2015 Alberta general election
The 2015 Alberta general election, 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.
The Progressive Conservative Association of Alberta had a majority in the outgoing Assembly. As a result of the election, the Alberta New Democratic Party 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. The Progressive Conservatives had won every provincial election since the 1971 election, making them the longest-serving provincial government in Canadian history—being in office for 44 years. 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.
The Wildrose Party under leader Brian Jean remained the Official Opposition, gaining four seats since 2012 despite winning 81,814 fewer votes and a 10.1% 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, the NDP's orange colour and the weather shifts occasioned by strong "winds of change" that southern Alberta commonly experiences.
Following the election, Notley and her cabinet were sworn in on May 24, 2015.
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, both held official party status with five and four seats respectively. On September 4, 2014, the PCs became the longest serving political dynasty in Canadian history, at 43 years, 5 days.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. 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.
Results
The NDP received the most votes, receiving 40.6 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 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.
Summary of the May 5, 2015 Legislative Assembly of Alberta election results
!rowspan="2" colspan="2" style="text-align:left;" |Party
!rowspan="2" style="text-align:left;" |Party leader
!rowspan="2" style="text-align:center;" |Number of
candidates
!colspan="4" style="text-align:center;" |Seats
!colspan="3" style="text-align:center;" |Popular vote*
!400 !!87 !!87 !!87 !!100.0% !!1,488,248 !!100.00% !!
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.
Northern Alberta
Central Edmonton
Suburban Edmonton
West Central Alberta
East Central Alberta
Central Calgary
Suburban Calgary
Southern Alberta
Defeated incumbents
MLAs who did not run again
;Progressive Conservative- Rob Anderson, Airdrie
- Wayne Cao, Calgary-Fort
- Cal Dallas, Red Deer-South
- Alana DeLong, Calgary-Bow
- Yvonne Fritz, Calgary-Cross
- Hector Goudreau, Dunvegan-Central Peace-Notley
- Jason Hale, Strathmore-Brooks
- Fred Horne, Edmonton-Rutherford
- Mary Anne Jablonski, Red Deer-North
- Genia Leskiw, Bonnyville-Cold Lake
- Donna Kennedy-Glans, Calgary-Varsity
- Bridget Pastoor, Lethbridge-East
- Bruce Rowe, Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills
- Danielle Smith, Highwood
- Heather Forsyth, Calgary-Fish Creek
- Shayne Saskiw, Lac La Biche-St. Paul-Two Hills
- Kent Hehr, Calgary-Buffalo
- Darshan Kang, Calgary-McCall
- Raj Sherman, Edmonton-Meadowlark
Timeline
- April 23, 2012: The Progressive Conservative Association of Alberta 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.
- May 23, 2012: The 28th Alberta Legislative Assembly sits for the first time.
- May 14, 2013: The Separation Party of Alberta changes its name back to the Alberta First Party name it abandoned in 2004.
- May 14, 2013: Edmonton-Manning PC MLA Peter Sandhu resigns from the PC caucus, becoming an Independent.
- 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.
- December 10, 2013: Edmonton-Manning Independent MLA Peter Sandhu rejoins the PC caucus.
- 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.
- 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.
- March 20, 2014: Alison Redford resigns as leader of the PCs, and Dave Hancock is named interim leader.
- 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.
- April 29, 2014: An NDP leadership election is initiated when leader Brian Mason announces his pending resignation as leader.
- July 7, 2014: Fort McMurray-Wood Buffalo Independent MLA Mike Allen is admitted back into the PC caucus after a caucus vote.
- August 6, 2014: PC MLA Alison Redford resigns her Calgary-Elbow seat, triggering a by-election.
- September 6, 2014: In the Progressive Conservative Association of Alberta leadership election, former federal cabinet minister Jim Prentice is elected leader.
- September 15, 2014: Dave Hancock resigns as Premier and his Edmonton-Whitemud seat, triggering a by-election. Jim Prentice is sworn in as premier.
- September 17, 2014: Calgary-Varsity Independent MLA Donna Kennedy-Glans requests, and is accepted back into, the PC caucus.
- 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.
- October 18, 2014: At the Alberta NDP convention Rachel Notley is chosen party leader.
- 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.
- November 2, 2014: Rimbey-Rocky Mountain House-Sundre Wildrose MLA Joe Anglin leaves the Wildrose caucus to sit as an Independent.
- November 24, 2014: Innisfail-Sylvan Lake MLA Kerry Towle and Little Bow MLA Ian Donovan leave the Wildrose Party and join the PCs.
- December 17, 2014: Nine Wildrose Party MLAs, including leader Danielle Smith and House Leader Rob Anderson cross the floor to join the PCs.
- December 21, 2014: Heather Forsyth is named interim leader of the Wildrose Party.
- 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.
- January 31, 2015: PC MLA Doug Horner resigns his Spruce Grove-St. Albert seat.
- February 1, 2015: David Swann is named interim leader of the Alberta Liberal Party.
- 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, 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. 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
Media endorsements
The following media outlets endorsed the Progressive Conservatives during the campaign:No media endorsements were made for any of the other parties.