2nd Alberta Legislature explained

Jurisdiction:AB
#:2nd
Type:Majority
Status:inactive
Term-Begin: March 23, 1909
Term-End:March 25, 1913
Scterm:March 15, 1906  - May 15, 1919
Pm:Alexander Cameron Rutherford
Pmterm:September 2, 1905  - May 26, 1910
Pm2:Arthur Sifton
Pmterm2:May 26, 1910  - October 30, 1917
Lo:Richard Bennett
Loterm:February 10, 1910  - May 26, 1910
Lo2:Edward Michener
Loterm2:November 10, 1910  - April 5, 1917
Party:Liberal Party
Party2:Conservative Party
Party3:Socialist Party
Sessionbegin:February 10, 1910
Sessionend:May 26, 1910
Sessionbegin2:November 10, 1910
Sessionend2:December 11, 1910
Sessionbegin3:November 30, 1911
Sessionend3:February 16, 1912
Sessionbegin4:February 11, 1913
Sessionend4:March 25, 1913
Ministry:Rutherford cabinet
Ministry2:Sifton cabinet
Monarchterm:January 22, 1901  - May 6, 1910
Monarch2:George V
Monarchterm2:May 6, 1910  - January 20, 1936
Viceroy:Hon. George Hedley Vicars Bulyea
Viceroyterm:September 1, 1905  - October 20, 1915
Members:41
Lastparl:1st
Nextparl:3rd

The 2nd Alberta Legislative Assembly was in session from March 23, 1909, to April 17, 1913, with the membership of the assembly determined by the results of the 1909 Alberta general election which was held on March 22, 1909. The Legislature officially resumed on March 23, 1909, and continued until the fourth session was prorogued and dissolved on March 25, 1913, prior to the 1913 Alberta general election.[1]

Alberta's second government was controlled by the majority Liberal Party led by Premier Alexander Rutherford until he resigned on May 26, 1910 due to the Alberta and Great Waterways Railway scandal, Rutherford was subsequently replaced by Arthur Sifton. The Official Opposition was the Conservative Party led by Richard Bennett for the first session, followed by Edward Michener for the remaining sessions. The Speaker was Charles W. Fisher who continued in the role from the 1st assembly, and would serve in the role until his death from the 1918 flu pandemic in 1919.

The total number of seats in the assembly was increased from 25 contested in the 1905 election to 41.

Bills

The Act respecting the Legislative Assembly of Alberta

Prior to the 1913 election, the Liberal government introduced An Act to amend the Act respecting the Legislative Assembly of Alberta which increased the number of seats in the Alberta Legislature from 41 to 56 and redistributed the boundaries of several constituencies.[2]

The Direct Legislation Act

Following pressure from the growing United Farmers of Alberta, the Alberta Legislature passed The Direct Legislation Act, which was assented to on March 25, 1913.[3] The Act enabled a referendum to be held if an initiative petition received a sufficient number of signatures, which was electors equally ten per cent of the votes polled in the previous general election, and an initiative petition could succeed if endorsed by 20 per cent of the votes polled in the previous election. The Act afforded a number of protections for the Legislature, noting that any initiative which would create a grant or charge on public revenue, or outside of provincial jurisdiction was invalid. While the Conservative Party's 1912 convention included an endorsement of Direct Legislation provisions, the party leader Edward Michener called it a "vote-catching device" and George Hoadley wondered if the Act would be successful compared to similar legislation in Saskatchewan. Socialist member Charles M. O'Brien described the bill as "ridiculous" and "neither consistent, systematic or scientific".

Scandals

See main article: Alberta and Great Waterways Railway scandal.

The Alberta and Great Waterways Railway Scandal was a political scandal in 1910, which forced the resignation of the Liberal provincial government of Alexander Cameron Rutherford. Rutherford and his government were accused of giving loan guarantees to private interests for the construction of the Alberta and Great Waterways (A&GW) Railway that substantially exceeded the actual cost of construction, and which paid interest considerably above the market rate. They were also accused of exercising insufficient oversight over the railway's operations.

The scandal split the Liberal Party: Rutherford's Minister of Public Works, William Henry Cushing, resigned from his government and publicly attacked its railway policy, and a large portion of the Liberal caucus voted to defeat the government in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta. Although the government survived all of these votes, and Rutherford largely placated the legislature by appointing a royal commission to investigate the affair, pressure from Lieutenant-Governor George Bulyea forced Rutherford's resignation and his replacement by Arthur Sifton.

The royal commission reported months after Rutherford had already resigned. The majority did not find Rutherford or his cabinet guilty of any wrongdoing, but criticized them for poor judgment, both in relation to the loan guarantees and in relation to the exemptions the A&GW received from provincial legislation; a minority report was more sympathetic, and declared the allegations against them "disproved". James Cornwall, a Liberal backbencher who supported Rutherford, fared somewhat worse: his personal financial involvement in the railway gave rise to "suspicious circumstances", but he too was not proven guilty of any wrongdoing.

Besides provoking Rutherford's resignation, the scandal opened rifts in the Liberal Party that took years to heal. Sifton eventually smoothed over most of these divisions, but was frustrated in his railway policy by legal defeats. He ultimately adopted a similar policy to Rutherford's, and the A&GW was eventually built by private interests using the money raised from provincial loan guarantees. The Liberals went on to be re-elected in 1913 and 1917.

Party composition

Affiliation1st Assembly dissolutionElected in 1909Standings at dissolution
223633
226
11
11
Independent Liberal1
1
 Total
254141
 Government Majority
203125

Members elected during the 1909 Alberta Provincial Election

For complete electoral history, see individual districts

2nd Alberta Legislative Assembly
 DistrictMemberPartyFirst elected
AlexandraAlwyn Bramley-MooreLiberal1909CalgaryWilliam CushingLiberal1905Richard BennettConservative1909
Thomas TweedieConservative1911CamroseGeorge P. SmithLiberal1909CardstonJohn William WoolfLiberal1905
Martin WoolfLiberal1912ClaresholmMalcolm McKenzieLiberal1909CochraneCharles W. FisherLiberal1905DidsburyJoseph StaufferLiberal1909Edmonton #1Charles Wilson CrossLiberal1905Edmonton #2John McDougallLiberal1909GleichenEzra RileyLiberal1906
Harold RileyConservative1911High RiverLouis RobertsLiberal1909InnisfailJohn A. SimpsonLiberal1905Lac Ste. AnnePeter GunnLiberal1909LacombeWilliam PufferLiberal1905LeducRobert TelfordLiberal1905
Lethbridge CityWilliam Ashbury BuchananLiberal1909
John Smith StewartConservative1911Lethbridge DistrictArchibald J. McLeanIndependent Liberal1909MacleodColin GengeLiberal1909
Robert PattersonFarmers1910Medicine HatWilliam FinlayLiberal1905
Charles R. MitchellLiberal1910NantonJohn M. GlendenningLiberal1909OkotoksGeorge HoadleyConservative1909OldsDuncan MarshallLiberal1909PakanProsper-Edmond LessardLiberal1909Peace RiverJames CornwallLiberal1909PembinaHenry William McKenneyLiberal1909Pincher CreekDavid WarnockLiberal1909
John KemmisConservative1911PonokaWilliam A. CampbellLiberal1909Red DeerEdward MichenerIndependent1909Rocky MountainCharles M. O'BrienSocialist1909SedgewickCharles StewartLiberal1909St. AlbertLucien BoudreauLiberal1909StettlerRobert L. ShawLiberal1909Stony PlainJohn McPhersonLiberal1905StrathconaAlexander RutherfordLiberal1905SturgeonJohn R. BoyleLiberal1905VegrevilleJames Bismark HoldenLiberal1906VermilionArchibald CampbellLiberal1909
Arthur SiftonLiberal1910VictoriaFrancis A. WalkerLiberal1905WetaskiwinCharles H. OlinLiberal1909

July 15, 1909

Standings changes after election

By-elections

By-elections are only shown if new members were elected

 DistrictMemberPartyReason for By-ElectionMedicine HatCharles R. MitchellLiberalJune 29, 1910—Resignation of William FinlayVermilionArthur SiftonLiberalJune 29, 1910—Resignation of Archie Campbell to provide seat for Premier Arthur SiftonGleichenArchibald J. McArthurLiberalOctober 3, 1910—Resignation of Ezra Riley in protest against Liberal Party Leadership
MacleodRobert PattersonFarmersOctober 3, 1910—Death of Colin GengeCalgary #2Thomas TweedieConservativeOctober 31, 1911—Resignation of Richard Bennett to run for House of CommonsGleichenHarold RileyConservativeOctober 31, 1911—Death of Archibald John McArthurLethbridge CityJohn Smith StewartConservativeOctober 31, 1911—Resignation of Mr. William Buchanan to run for House for CommonsPincher CreekJohn KemmisConservativeOctober 31, 1911—Resignation of David Warnock to run for House of CommonsCardstonMartin WoolfLiberalMay 27, 1912—Resignation of Mr. John Woolf

Floor crossings

References

Bibliography

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Perry, Sandra E. . Footz, Valerie L. . Massolin . Philip A. . A Higher Duty: Speakers of the Legislative Assemblies . 2006 . Legislative Assembly of Alberta . Edmonton, AB . 0-9689217-3-6 . 494 . 9 August 2020.
  2. An Act to amend the Act respecting the Legislative Assembly of Alberta . S.A. . 1913 . 2. http://canlii.ca/t/541qv.
  3. The Direct Legislation Act . S.A. . 1913 . 3. https://canlii.ca/t/541qw .