Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Calgary-Lougheed

Provincial electoral district in Alberta, Canada From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Calgary-Lougheed
Remove ads

Calgary-Lougheed is a provincial electoral district in Alberta, Canada. It is one of 87 districts mandated to return a single member to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta using the first-past-the-post method of voting.

Quick Facts Alberta electoral district, Provincial electoral district ...

The district is primarily urban, and it exists on the suburban fringes of the city of Calgary. It was created in the 1993 boundary redistribution from Calgary-Shaw, and is named in honour of former premier Peter Lougheed, who held the nearby seat of Calgary West from 1967 to 1986.

The district has been a stronghold for Progressive Conservative candidates since it was created. The current MLA for this riding is Eric Bouchard of the United Conservative Party. The riding was vacant for a period following the resignation of the former premier of Alberta, Jason Kenney of the United Conservative Party. The first MLA was Jim Dinning, who previously represented Calgary-Shaw.

The district contains the neighbourhoods of Bridlewood, Millrise, Shawnee, Evergreen, Evergreen Estates, Alpine Park, and Vermilion Hills.

Remove ads

History

Summarize
Perspective

The electoral district was created in the 1993 boundary redistribution from Calgary-Shaw and Highwood. In the 2010 Boundary redistribution all land east of 14 Street was cut out of the riding and given to Shaw and Calgary-Fish Creek.

Boundary history

More information 14 Calgary-Lougheed 2003 boundaries, Bordering districts ...
More information 18 Calgary-Lougheed 2010 boundaries, Bordering districts ...

Representation history

More information Members of the Legislative Assembly for Calgary-Lougheed, Assembly ...

The electoral district was created from Calgary-Shaw in the 1993 boundary redistribution. The first election held that year saw incumbent Progressive Conservative MLA Jim Dinning defeat Liberal candidate Jack Driscoll and three other candidates. Dinning retired from the legislature in 1997.

The 1997 election saw Progressive Conservative candidate Marlene Graham elected with a landslide majority. She was re-elected with a larger margin in the 2001 general election and retired at dissolution in 2004.

The 2004 election saw Progressive Conservative candidate Dave Rodney win a very large majority to hold the seat for his party. He was easily re-elected in 2008 and 2012.

In 2015, however, Rodney barely held the seat in a close three-way race against NDP and Wildrose challengers. In 2017, the Progressive Conservative and Wildrose parties merged to form the United Conservative Party, which Rodney joined. He subsequently resigned his seat to allow party leader Jason Kenney to run in a by-election. Kenney was elected by a wide margin over the NDP candidate and Liberal leader David Khan.

Remove ads

Legislative election results

2023

More information Party, Candidate ...

2019

More information Party, Candidate ...

^ Change is calculated from redistributed 2015 results.

2017 by-election

More information Party, Candidate ...
  1. Swing is calculated from the sum of Progressive Conservative and Wildrose vote shares.

    2015

    More information Party, Candidate ...
    More information 2015 Alberta general election redistributed results, Party ...

    2012

    More information 2012 Alberta general election, Party ...

    2008

    More information 2008 Alberta general election, Party ...

    2004

    More information 2004 Alberta general election, Party ...

    2001

    More information 2001 Alberta general election, Party ...

    1997

    More information 1997 Alberta general election, Party ...

    1993

    More information 1993 Alberta general election, Party ...
    Remove ads

    Senate nominee election results

    Summarize
    Perspective

    2004

    2004 Senate nominee election results: Calgary-Lougheed[10] Turnout 40.76%
    Affiliation Candidate Votes % votes % ballots Rank
    Progressive ConservativeBert Brown4,60317.44%52.78%1
    Progressive ConservativeJim Silye4,04015.31%46.32%5
    Progressive ConservativeBetty Unger3,90014.78%44.72%2
    Progressive ConservativeDavid Usherwood3,04711.55%34.94%6
    Progressive ConservativeCliff Breitkreuz2,4739.37%28.35%3
      Independent Link Byfield 2,374 9.00% 27.22% 4
      Independent Tom Sindlinger 1,684 6.38% 19.31% 9
    Alberta Alliance Michael Roth 1,520 5.76% 17.43% 7
    Alberta Alliance Vance Gough 1,485 5.63% 17.03% 8
    Alberta Alliance Gary Horan 1,262 4.78% 14.47% 10
    Total votes 26,388 100%
    Total ballots 8,722 3.03 votes per ballot
    Rejected, spoiled and declined 1,960
    26,209 eligible electors

    Voters had the option of selecting four candidates on the ballot

    2012

    More information 2012 Senate nominee election results, Party ...

    See also

    References

    Loading related searches...

    Wikiwand - on

    Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

    Remove ads