1975 Alberta general election
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75 seats in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta 38 seats were needed for a majority | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Turnout | 59.58% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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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. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The 1975 Alberta general election was held on March 26, 1975, to elect members of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta to the 18th Alberta Legislature. The election was called on February 14, 1975 prorogued and dissolved of the 17th Alberta Legislature.[1]
The Progressive Conservative Party led by incumbent Premier Peter Lougheed won its second term in government in a landslide, taking over 62 per cent of the popular vote and winning 69 of the 75 seats in the legislature to form a majority government.
The Social Credit Party saw its vote collapse. After 36 years in government from 1935 to 1971—virtually its entire history—it was ill-prepared for a role in opposition. It lost over half of its popular vote from the previous election, and was cut down to only four MLAs—just barely holding onto official party status.
Background
[edit]The 1971 general election resulted in the Progressive Conservative Party led by Peter Lougheed defeating the Social Credit Party which had governed Alberta continuously for 36 years consecutive years. The Progressive Conservatives defeated the Social Credit Party by 5.3 per cent in the popular vote and formed a majority government.
Social Credit leader and former Premier Harry Strom continued as leader of the opposition until 1973 when he resigned, Strom continued in the legislature until the 1975 election, when he did not seek re-election.[2] In the 1973 leadership election, Werner Schmidt, vice-president of Lethbridge Community College, who didn't hold a seat in the Legislative Assembly, ran against former Highways Minister Gordon Taylor, former Education Minister Robert Curtis Clark, and John Ludwig, dean of business education at Alberta College.[3] Clark, who had the support of half of the party's MLAs, led Schmidt on the first ballot, 583 votes to 512 votes. But in an upset victory, Schmidt won on the second ballot with 814 votes, defeating Clark by 39 votes.[4] Social Credit MLA Gordon Taylor grew detached with the party and supported Lougheed's plan to provide gas lines to rural areas. Taylor left the Social Credit caucus in 1975 just before the election.
The New Democratic Party led by leader Grant Notley captured a single seat in the 1971 general election.
The Alberta Liberal Party failed to capture a single seat in the 1971 general election led by leader Bob Russell. Russell contested the 1973 by-election in Calgary-Foothills finishing a distant fourth with 5.8 per cent of the vote. Russell resigned the leadership of the Liberal Party later in 1974, and was succeeded by Nicholas Taylor.
Election campaign
[edit]Progressive Conservative
[edit]Premier Peter Lougheed enjoyed strong support from his home constituency of Calgary-West, meaning he was able to campaign throughout the province.[5]
The Progressive Conservative Party campaigned a platform on administrative competence and promises outlined in an unpassed 1975–76 budget.[5] Leaning on successful negotiations with the federal and Ontario governments and oil companies for the development of oil sands in the Winnipeg Agreement only 11 days before the legislature was dissolved.[5] Other promises included the creation of the Alberta Heritage Savings Trust Fund, reduction of personal income taxes by at least 28 per cent, and increased social program spending, all of which were built on growing non-renewable natural resource revenue resulting from 1970s energy crisis.[5]
Campaign slogans utilized by the Progressive Conservatives included "Lougheed Leadership", "43 Months of Progress", and "Vote Today for Alberta".[5]
The Progressive Conservative government was criticized for interference with the free market, which was exemplified with the 1974 purchase of Pacific Western Airlines for $37.5-million.[5] The Lougheed government was also criticized for significant government spending authorized through Order-in-Council instead of appropriations through the legislature.[5]
Social Credit Party
[edit]The Social Credit Party ran a campaign advocating for the provincial government to provide low-interest loans to Albertans for housing, farming and small business purposes.[5] Social Credit leader Werner Schmidt promoted greater revenue sharing with municipal governments, and more conciliatory stance to negotiations with the federal government, and greater emphasis on free market enterprise.[5] The Social Credit Party referred to themselves as "the Alberta Party" throughout the election, but was unable to gather significant momentum with the phrase.[5]
The Social Credit Party was only able to muster 70 candidates to contest the provinces 75 electoral districts. Many of the candidates focused their advertising dollars and canvassing efforts on highlighting their individual experience and value as a constituent representative rather than emphasizing the Party's platform.[6]
New Democratic Party
[edit]NDP leader Grant Notley was elected to the Spirit River-Fairview district in 1971 by a slim margin in a competitive three-way race.[7] The pressure in his home riding required Notley to do much of his campaigning in his home riding, and not in locations across the province.[5]
Through his efforts in the legislature, Notley gained a reputation as a hard-working, sincere and capable representative and critic of Peter Lougheed.[6] The NDP mustered candidates in all 75 constituencies, and as the only opposition party with a full slate of candidates, the NDP created the election slogan "The Only Real Opposition".[6]
The NDP's campaign strategy did not emphasis socialist programs in the early stages of the campaign, instead focusing on the Lougheed government's agreement with Syncrude for developing the oil sands. Notley and the NDP believed the Syncrude agreement would be the central issue of the election, as the agreement included significant public financial investments.[6] Notley was able to obtain several confidential government documents relating to the Syncrude project's viability which the NDP released throughout the campaign, however the Progressive Conservatives steered away from debate on the subject.[6] Later in the election the NDP brought forward more traditional socialist programs including children's dental care, increasing old age pensions, government run auto insurance and increasing public ownership of utility companies.[6]
Liberal
[edit]The Liberal Party focused its campaign on leader Nick Taylor's charisma and environmental opposition to the Progressive Conservatives industrialization policy.[6] Instead the Liberal Party emphasized that Alberta's economy should be focused on renewable resources such as agriculture, timber, tourism and modern professional skills.[6] The Liberals emphasized their platform through the campaign slogan "The Alternative".[6]
The Liberal Party was able to field 46 candidates in the province's 75 electoral districts, although with a majority of the Party's support coming from Calgary and Edmonton, many of the rural candidates were paper candidates.[8] Much of the Liberal campaign resources were focused on urban candidates, with most of the resources going towards Taylor's Calgary-Glenmore constituency.[8]
Results
[edit]To no one's surprise, the Progressive Conservative Party won a lopsided victory, capturing 62.7 per cent of the vote and 69 of 75 seats in the legislature. The Edmonton Report cover featured a caricature of Peter Lougheed following the victory accompanied with the title "Peter The Greatest".[9]
The Social Credit Party was further decimated as they dropped from 21 seats (from 25 to 4), capturing 18.2 per cent of the vote. Leader Werner Schmidt failed to capture his own seat in Taber-Warner, capturing 2,418 votes (33.43 per cent), coming second to Progressive Conservative Robert Bogle who captured 4,614 votes (63.78 per cent). Independent Social Credit candidate Gordon Taylor was able to retain his seat.[8] Schmidt resigned as leader of the Social Credit Party days after the election.[9]
The Liberal Party grew to nearly 5 per cent of the popular vote, but secured no seats.[9] Nick Taylor came second in his constituency of Calgary-Glenmore with 4,166 votes, well behind the Progressive Conservative candidate Hugh Planche who garnered 10,641 votes. Taylor attributed the Liberal's overall poor performance to the connection with the unpopular federal Liberal Party.[9]
The New Democratic Party leader Grant Notley was able to capture his seat in Spirit River-Fairview with 50.83 per cent of the vote, defeating his only opponent, Progressive Conservative Alex Woronuk. Despite garnering 12.9 per cent of the popular vote, the NDP was only able to capture Notley's seat. The NDP was still somewhat pleased that candidates came second in northern areas of the province and all 16 Edmonton constituencies.[9]
Overall voter turnout in the election was 59.58 per cent.[10]
Party | Party leader | # of candidates |
Seats | Popular vote | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1971 | Elected | % Change | # | % | % Change | ||||
Progressive Conservative | Peter Lougheed | 75 | 49 | 69 | +40.8% | 369,764 | 62.65% | +16.25% | |
Social Credit | Werner Schmidt | 70 | 25 | 4 | -84.0% | 107,211 | 18.17% | -22.93% | |
New Democrats | Grant Notley | 75 | 1 | 1 | 0% | 76,360 | 12.94% | +1.52% | |
Independent Social Credit | 1 | * | 1 | 100% | 4,428 | 0.75% | * | ||
Liberal | Nicholas Taylor | 46 | - | - | - | 29,424 | 4.98% | +3.97% | |
Independent Progressive Conservative | 3 | * | - | * | 1,059 | 0.18% | * | ||
Communist | 14 | * | - | * | 768 | 0.13% | * | ||
Independent | 4 | - | - | 625 | 0.11% | +1.06% | |||
Independent Liberal | 2 | * | - | * | 416 | 0.07% | * | ||
Constitutional Socialist | Mike Uhryn | 3 | * | - | * | 115 | 0.02% | * | |
Total | 293 | 75 | 75 | - | 590,200 | 100% | |||
Source: Elections Alberta |
Note:
* Party did not nominate candidates in the previous election.
Results by riding
[edit]Electoral district | Candidates | Incumbent | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
PC | Social Credit | NDP | Liberal | Other | ||||||||
Athabasca | Frank Appleby 3,723 59.63% |
Peter Hupka 582 9.32% |
Peter E. Opryshko 1,686 27.01% |
John Murphy 226 3.62% |
Frank Appleby | |||||||
Banff | Fred Kidd 5,221 68.92% |
Merlyn Kirk 1,129 14.90% |
Wayne Getty 737 9.73% |
Morna F. Schechtel 453 5.98% |
||||||||
Barrhead | Hugh F. Horner 3,665 67.48% |
Bill Seatter 919 16.92% |
Arlington Corbett 826 15.21% |
Hugh F. Horner | ||||||||
Bonnyville | Donald Hansen 3,226 56.66% |
George Nordstrom 1,119 19.65% |
Franklin Foster 805 14.14% |
Ron Pernarowski 526 9.24% |
Donald Hansen | |||||||
Bow Valley | Jim C. George 1,906 37.41% |
Fred T. Mandeville 2,992 58.72% |
Syd Evans 183 3.59% |
Fred T. Mandeville | ||||||||
Calgary-Bow | Neil Webber 5,251 52.12% |
Roy Wilson 3,537 35.11% |
Jack Dunbar 879 8.72% |
Mike Prohaszka 314 3.12% |
David Whitefield (Comm.) 64 0.64% |
Roy Wilson | ||||||
Calgary-Buffalo | Ronald H. Ghitter 6,525 70.69% |
Norman Ashmead 786 8.51% |
Paula Davies 877 9.50% |
Maria Eriksen 962 10.42% |
David Wallis (Comm.) 55 0.60% |
Ronald H. Ghitter | ||||||
Calgary-Currie | Fred H. Peacock 6,068 72.85% |
Edwin Ens 939 11.27% |
Hiram Coulter 713 8.56% |
Ron Chahal 586 7.04% |
Fred H. Peacock | |||||||
Calgary-Egmont | Merv Leitch 10,867 75.70% |
Lloyd Downey 1,119 7.79% |
Maureen McCutcheon 712 4.96% |
Jack Haggarty 1,634 11.38% |
Merv Leitch | |||||||
Calgary-Elbow | David J. Russell 6,159 73.68% |
Bernard Laing 589 7.05% |
Jack Peters 449 5.37% |
Sharon Carstairs 1,149 13.75% |
David J. Russell | |||||||
Calgary-Foothills | Stewart A. McCrae 10,917 67.50% |
Bill Campbell 2,587 16.00% |
Ken Gee 1,366 8.45% |
Acker Winn (Ind. Lib.) 324 2.01% Hilda Armstrong 893 5.52% |
David Gutnick (Comm.) 55 0.34% |
Stewart A. McCrae | ||||||
Calgary-Glenmore | Hugh L. Planche 10,641 65.85% |
Ralph Cameron 838 5.19% |
Bill Peterson 498 3.08% |
Nicholas Taylor 4,166 25.78% |
William Daniel Dickie | |||||||
Calgary-McCall | Andrew Little 9,102 64.91% |
George Ho Lem 3,397 24.22% |
Doreen Heath 997 7.11% |
Garry Willis 440 3.14% |
Colin Constant (Comm.) 46 0.33% |
George Ho Lem | ||||||
Calgary-McKnight | Eric Charles Musgreave 8,586 67.80% |
Allen Howard 1,572 12.41% |
Ray Martin 1,747 13.80% |
Pat Smart 743 5.87% |
Calvin E. Lee | |||||||
Calgary-Millican | Thomas Charles Donnelly 4,978 57.56% |
Arthur J. Dixon 2,114 24.44% |
Joseph Yanchula 940 10.87% |
Jodi Mahoney 512 5.92% |
Mike Daniels (Comm.) 43 0.50% Roger Lavoie (Ind.) 21 0.24% |
Arthur J. Dixon | ||||||
Calgary-Mountain View | John Kushner 3,800 48.76% |
Albert W. Ludwig 2,562 32.88% |
Orrin Kerr 725 9.30% |
John Sutherland 576 7.39% |
Joe Hill (Comm.) 56 0.72% |
Albert W. Ludwig | ||||||
Calgary-North Hill | Roy Alexander Farran 6,673 70.51% |
Robert A. Simpson 1,364 14.41% |
Joan Ryan 723 7.64% |
Dorothy Groves 584 6.17% |
Stephen Whitefield (Comm.) 60 0.63% |
Roy Alexander Farran | ||||||
Calgary-West | Peter Lougheed 8,983 78.28% |
Charles Gray 1,213 10.57% |
Neil Ellison 674 5.87% |
Steve Shaw 564 4.91% |
Peter Lougheed | |||||||
Camrose | Gordon Stromberg 6,483 72.40% |
Ray Reid 1,313 14.66% |
David Moore 1,141 12.74% |
Gordon Stromberg | ||||||||
Cardston | John Thompson 2,899 59.77% |
Roy Sprackman 1,826 37.65% |
Kelty Paul 115 2.37% |
Edgar W. Hinman | ||||||||
Clover Bar | Murray Finnerty 3,211 34.23% |
Walt A. Buck 5,151 54.90% |
Duncan McArthur 799 8.52% |
David Cooke 197 2.10% |
Walt A. Buck | |||||||
Cypress | Alan Hyland 2,065 53.21% |
Barry Bernhardt 1,447 37.28% |
Allen Eng 202 5.20% |
Margaret Dragland (Ind.) 159 4.10% |
Harry E. Strom | |||||||
Drayton Valley | Rudolph Zander 3,224 67.77% |
Tom Johnson 513 10.78% |
Lars Larson 815 17.13% |
Maurice Duteau 191 4.02% |
Rudolph Zander | |||||||
Drumheller | Wayne Ohlhauser 2,678 36.29% |
Gordon E. Taylor (Ind. SoCred) 4,428 60.20% |
Larry Schowalter 249 3.37% |
Gordon Edward Taylor | ||||||||
Edmonton-Avonmore | Horst A. Schmid 4,596 60.87% |
Joe G. Radstaak 1,341 17.76% |
Neil R. Larsen 1,141 15.11% |
Ann Mazur 413 5.47% |
Mike Uhryn (Con. Social.) 47 0.62% |
Horst A. Schmid | ||||||
Edmonton-Belmont | Albert Edward Hohol 6,662 64.72% |
Victor Nakonechny 1,164 11.31% |
Ashley Pachal 1,759 17.09% |
John Day 661 6.42% |
Chris Hansen (Comm.) 27 0.26% |
Albert Edward Hohol | ||||||
Edmonton-Beverly | Bill W. Diachuk 5,046 61.81% |
Patrick A. Moore 764 9.36% |
Bill Kobluk 1,902 23.30% |
Rudolph Pisesky 374 4.58% |
Paul Jarbeau (Comm.) 60 0.73% |
Bill W. Diachuk | ||||||
Edmonton-Calder | Tom Chambers 5,689 67.96% |
Burke Barker 1,640 19.59% |
Jack Pickett 620 7.41% |
Keith Lawson (Ind.) 396 4.73% |
Tom Chambers | |||||||
Edmonton-Centre | Gordon Miniely 3,996 61.79% |
Gerry Beck 386 5.97% |
Barry Roberts 1,125 17.40% |
Ed Molstad 930 14.38% |
Gordon Miniely | |||||||
Edmonton-Glenora | Lou Hyndman 7,735 74.14% |
Al Opstad 782 7.50% |
Alex McEachern 1,837 17.61% |
William Askin (Con. Social.) 44 0.42% |
Lou Hyndman | |||||||
Edmonton-Gold Bar | William Yurko 5,247 64.14% |
Larry Latter 982 12.00% |
Grant Arnold 1,312 16.04% |
Don Hoyda 579 7.08% |
Harry J. Strynadka (Comm.) 28 0.34% |
William Yurko | ||||||
Edmonton-Highlands | David T. King 3,085 58.66% |
Ambrose Holowach 888 16.89% |
Muriel Venne 1,129 21.47% |
William A. Tuomi (Comm.) 82 1.56% |
David T. King | |||||||
Edmonton-Jasper Place | Leslie Gordon Young 5,436 66.02% |
Don Eastcott 1,035 12.57% |
Carol Berry 1,192 14.48% |
Philip Lister 491 5.96% |
Leslie Gordon Young | |||||||
Edmonton-Kingsway | Kenneth R.H. Paproski 4,897 65.96% |
Jake Johnson 619 8.34% |
Jane Weaver 1,418 19.10% |
Roy Landreth 472 6.36% |
Kenneth R.H. Paproski | |||||||
Edmonton-Meadowlark | Gerard Joseph Amerongen 6,715 67.66% |
Russ Forsythe 1,093 11.01% |
Harvey Tilden 1,406 14.17% |
Vic Yanda 698 7.03% |
Gerard Joseph Amerongen | |||||||
Edmonton-Norwood | Catherine Chichak 4,298 58.80% |
Alfred J. Hooke 1,045 14.30% |
Howard Rubin 1,849 25.29% |
Gary Hansen (Comm.) 48 0.66% |
Catherine Chichak | |||||||
Edmonton-Ottewell | John G. Ashton 8,807 70.85% |
Irvine Zemrau 1,559 12.54% |
Jim Denholm 2,003 16.11% |
John G. Ashton | ||||||||
Edmonton-Parkallen | Neil S. Crawford 4,810 62.18% |
Glen Carlson 904 11.69% |
Brian Fish 1,546 19.98% |
Brian Erickson 461 5.96% |
Neil S. Crawford | |||||||
Edmonton-Strathcona | Julian Koziak 3,996 54.21% |
Betty Horch 768 10.42% |
Gordon S.B. Wright 2,108 28.60% |
Arthur Yates 415 5.63% |
Kimball Cariou (Comm.) 28 0.38% Harry Garfinkel (Con. Social.) 24 0.33% |
Julian Koziak | ||||||
Edmonton-Whitemud | Donald Ross Getty 9,614 67.66% |
Phil Dickson 1,101 7.75% |
Lila Fahlman 2,645 18.61% |
Dilys Andersen 830 5.84% |
Donald Ross Getty | |||||||
Edson | Robert W. Dowling 3,872 64.96% |
Ralph Bond 651 10.92% |
John Lindsay 1,426 23.92% |
Robert W. Dowling | ||||||||
Grande Prairie | Winston Backus 6,466 61.08% |
John Baergen 1,475 13.93% |
Ross Campbell 1,962 18.53% |
Gordon Astle 651 6.15% |
Winston Backus | |||||||
Hanna-Oyen | John Edward Butler 2,927 68.61% |
Alfred Weik 817 19.15% |
David Urichuk 134 3.14% |
Lyall Alexander Curry 378 8.86% |
Clinton Keith French | |||||||
Highwood | George Wolstenholme 4,037 63.64% |
Edward P. Benoit 1,925 30.35% |
Muriel McCreary 234 3.69% |
Melbe Cochlan 125 1.97% |
Edward P. Benoit | |||||||
Innisfail | Clifford L. Doan 4,029 66.27% |
Raymond C. Reckseidler 1,512 24.87% |
Pat Loughlin 376 6.18% |
Fred Monk 147 2.42% |
Clifford L. Doan | |||||||
Lac La Biche-McMurray | Ron Tesolin 2,859 52.68% |
Ken Cochrane 560 10.32% |
Ronald Morgan 530 9.77% |
Jean Davidson 703 12.95% |
Mike Chandi (Ind. P.C.) 737 13.68% |
Dan Bouvier | ||||||
Lacombe | John William Cookson 4,186 68.42% |
Ivan Stonehocker 1,414 23.11% |
Ed Kamps 486 7.94% |
John William Cookson | ||||||||
Lesser Slave Lake | Larry R. Shaben 2,387 57.91% |
Dennis Barton 921 22.34% |
John Tomkins 791 19.19% |
Dennis Barton | ||||||||
Lethbridge-East | Archibald Dick Johnston 7,233 66.82% |
John V. Anderson 1,915 17.69% |
Bessie Annand 1,006 9.29% |
Shirley Wilson 645 5.96% |
John V. Anderson | |||||||
Lethbridge-West | John Gogo 3,991 58.26% |
Richard David Gruenwald 1,914 27.94% |
Ian Whishaw 812 11.85% |
Richard David Gruenwald | ||||||||
Little Bow | George McMorris 2,019 37.08% |
Raymond Albert Speaker 3,132 57.52% |
Wayne Doolittle 126 2.31% |
Ben Loman 157 2.88% |
Raymond Albert Speaker | |||||||
Lloydminster | James Edgar Miller 4,370 81.94% |
Dave Listoe 938 17.59% |
James Edgar Miller | |||||||||
Macleod | Thomas James John Walker 3,671 55.37% |
Leighton E. Buckwell 2,359 35.58% |
Kathleen M. Cairns 330 4.98% |
Bill Olafson 231 3.48% |
Leighton E. Buckwell | |||||||
Medicine Hat-Redcliff | James Horsman 5,678 46.33% |
William Wyse 5,548 45.27% |
Bill Hartley 417 3.40% |
David Wilkins 532 4.34% |
Hilory Sorschan (Ind. P.C.) 53 0.43% |
William Wyse | ||||||
Olds-Didsbury | Kenneth Amthor 2,860 38.26% |
Robert Curtis Clark 4,400 58.86% |
Margaret Hinton 209 2.80% |
Robert Curtis Clark | ||||||||
Peace River | Al (Boomer) Adair 3,567 60.76% |
Budd Dennis 897 15.28% |
John Hokanson 1,292 22.01% |
Vera Lane (Ind. Lib.) 92 1.57 |
Al (Boomer) Adair | |||||||
Pincher Creek-Crowsnest | Frederick Deryl Bradley 3,209 59.81% |
Charles Duncan Drain 1,837 34.24% |
David Elliot 235 4.38% |
Gwen Gyulai (Ind.) 49 0.91% |
Charles Duncan Drain | |||||||
Ponoka | Donald J. McCrimmon 3,328 59.60% |
Alvin Goetz 1,263 22.62% |
Boug Lier 932 16.69% |
Donald J. McCrimmon | ||||||||
Red Deer | James L. Foster 6,566 65.74% |
Cecil Spiers 1,538 15.40% |
Ken McMillan 1,317 13.19% |
Herb Fielding 549 5.50% |
James L. Foster | |||||||
Redwater-Andrew | George Topolnisky 3,784 65.60% |
Graham Crosbie 1,824 31.62% |
Neil Stenberg (Comm.) 116 2.01% |
George Topolnisky | ||||||||
Rocky Mountain House | Helen Hunley 4,119 65.95% |
Harvey Staudinger 1,537 24.61% |
Morris Jenson 576 9.22% |
Helen Hunley | ||||||||
Sedgewick-Coronation | Henry Kroeger 2,757 56.15% |
Ralph A. Sorenson 1,768 36.01% |
Gladys Creasy 370 7.54% |
Ralph A. Sorenson | ||||||||
Smoky River | Marvin Moore 3,446 60.34% |
Obert Amundson 347 6.08% |
Victor Tardif 1,778 31.13% |
John Hinks 119 2.08% |
Marvin Moore | |||||||
Spirit River-Fairview | Alex Woronuk 2,918 48.76% |
Grant W. Notley 3,017 50.42% |
Grant W. Notley | |||||||||
St. Albert | William Ernest Jamison 6,450 54.32% |
Keith Everitt 2,221 18.70% |
Earl Toane 1,591 13.40% |
John Bakker 1,564 13.17% |
William Ernest Jamison | |||||||
St. Paul | Mick Fluker 2,912 57.05% |
John Hull 848 16.61% |
Pierre M. Vallee 764 14.97% |
Roland Genereux 561 10.99% |
Mick Fluker | |||||||
Stettler | Graham L. Harle 3,773 74.95% |
James Mah 866 17.20% |
William Cook 360 7.15% |
Jack G. Robertson | ||||||||
Stony Plain | William Frederick Purdy 5,109 63.31% |
Dean Throness 1,113 13.79% |
Jim Bell 923 11.44% |
Betty Howery 628 7.78% |
Arthur Killoran (Ind. P.C.) 269 3.34% |
William Frederick Purdy | ||||||
Taber-Warner | Robert Bogle 4,614 63.59% |
Werner G. Schmidt 2,418 33.32% |
Brian Aman 202 2.78% |
Douglas Miller | ||||||||
Three Hills | Allan Warrack 4,268 69.66% |
Bob Sommerville 1,406 22.95% |
Bruce Potter 192 3.13% |
Wes Combs 252 4.11% |
Allan Warrack | |||||||
Vegreville | John S. Batiuk 3,644 53.26% |
Ernie Youzwishen 908 13.27% |
Barney Welsh 2,270 33.18% |
John S. Batiuk | ||||||||
Vermilion-Viking | Tom Lysons 2,731 54.10% |
Angus MacMillan 1,274 25.24% |
Ken Jaremco 1,019 20.19% |
Ashley H. Cooper | ||||||||
Wainwright | Charles Stewart 3,039 58.91% |
Bev Penman 1,616 31.32% |
Harold Tangen 496 9.61% |
Henry A. Ruste | ||||||||
Wetaskiwin-Leduc | Dallas Schmidt 7,544 63.76% |
Waldo Siemens 2,076 17.55% |
Earl R. Rasmuson 1,662 14.05% |
Pat Green 522 4.41% |
James D. Henderson | |||||||
Whitecourt | Peter Trynchy 3,921 71.15% |
Rig Godwin 676 12.27% |
John Udchitz 893 16.20% |
Peter Trynchy |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Perry & Footz 2006, p. 499.
- ^ Barr 2004, p. 198.
- ^ "2,000 delegates to Alberta Social Credit meeting pick successor to ex-Premier today", Globe and Mail, February 3, 1973
- ^ "Schmidt wins Alberta Social Credit leadership, upset may split party", Globe and Mail, February 5, 1973
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Elton 1976, p. 216.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Elton 1976, p. 217.
- ^ Elton 1976, p. 215.
- ^ a b c Elton 1976, p. 218.
- ^ a b c d e Elton 1976, p. 219.
- ^ Elections Alberta (November 25, 2007). "General Elections 1975-2004 (Overall Summary of Ballots Cast and % of Voter Turnout)". Archived from the original on August 15, 2011. Retrieved April 29, 2011.
Works cited
[edit]- Barr, John J. (2004). "Harry Strom". In Rennie, Bradford J. (ed.). Alberta Premiers of the Twentieth Century. Regina, Saskatchewan: Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina. ISBN 0-88977-151-0.
- Perry, Sandra E.; Footz, Valerie L. (2006). Massolin, Philip A. (ed.). A Higher Duty: Speakers of the Legislative Assemblies. Edmonton, AB: Legislative Assembly of Alberta. ISBN 0-9689217-3-6. Retrieved August 9, 2020.
- Elton, David (1976). "Alberta". In Saywell, John (ed.). Canadian Annual Review of Politics and Public Affairs, 1975. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9781442671898.