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2021 Edmonton municipal election
Municipal election in Canada From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The 2021 Edmonton municipal election was held on October 18, 2021, to elect a mayor and 12 councillors to the Edmonton city council, nine trustees to Edmonton Public Schools, and seven trustees to the Edmonton Catholic Schools. It was held in conjunction with the 2021 Alberta municipal elections.
In conjunction with the municipal elections, residents voted in a provincially mandated Senate nominee election, a referendum on equalization and on whether to adopt permanent daylight saving time.[2]
Incumbent mayor Don Iveson announced in November 2020 that he would not be seeking re-election.[3]
Mayor was elected through first-past-the-post voting in at-large contest. Councillors and school board trustees were elected through first-past-the-post voting in single-member wards.
Successful candidates do not need to have majority support of the voters in their district. The successful mayoral candidate and nine of the 12 successful ward councillors were elected with less than majority of votes in their districts. Over all the 12 wards, of the more than 210,000 votes cast for councillor candidates, 99,000 voters saw their choice elected.[4]
The total number of votes cast for mayor was 236,488.[5]
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Candidates
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X = incumbent. Candidates as listed have filed the necessary paperwork with the City of Edmonton.[2]
Mayor
- Abdul Malik Chukwudi – engineer
- Rick Comrie – business owner
- Brian (Breezy) Gregg – retired music artist
- Kim Krushell – former councillor
- Augustine Marah – teacher and community activist
- Mike Nickel – incumbent ward 11 councillor
- Michael Oshry – former councillor
- Amarjeet Sohi – former councillor and MP
- Diana Steele – President of Crestwood Community League
- Cheryll Watson – Former Head of Innovate Edmonton
Council
The following is a list of candidates that announced their candidacy for the 2021 election.[13] Edmonton's ward map was redrawn for the 2021 election, with each ward being given an Indigenous name.[14]
Each ward elected one councillor through First-past-the-post voting.
The total number of candidates for council seats was larger than in any previous election in Edmonton history, even beating the record set in the 1964 Edmonton municipal election.
Nakota Isga
(Rosenthal, West Jasper Place, Big Lake, Westview Village, Lewis Farms, Glenora)
- Andrew Knack – incumbent
- Dave Olivier – businessman
- Steve Weston – construction manager
Anirniq
(Calder, the Pallisades, Griesbach, Athlone, Wellington, Lauderdale, Rosslyn, Kensington, Carlisle, Cumberland, Sherbrooke, Inglewood, Woodcroft, Dovercourt, Prince Charles, Albany)
- Mark Davies – risk management director
- Bev Esslinger – incumbent
- Ali Haymour – finished third in the 2017 Ward 2 race
- Erin Rutherford – public sector manager
- Tyler Zutz – business consultant
tastawiyiniwak
(Castle Downs, Dickinsfield, Londonderry, Lake District)
- Ahmed "Knowmadic" Ali – poet
- Cody Bondarchuk – community leader
- Jon Dziadyk – incumbent
- Iannie Gerona – shopkeeper
- Zain Hafiz – business owner
- Karen Principe – finished third in the 2017 Ward 3 race
Dene
(Casselman-Steele Heights, Clareview, Hermitage, Horse Hill, Pilot Sound)
- Gerard Mutabazi Amani – community leader
- Andy Andrzej Gudanowski – finished sixth in the 2017 Ward 7 race
- Aaron Paquette – incumbent
- Lana Palmer – oral surgeon
- Tricia Velthuizen – spokesperson for Service Alberta Minister Nate Glubish, finished fourth in the 2017 Ward 4 race[16]
O-day’min
(Riverview Area, Edgemont, Stillwater, Uplands, River's Edge, Glastonbury, Granville, Hamptons, Lymnurn, Ormsby Place, Dechene, Downtown, Callingwood North/South, Elmwood, Lynnwood, Patricia Heights, Quesnell, Oleskiew, Thorncliff, Westringe, Cameron, Jamieson Place, Wedgewood, Donsdale, Gariepy, Lessard North)
- Gino Akbari – entrepreneur
- Gabrielle Battiste – lawyer
- Adrian Bruff – entrepreneur
- Tony Caterina – incumbent
- Naima Haile – curator
- Mohammed Migdaddy – clinical pharmacist
- Adil Pirbhai – finished fourth in the 2017 Ward 6 race
- Anne Stevenson – urban planner
- Ibrahim Wado
- Joshua Wolchansky – civil servant
Métis
(Abbottsfield, Alberta Avenue, Avonmore, Beacon Heights, Bellevue, Bergman, Beverly Heights, Bonnie Doon, Capilano, Cloverdale, Cromdale, Delton, Eastwood, Elmwood Park, Forest Heights, Fulton Place, Gold Bar, Highlands, Holyrood, Idylwylde, Kenilworth, King Edward Park, Montrose, Newton, Ottewell, Parkdale, Rundle Heights, Strathearn, Terrace Heights, Virginia Park)[17]
- Rob Bernshaw – finished third in the 2013 Ward 3 race
- Abdulhakim Dalel – political activist
- Liz John-West – finished fourth in the 2017 Ward 7 race
- Brian Kendrick – finished third in the 2010 Ward 5 race
- Daniel John Kornak – political activist
- James Kosowan – finished third in the 2017 Ward 8 race
- Cori Longo – postal worker
- Caroline Matthews – entrepreneur
- Salar Melli – entrepreneur
- Jim Rickett – Telus operations manager
- Ashley Salvador – entrepreneur
- Steven Townsend – entrepreneur
sipiwiyiniwak
(The Grange, Riverview, Cameron Heights, Laurier Heights, Edgemont)
- Giselle General – public servant
- Sarah Hamilton – incumbent
- Scott Hayes – realtor
- Daniel Heikkinen – entrepreneur
- Derek Hlady – entrepreneur
papastew
(Belgravia, Strathcona, Ritchie, Grandview, Allendale, Pleasantview, Aspen Gardens, Greenfield, Duggan)
- Haruun Ali – university student
- James Cameron – businessman
- Susan Field – businesswoman
- Kirsten Goa – finished second in the 2017 Ward 8 race
- Michael Janz – former public school trustee of Ward F
- Tarcy Schindelka – businessman
- Byron Vass – environmental sector
pihêsiwin
(Riverbend, Terwillegar Heights, Windermere, Magrath Heights, Mactaggart)
- Guiscela Perez Arellano – IT
- Tim Cartmell – incumbent
Ipiihkoohkanipiaohtsi
(Kaskitayo:Blue Quill, Ermineskin, Keheewin, Twinbrooks; Heritage Valley:Blackburne, Rutherford, Graydon Hill, Chappelle, Allard)
- Jason Carter – Indigenous artist
- Rhiannon Hoyle – entrepreneur
- Scott Johnston – radio reporter
- Glynnis Andrea Lieb – social psychologist
- Jon Morgan – community leader
- Jennifer Rice – public servant
Karhiio
(Ellerslie, Knottwood, Lakewood, Mill Woods Town Centre, Millbourne, Millhurst, Woodvale, Summerside, Southeast Edmonton)
- Muhammad Herman Gill – businessman
- Sana Kakar – architect
- Charan Saggu – businessman
- Tom Shaw – project manager
- Keren Tang – finished second in the 2017 Ward 11 race
- Shamair Turner – insurance broker
Sspomitapi
(Decoteau, The Meadows, Burnewood, Ridgewood, Southwood, Maple Ridge)
- Moe Banga – incumbent
- Jasbir Singh Gill – President of Edmonton Taxi Association
- Harman Singh Kandola – lawyer
- Mukesh Makwana – welder
- Sanjay Malhotra – businessman
- Rashpal Sehmby – postal worker
- Jo-Anne Wright – finished second in the 2013 Ward 12 race
Edmonton Public School Board Trustees
Nine elected, one per ward through first past the post.
Ip, the elected trustee for Ward H, was elected MLA in the 2023 provincial election. He resigned as trustee – the school board voted not to hold a by-election but to have trustee Jan Sawyer cover his ward as well as her own.[20]
Edmonton Catholic School Board Trustees
Carla Smiley resigned from the position in October 2021. As of July 2023, the Catholic School Board was refusing to hold a by-election.[21]
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Mayoral opinion polling
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See also
Footnotes
References
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