notley
87 4 4 54 62.1 603,459 40.59 +30.77


Wildrose

Brian Jean
86 17 5 21 24.1 360,124 24.22 –10.07


Progressive Conservative

Jim Prentice
87 61 70 9 10.3 412,958 27.77 –16.18


Liberal

David Swann
56 5 5 1 1.1 62,171 4.18 –5.71


Alberta Party

Greg Clark
36 1 1.1 33,867 2.28 +0.95


Green[12]
Janet Keeping
24 7,321 0.49 +0.10


Social Credit

Len Skowronski
6 832 0.06 +0.04


Communist

Naomi Rankin
2 181 0.01 =


Alberta First[13]
Bart Hampton
1 72 0.005 =
 

Independent
15 1 5,916 0.40 +0.13
 
Vacant
2
1**
1.1


Total
400 87 87 87 100.0% 1,486,901 100.00%


* The total popular vote includes votes from voided Calgary-Foothills election.

** The candidate elected for Calgary-Foothills, Jim Prentice, disclaimed his victory.[14] According to section 139 of the Alberta Elections Act,[15] 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

Party

2012

Gain from (loss to)

2015

NDP

WR

PC

Lib

Alb

New Democratic 4 2 44 4 54

Wildrose 17 (2) 7 (1) 21

Progressive Conservative 61 (44) 1 (7) (1) 9

Liberal 5 (4) 1

Alberta Party 0 1 1
Total 87 (50) 3 (7) 52 (1) 4 (1) 86

The election resulted in a majority government led by the New Democratic Party.


The result in Calgary-Glenmore remained unresolved on election night, as incumbent PC MLA Linda Johnson and NDP challenger Anam Kazim finished the vote count in an exact tie of 7,015 votes each,[16] necessitating a recount process.[16] 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 in Edmonton, 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 in Calgary, 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 and Red Deer. NDP support remained relatively lower in rural Alberta, where they won only a handful of ridings in the north of the province, as well as some rural ridings around Edmonton.[17]


Notley later said that she had known a week before the election that the NDP would win. She told the Canadian 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 for official 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.[18]


The PCs finished second in the popular vote, 52,800 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 power solely on the basis of seats won (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, following Prentice's disclaiming of victory in his riding. The PC 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 Opposition Danielle 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 the Alberta Party, won the first ever seat for his party in the Legislative Assembly.


For the first time since the 1920s, centre-left candidates won a majority of seats in Calgary (15 NDP, 1 Liberal, 1 Alberta Party).



Results by riding


Bold indicates cabinet members, and party leaders are italicized. Candidate names appear as they appeared on the ballot.


Colour band in gulley indictes winner of the election.


All results are sourced from Elections Alberta.[19]



Northern Alberta


















































































































































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  PC   Wildrose   Liberal   NDP   Alberta Party Other

Athabasca-Sturgeon-Redwater

Jeff Johnson
5,016 - 29.9%
Travis Olson
4,973 - 29.6%


Colin Piquette
6,797 - 40.5%




Jeff Johnson

Barrhead-Morinville-Westlock

Maureen Kubinec
4,876 - 26.6%

Glenn van Dijken
7,206 - 39.3%

Tristan Turner
6,232 - 34.0%




Maureen Kubinec

Bonnyville-Cold Lake
Craig 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-Notley
Rhonda Clarke-Gauthier
2,766 - 28.8%
Kelly Hudson
3,147 - 32.8%


Margaret McCuaig-Boyd
3,692 - 38.4%




Hector Goudreau†

Fort McMurray-Conklin

Don 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 Buffalo

Mike 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-Smoky

Everett 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-Wapiti

Wayne 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 Hills
Darrell 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 Lake

Pearl Calahasen
1,944 - 21.5%
Darryl Boisson
3,198 - 35.3%


Danielle Larivee
3,915 - 43.2%



Pearl Calahasen

Peace River

Frank 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


















































































































































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  PC   Wildrose   Liberal   NDP   Alberta Party Other

Edmonton-Beverly-Clareview

Tony 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-Calder
Thomas "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-Centre
Catherine 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-Glenora

Heather 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 Bar

David 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-Norwood
Jonathan 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 Creek

Gene 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 Woods

Sohail 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-Riverview

Steve 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-Rutherford
Chris 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-Strathcona
Shelley Wegner
2,242 - 13.6%

Steve Kochan
658 - 4.0%

Rachel Notley
13,592 - 82.4%




Rachel Notley


Suburban Edmonton

































































































































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  PC   Wildrose   Liberal   NDP   Alberta Party Other

Edmonton-Castle Downs

Thomas 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-Decore

Janice 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-Ellerslie
Harman 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-Manning
Gurcharan 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-McClung

David 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-Meadowlark
Katherine 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 West

Matt 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-Whitemud

Stephen 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 Park

Cathy Olesen
5,655 - 25.9%
Linda Osinchuk
4,815 - 22.1%


Annie McKitrick
11,365 - 52.0%



Cathy Olesen

St. Albert

Stephen 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

































































































































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  PC   Wildrose   Liberal   NDP   Alberta Party Other

Drayton Valley-Devon

Diana 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 Lake

Kerry 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 Hills
Wade 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-North
Christine 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-South
Darcy 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-Sundre
Tammy 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. Albert
Rus 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 Plain

Ken 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 Yellowhead

Robin Campbell
3,433 - 32.3%
Stuart Taylor
3,055 - 28.8%


Eric Rosendahl
4,135 - 38.9%




Robin Campbell

Whitecourt-Ste. Anne

George VanderBurg
4,721 - 31.1%
John Bos
4,996 - 33.0%


Oneil Carlier
5,442 - 35.9%



George VanderBurg


East Central Alberta































































































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  PC   Wildrose   Liberal   NDP   Alberta Party Other

Battle River-Wainwright
Blake Prior
5,057 - 31.2%

Wes Taylor
6,862 - 42.3%
Ron Williams
500 - 3.1%
Gordon Naylor
3,807 - 23.5%



Vacant

Drumheller-Stettler

Jack Hayden
5,388 - 33.9%

Rick Strankman
7,570 - 47.7%

Emily Shannon
2,927 - 18.4%



Rick Strankman

Fort Saskatchewan-Vegreville

Jacquie 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-Ponoka
Peter 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-Beaumont

George 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 Park

Dave 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-Lloydminster

Richard Starke
5,935 - 47.4%
Danny Hozack
4,171 - 33.3%

Saba Mossagizi
2,428 - 19.4%



Richard Starke

Wetaskiwin-Camrose

Verlyn Olson
5,951 - 34.7%
Bill Rock
3,685 - 21.5%


Bruce Hinkley
7,531 - 43.9%




Verlyn Olson


Central Calgary



































































































































































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  PC   Wildrose   Liberal   NDP   Alberta Party Other

Calgary-Acadia

Jonathan 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-Buffalo
Terry 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-Cross
Rick 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-Currie

Christine 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-East

Moe 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-Elbow

Gordon 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 Creek

Richard 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-Fort
Andy 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-Glenmore

Linda 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-Klein

Kyle Fawcett
4,878 - 26.7%
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 View

Mark 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-Varsity
Susan 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





































































































































































































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  PC   Wildrose   Liberal   NDP   Alberta Party Other

Calgary-Bow
Byron 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-Foothills

Jim 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-Greenway

Manmeet Bhullar
5,337 - 42.8%
Devinder Toor
2,627 - 21.1%

Don Monroe
4,513 - 36.2%




Manmeet Bhullar

Calgary-Hawkwood

Jason 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-Hays

Ric 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-Lougheed

Dave 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 Hill

Neil 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-McCall
Jagdeep 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 West

Sandra 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 Hills

Teresa 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-Shaw

Jeff Wilson
5,348 - 30.7%
Brad Leishman
5,301 - 30.4%
Alexander Barrow
668 - 3.8%

Graham Sucha
5,449 - 31.3%
Evert Smith
661 - 3.8%


Jeff Wilson

Calgary-South East

Rick 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-West

Mike Ellis
8,312 - 46.8%
Gerard Lucyshyn
4,512 - 25.4%

Mizanur Rahman
4,940 - 27.8%



Mike Ellis

Chestermere-Rocky View

Bruce 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


















































































































































































































Electoral District
Candidates
 
Incumbent
  PC   Wildrose   Liberal   NDP   Alberta Party Other

Airdrie
Peter 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-Cochrane

Ron Casey
5,555 - 28.2%
Scott Wagner
5,692 - 28.9%


Cameron Westhead
8,426 - 42.8%



Ron Casey

Cardston-Taber-Warner
Brian 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 Hat
Bob Olson
3,389 - 21.6%

Drew Barnes
8,544 - 54.6%
Eric Musekamp
528 - 3.4%
Bev Waege
3,201 - 20.4%



Drew Barnes

Highwood
Carrie 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-East
Tammy 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-West

Greg 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 Bow

Ian 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-Macleod

Evan 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 Hat

Blake 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-Brooks
Molly 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


















































































































































































































































































































Party
Name
Constituency
Office held at election
Year elected
Defeated by
Party


Progressive
Conservative

Mike Allen

Fort McMurray-Wood Buffalo


2012

Tany Yao


Wildrose Party

Moe Amery

Calgary East


1993

Robyn Luff


New Democratic Party

Pearl Calahasen

Lesser Slave Lake
Longest-serving MLA at dissolution

1989

Danielle Larivee


New Democratic Party

Jonathan Denis

Calgary-Acadia
Minister of Justice and Solicitor General

2008

Brandy Payne


New Democratic Party

Gordon Dirks

Calgary-Elbow

Minister of Education

2014

Greg Clark


Alberta Party

Ian Donovan

Little Bow


2012

Dave Schneider


Wildrose Party

David Dorward

Edmonton-Gold Bar
Associate Minister of Aboriginal Relations

2012

Marlin Schmidt


New Democratic Party

Jacquie Fenske

Fort Saskatchewan-Vegreville


2012

Jessica Littlewood


New Democratic Party

Matt Jeneroux

Edmonton-South West


2012

Thomas Dang


New Democratic Party

Jeff Johnson

Athabasca-Sturgeon-Redwater
Minister of Seniors

2008

Colin Piquette


New Democratic Party

Linda Johnson

Calgary-Glenmore


2012

Anam Kazim


New Democratic Party

Stephen Khan

St. Albert

Minister of Service Alberta

2012

Marie Renaud


New Democratic Party

Heather Klimchuk

Edmonton-Glenora
Minister of Human Services

2008

Sarah Hoffman


New Democratic Party

Maureen Kubinec

Barrhead-Morinville-Westlock

Minister of Culture and Tourism

2012

Glenn van Dijken


Wildrose Party

Thomas Lukaszuk

Edmonton-Castle Downs


2001

Nicole Goehring


New Democratic Party

Stephen Mandel

Edmonton-Whitemud

Minister of Health

2014

Bob Turner


New Democratic Party

Bruce McAllister

Chestermere-Rocky View


2012

Leela Aheer


Wildrose Party

Everett McDonald

Grande Prairie-Smoky


2012

Todd Loewen


Wildrose Party

Frank Oberle

Peace River

Minister of Energy, Government House Leader

2004

Debbie Jabbour


New Democratic Party

Cathy Olesen

Sherwood Park


2012

Annie McKitrick


New Democratic Party

Blake Pedersen

Medicine Hat


2012

Bob Wanner


New Democratic Party

Sohail Quadri

Edmonton-Mill Woods


2012

Christina Gray


New Democratic Party

Janice Sarich

Edmonton-Decore


2008

Chris Nielsen


New Democratic Party

Don Scott

Fort McMurray-Conklin
Minister of Innovation and Advanced Education, Deputy House Leader

2012

Brian Jean


Wildrose Party

Kerry Towle

Innisfail-Sylvan Lake


2012

Don MacIntyre


Wildrose Party

Jeff Wilson

Calgary-Shaw


2012

Graham Sucha


New Democratic Party

Teresa Woo-Paw

Calgary-Northern Hills


2008

Jamie Kleinsteuber


New Democratic Party

David Xiao

Edmonton-McClung


2008

Lorne Dach


New Democratic Party

Steve Young

Edmonton-Riverview


2012

Lori Sigurdson


New Democratic Party

Gene Zwozdesky

Edmonton-Mill Creek

Speaker

1993

Denise Woollard


New Democratic Party


Liberal

Laurie Blakeman

Edmonton-Centre


1997

David Shepherd


New Democratic Party

Independent

Joe Anglin

Rimbey-Rocky Mountain House-Sundre


2012

Jason Nixon


Wildrose Party


MLAs who did not run again


Progressive Conservative



  • Rob Anderson, Airdrie[20]


  • Wayne Cao, Calgary-Fort[20][21]


  • Cal Dallas, Red Deer-South[21]


  • Alana DeLong, Calgary-Bow[20][21]


  • Yvonne Fritz, Calgary-Cross[20][21]


  • Hector Goudreau, Dunvegan-Central Peace-Notley[21]


  • Jason Hale, Strathmore-Brooks


  • Fred Horne, Edmonton-Rutherford[21]


  • Mary Anne Jablonski, Red Deer-North[21]


  • Genia Leskiw, Bonnyville-Cold Lake[21]


  • Donna Kennedy-Glans, Calgary-Varsity[21][20]


  • Bridget Pastoor, Lethbridge-East[21]


  • Bruce Rowe, Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills[21]


  • Danielle Smith, Highwood[21]


Wildrose



  • Heather Forsyth, Calgary-Fish Creek[21]


  • Shayne Saskiw, Lac La Biche-St. Paul-Two Hills[21]


Liberal



  • Kent Hehr, Calgary-Buffalo[21]


  • Darshan Kang, Calgary-McCall[21]


  • Raj Sherman, Edmonton-Meadowlark[21]



Timeline



  • April 23, 2012: The Progressive Conservative Association of Alberta (PCs) win the 28th Alberta general election. The Wildrose Party wins the second-most seats, for the first time forming the Official Opposition.

  • May 3, 2012:The election results are certified and made official.[22]

  • May 23, 2012: The 28th Alberta Legislative Assembly sits for the first time.[23]

  • May 14, 2013: The Separation Party of Alberta changes its name back to the Alberta First Party name it abandoned in 2004.[24]

  • May 14, 2013: Edmonton-Manning PC MLA Peter Sandhu resigns from the PC caucus, becoming an Independent.[25]

  • July 16, 2013: Fort McMurray-Wood Buffalo PC MLA Mike Allen quits the PC caucus after being arrested in the US on a soliciting for prostitution charge.[26]

  • December 10, 2013: Edmonton-Manning Independent MLA Peter Sandhu rejoins the PC caucus.[27]

  • March 12, 2014: After an expense scandal involving Premier Redford's trip to the funeral of Nelson Mandela, Calgary-Foothills PC MLA Len Webber leaves the PC caucus to sit as an Independent.[28]

  • March 17, 2014: Calgary-Varsity PC MLA and Associate Minister for Electricity and Renewable Energy Donna Kennedy-Glans leaves the PC caucus to sit as an Independent.[29]

  • March 20, 2014: Alison Redford resigns as leader of the PCs, and Dave Hancock is named interim leader.[30]

  • March 23, 2014: Redford's resignation as Premier comes into effect and Deputy Premier and Edmonton-Whitemud MLA Dave Hancock is sworn in as Premier.[31]

  • April 29, 2014: An NDP leadership election is initiated when leader Brian Mason announces his pending resignation as leader.[32]

  • July 7, 2014: Fort McMurray-Wood Buffalo Independent MLA Mike Allen is admitted back into the PC caucus after a caucus vote.[33]

  • August 6, 2014: PC MLA Alison Redford resigns her Calgary-Elbow seat, triggering a by-election.[34]

  • September 6, 2014: In the Progressive Conservative Association of Alberta leadership election, former federal cabinet minister Jim Prentice is elected leader.[35]

  • September 15, 2014: Dave Hancock resigns as Premier and his Edmonton-Whitemud seat, triggering a by-election.[36]Jim Prentice is sworn in as premier.[37]

  • September 17, 2014: Calgary-Varsity Independent MLA Donna Kennedy-Glans requests, and is accepted back into, the PC caucus.[38]

  • September 29, 2014: Independent MLA Len Webber resigns his Calgary-Foothills seat, PC MLA Ken Hughes resigns his Calgary-West seat, and by-elections are called in their ridings as well as Calgary-Elbow and Edmonton-Whitemud.[39]

  • October 18, 2014: At the Alberta NDP convention Rachel Notley is chosen party leader.[40]

  • October 27, 2014: Four PC MLAs are elected in by-elections: Gordon Dirks in Calgary-Elbow, Jim Prentice in Calgary-Foothills, Mike Ellis in Calgary-West, and Stephen Mandel in Edmonton-Whitemud.[41]

  • November 2, 2014: Rimbey-Rocky Mountain House-Sundre Wildrose MLA Joe Anglin leaves the Wildrose caucus to sit as an Independent.[42]

  • November 24, 2014: Innisfail-Sylvan Lake MLA Kerry Towle and Little Bow MLA Ian Donovan leave the Wildrose Party and join the PCs.[43]

  • December 17, 2014: Nine Wildrose Party MLAs, including leader Danielle Smith and House Leader Rob Anderson cross the floor to join the PCs.[44]

  • December 21, 2014: Heather Forsyth is named interim leader of the Wildrose Party.[45]

  • January 26, 2015: Raj Sherman resigns as leader of the Alberta Liberal Party, and PC MLA Doug Griffiths resigns from his Battle River-Wainwright seat.[46]

  • January 31, 2015: PC MLA Doug Horner resigns his Spruce Grove-St. Albert seat.[47]

  • February 1, 2015: David Swann is named interim leader of the Alberta Liberal Party.[48]

  • March 26, 2015: Premier Jim Prentice tables his government's 2015-16 budget.

  • March 28, 2015: Former Conservative MP Brian Jean wins Wildrose Party leadership election, former Wildrose Party leader Danielle Smith loses PC nomination in Highwood to Okotoks councilor Carrie Fischer

  • April 7, 2015: Premier Jim Prentice drops the writ, calling for an election on May 5, 2015.

  • April 23, 2015: Televised leaders' debate.

  • May 5, 2015: Election results - the NDP win a majority of seats (53), and the Wildrose finish second with 21 seats. The Progressive Conservatives' run of nearly 44 years as government ends with a third-place finish of 10 seats. Premier Prentice announces resignation as PC leader and as Calgary-Foothills MLA. The initial result in Calgary-Glenmore is a tie.

  • May 15, 2015: Elections Alberta publishes the official result.[49] NDP candidate Anam Kazim wins the riding of Calgary-Glenmore after recount, leaving the NDP holding 54 of 87 seats in the legislature.



Opinion polls


The following is a summary of published polls of voter intentions.




















































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































































Date of Polling
Polling Firm

Margin of Error
(19 times out of 20)

PC

Wildrose

Liberal

NDP

Alberta

Other

Undecided

May 5, 2015

Election 2015

27.8
24.2
4.2

40.6
2.3
0.9

May 4, 2015

Forum Research
±3 pp
23
23
4

45
3
2

May 1–4, 2015

Insights West
±3.1 pp
23
27
4

42
3
2
9

Apr. 29–May 3, 2015

EKOS Research Associates
±3.4 pp
22.5
24.0
5.6

44.3
2.2
1.4


May 2, 2015

Forum Research
±3 pp
21
24
5

42
5
3

April 29, 2015

Mainstreet Research
±1.85 pp
21
26
5

44
3

14

April 27–29, 2015

Ipsos-Reid
±4.1 pp
24
26
9

37
3
1

April 25–29, 2015

EKOS Research Associates
±3.7 pp
23.1
21.3
6.3

42.2
4.6
2.6


April 26–28, 2015
ThinkHQ
±2.1 pp
20
27
9

39
4
1

April 26–28, 2015
Leger Marketing
±2.8 pp
30
24
6

38
1
1
16

April 25–28, 2015
Return On Insight
±3.6 pp
24
21
10

38
4



April 23, 2015

Televised leaders' debate

April 23, 2015

Mainstreet Research
±1.49 pp
26

32
8
31
4

21

April 22–23, 2015

Forum Research
±3 pp
20
25
7

38
6
5

April 20, 2015

Mainstreet Research
±1.78 pp
25

35
4
31
4

19

April 13, 2015

Mainstreet Research
±1.76 pp
24

31
10
30
5

23

April 7–9, 2015

Forum Research
±2 pp
27

30
12
28
2
2

April 7, 2015

Dissolution of the 28th Alberta Legislative Assembly, campaign begins

April 7, 2015

Mainstreet Research
±1.78 pp
27

31
12
26
3

24

April 2–6, 2015
ThinkHQ
±2.3 pp
25

31
12
26
5
1

March 27–30, 2015

Insights West
±3.9 pp

31
27
14
22
2
5

March 29, 2015

Mainstreet Research
±1.8 pp

30

30
17
18
5

20

March 28, 2015

Brian Jean becomes leader of the Wildrose Party

February 13–23, 2015

Environics


46
16
18
17

4

February 1, 2015

David Swann becomes interim leader of the Liberal Party

January 26, 2015

Raj Sherman resigns as leader of the Liberal Party

December 28–30, 2014

Insights West


42
14
19
18

7

December 21, 2014

Heather Forsyth becomes interim leader of the Wildrose Party

December 21, 2014

Mainstreet Research


44
20
14
18
4


December 17, 2014

Danielle Smith resigns as leader of the Wildrose Party, crosses the floor with 8 caucus members to the PCs

Nov. 28–Dec. 1, 2014

Insights West


35
29
15
16

5

October 18, 2014

Rachel Notley becomes leader of the New Democratic Party

October 4–9, 2014

Lethbridge College


32.6
30.8
12.8
16.8

7.0

September 6, 2014

Jim Prentice becomes leader of the Progressive Conservative Association and Premier

Aug. 27–Sep. 2, 2014

Leger Marketing

29

33
18
16

4

June 23–26, 2014
Leger Marketing

26

31
20
19

4

April 29, 2014

Brian Mason resigns as leader of the New Democratic Party, becomes interim leader

April 23–26, 2014

Insights West

21

50
11
16

2

March 20, 2014

Alison Redford resigns as Premier and leader of the Progressive Conservative Association, Dave Hancock becomes interim leader and Premier

March 10–16, 2014
ThinkHQ

19

46
16
15
3
1

March 3–9, 2014

Angus Reid

23

46
15
13

4

February 24–27, 2014
Leger Marketing

25

38
16
15
3
2

February 14–23, 2014

Environics


36
33
18
12

2

October 5–6, 2013
Lethbridge College


36.1
29.4
15.7
12.2
1.1
5.6

September 11–17, 2013
Leger Marketing

33

34
15
15

3

April 9–12, 2013
Leger Marketing

29

37
17
14

3

February 12–16, 2013
ThinkHQ

26

38
13
16
3
4

January 14–20, 2013
Leger Marketing


40
28
12
13

6

October 10–23, 2012
Environics


45
29
13
12

1

September 29–30, 2012
Lethbridge College


44.6
23.9
11.1
14.0
3.0
3.4

August 10–22, 2012
Environics


43
26
14
13

3

June 11, 2012

Forum Research


39
36
9
12
2
2

April 23, 2012

Election 2012
±0.0 pp

44.0
34.3
9.9
9.8
1.3
0.7


Media endorsements


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




  • Calgary Herald (Postmedia)[50]


  • Calgary Sun (Postmedia)[51]


  • The Globe and Mail (The Woodbridge Company, majority owned by Thomson Reuters)[52]


  • Edmonton Journal (Postmedia)[53]


  • Edmonton Sun (Postmedia)[54]


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



Footnotes





  1. ^ The Progressive Conservative Association won a plurality of votes in 10 ridings. However, Jim Prentice disclaimed his victory in Calgary-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 of Calgary-Foothills


  3. ^ Blakeman was also endorsed by the Alberta Party and the Green Party of Alberta.


  4. ^ Dawe was also endorsed by the Green Party of Alberta.


  5. ^ Withdrew.


  6. ^ Prentice disclaimed his victory on election night, leaving the seat vacant.




References





  1. ^ Election Act, R.S.A. 2000, c. E-1, s. 38.1, as amended by S.A. 2011, c. 19



  2. ^ "Jim Prentice resignation as MLA too fast, strategist says". CBC News, May 6, 2015.


  3. ^ Betke, Carl (1979). Society and Politics in Alberta. Methuen. pp. 130–145..mw-parser-output cite.citation{font-style:inherit}.mw-parser-output .citation q{quotes:"""""""'""'"}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-free a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/6/65/Lock-green.svg/9px-Lock-green.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-limited a,.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-registration a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d6/Lock-gray-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-gray-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .citation .cs1-lock-subscription a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/aa/Lock-red-alt-2.svg/9px-Lock-red-alt-2.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration{color:#555}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription span,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration span{border-bottom:1px dotted;cursor:help}.mw-parser-output .cs1-ws-icon a{background:url("//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/4/4c/Wikisource-logo.svg/12px-Wikisource-logo.svg.png")no-repeat;background-position:right .1em center}.mw-parser-output code.cs1-code{color:inherit;background:inherit;border:inherit;padding:inherit}.mw-parser-output .cs1-hidden-error{display:none;font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-visible-error{font-size:100%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-maint{display:none;color:#33aa33;margin-left:0.3em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-subscription,.mw-parser-output .cs1-registration,.mw-parser-output .cs1-format{font-size:95%}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-left,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-left{padding-left:0.2em}.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-right,.mw-parser-output .cs1-kern-wl-right{padding-right:0.2em}


  4. ^ BRATT, DUANE (December 25, 2015). "NDP: The year of Alberta's Orange chinook". Retrieved April 5, 2018 – via The Globe and Mail.


  5. ^ "Could the "Orange Chinook" Extend into the October Election - Federal Election Tracker by Global Public Affairs". Globalelectioninsights.ca. 2014-06-20. Retrieved 2018-05-30.


  6. ^ Notley, 11 cabinet ministers to be sworn in Sunday at legislature. Edmonton Journal, 2015-05-20.


  7. ^ Stolte, Elise (April 23, 2012). "Alberta Election 2012: NDP picks up support, falls short of goal". Edmonton Journal. Retrieved May 6, 2012.


  8. ^ "Alberta PCs win historic 12th straight majority". CTV Calgary. April 23, 2012. Retrieved May 11, 2012.


  9. ^ Justin Giovannetti (7 April 2015). "Jim Prentice seeks mandate on May 5 in cautious Alberta election bid". Retrieved 7 May 2015.


  10. ^ Bratt, Duane. "Alberta election may be unethical, but it's not illegal". The Globe and Mail (Apr. 10, 2015). Retrieved 12 March 2016.


  11. ^ "Unofficial Results". Archived from the original on April 26, 2012. Retrieved July 18, 2015.


  12. ^ Results compared to the Evergreen Party's results in 2012


  13. ^ Results compared to the Separation Party's results in 2012


  14. ^ Office of the Chief Electoral Officer (5 June 2015). "Notice: Members Elected to Serve in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta". The Alberta Gazette, Part I. 111 (11): 391.


  15. ^ RSA 2000, c E-1


  16. ^ ab "Calgary-Glenmore riding in a dead heat". Calgary Herald, May 5, 2015.


  17. ^ Dyck, Rand (2015). Provincial Politics in Canada (Revised 2015 ed.). pp. 241–28.


  18. ^ Bennett, Dean (May 10, 2015). "Notley says she knew NDP would win Alberta election a week before vote". CTV News. Retrieved May 12, 2015.


  19. ^ "Provincial Results". Elections Alberta. Retrieved August 11, 2017.


  20. ^ abcde Henton, Darcy (2015-02-07). "Retiring MLAs to take home $5M in severance pay". Calgary Herald. Retrieved 2016-06-03.


  21. ^ abcdefghijklmnopq Markusoff, Jason (2015-02-17). "After five terms, Calgary MLA Wayne Cao joins list of Tories not running again". Calgary Herald. Retrieved 2016-10-10.


  22. ^ "Key Dates". Elections Alberta. Archived from the original on May 4, 2012. Retrieved May 6, 2012.


  23. ^ Henton, Darcy (May 2, 2012). "Redford says she wants to fast-track twinning of Highway 63". Calgary Herald. Retrieved May 6, 2012.


  24. ^ "Parties". Elections Alberta. Retrieved August 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.


  25. ^ O'Donnell, Sarah (May 14, 2013). "Edmonton Conservative MLA withdraws from caucus while ethics investigation underway". Edmonton Journal. Archived from the original on June 14, 2013. Retrieved May 23, 2013.


  26. ^ "Alberta MLA quits PC caucus after U.S. prostitution arrest". CBC News. July 16, 2013. Retrieved July 20, 2013.


  27. ^ "MLA Peter Sandhu back in PC caucus". CBC News. December 10, 2013. Retrieved February 20, 2014.


  28. ^ Wood, James (March 12, 2014). "MLA won't remain a Tory 'with her as leader of the party'". Calgary Herald. Retrieved March 13, 2014.


  29. ^ Barrett, Jessica (March 18, 2014). "Associate minister leaves Tories, blaming culture of entitlement". Calgary Herald. Retrieved March 18, 2014.


  30. ^ Janus, Andrea (March 20, 2014). "Redford's replacement Dave Hancock promises 'government Albertans want'". CTV News. Retrieved March 23, 2014.


  31. ^ "Dave Hancock to be interim Alberta premier". CBC News. March 19, 2014. Retrieved March 20, 2014.


  32. ^ Bennett, Dean (May 2, 2014). "Alberta NDP to pick new leader in Edmonton". Global News. Retrieved May 4, 2014.


  33. ^ Mertz, Emily (July 7, 2014). "Alberta MLA Mike Allen back in PC Caucus". Global News. Retrieved July 7, 2014.


  34. ^ Kleiss, Karen (August 6, 2014). "Alison Redford resigns seat, leaves politics". Calgary Herald. Archived from the original on August 8, 2014. Retrieved August 7, 2014.


  35. ^ "Alberta PC leadership vote: Jim Prentice wins on 1st ballot". CBC News. September 6, 2014. Retrieved September 6, 2014.


  36. ^ "Outgoing Alberta premier Dave Hancock resigns MLA seat". September 12, 2014. Retrieved September 12, 2014.


  37. ^ Ibrahim, Mariam (September 15, 2014). "Prentice promises 'new way of doing things' as smaller cabinet sworn in". Edmonton Journal. Retrieved September 17, 2014.


  38. ^ "Kennedy-Glans returns to Alberta PC caucus". Global News. September 17, 2014. Retrieved 18 September 2014.


  39. ^ Howell, Trevor (September 30, 2014). "Prentice to run in Calgary-Foothills as four byelections called". Calgary Herald. Retrieved October 1, 2014.


  40. ^ Bennett, Dean (October 18, 2014). "Rachel Notley becomes new leader of Alberta NDP". Global News. Retrieved October 19, 2014.


  41. ^ "Alberta byelections swept by Jim Prentice's Progressive Conservative Party". CBC News. October 27, 2014. Retrieved October 29, 2014.


  42. ^ "Joe Anglin quits Wildrose caucus, will sit as independent". CBC News. November 2, 2014. Retrieved November 2, 2014.


  43. ^ Ibrahim, Mariam; Kleiss, Karen. "Wildrose MLAs Kerry Towle and Ian Donovan cross floor to join Tories". Edmonton Journal. Retrieved 24 November 2014.


  44. ^ Bartko, Karen (December 17, 2014). "Cabinet minister has 'open mind' to Wildrose floor crossings". Global Edmonton. Retrieved December 17, 2014.


  45. ^ "Wildrose turns to Heather Forsyth as party reels from defections". CBC News. December 21, 2014. Retrieved December 21, 2014.


  46. ^ "Raj Sherman stepping down as Alberta Liberal leader". CBC News. January 26, 2015. Retrieved January 26, 2015.


  47. ^ "Doug Horner resigning as MLA at end of January". CBC News. January 22, 2015. Retrieved January 27, 2015.


  48. ^ "David Swann chosen as interim leader of Alberta Liberals". CBC News. February 1, 2015. Retrieved February 1, 2015.


  49. ^ "Official Poll Results". Elections Alberta. 2015-05-15. Archived from the original on 2015-05-18. Retrieved 2015-05-16.


  50. ^ "Our choice: Prentice deserves another mandate". Calgary Herald. May 2, 2015.


  51. ^ "Editorial: Alberta PC party the only viable choice". Calgary Sun. May 2, 2015.


  52. ^ "For Alberta, Jim Prentice is the best choice". The Globe and Mail. May 1, 2015.


  53. ^ "Saturday's Editorial: In this election, we are picking a CEO for the province". Edmonton Journal. May 2, 2015. Retrieved May 2, 2015.


  54. ^ "Editorial: Alberta PC party the only viable choice". Edmonton Sun. May 2, 2015. Retrieved May 4, 2015.




External links


  • Elections Alberta











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