Calgary Montrose | |
Province: | Alberta |
Prov-Status: | defunct |
Prov-Created: | 1986 |
Prov-Abolished: | 2012 |
Prov-Election-First: | 1986 |
Prov-Election-Last: | 2008 |
Calgary Montrose was a provincial electoral district in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, mandated to return a single member to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta using the first past the post method of voting from 1986 to 2012.
This urban district located in central east Calgary was created in the 1986 boundary re-distribution from Calgary-McCall. The district elected Progressive Conservative candidates for its entire history.
The district has seen its share of controversial elections in recent years. The last representative was Manmeet Bhullar, who won his first term in office in a controversial race over Independent Ron Leech in the 2008 general election. The previous representative was Hung Pham, who served from 1993 to 2004.
The Calgary-Montrose electoral district would be dissolved in the 2010 Alberta boundary re-distribution and would be re-distributed into the Calgary-East, Calgary-Greenway and Calgary-Cross electoral districts.[1]
17 Calgary-Montrose 2003 boundaries[2] | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Bordering districts | ||||
North | East | West | South | |
Calgary-McCall | Airdrie-Chestermere | Calgary-East | Calgary-Fort | |
riding map goes here | map in relation to other districts in Alberta goes here | |||
Legal description from the Statutes of Alberta 2003, Electoral Divisions Act. | ||||
Starting at the intersection of 68 Street NE with 32 Avenue NE; then 1. east along 32 Avenue NE to the west boundary of Block 10, Plan 8411285 (Monterey Park Estates); 2. generally south, east and north along the block boundary to 32 Avenue NE; 3. east along 32 Avenue NE and its easterly extension to the east Calgary city boundary; 4. south along the east city boundary to 17 Avenue SE; 5. west along 17 Avenue SE to 52 Street SE; 6. north along 52 Street SE to 16 Avenue NE; 7. east along 16 Avenue NE to 68 Street NE; 8. north along 68 Street NE to the starting point. | ||||
Note: |
Members of the Legislative Assembly for Calgary-Montrose[3] | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Assembly | Years | Member | Party | |
See: Calgary-McCall 1971-1986 | ||||
21st | 1986–1989 | Rick Orman | Progressive Conservative | |
22nd | 1989–1993 | |||
23rd | 1993–1997 | Hung Pham | ||
24th | 1997–2001 | |||
25th | 2001–2004 | |||
26th | 2004–2008 | |||
27th | 2008–2012 | Manmeet Bhullar |
The electoral district was created in the 1986 boundary redistribution. The first election held that year saw Progressive Conservative candidate Rick Orman win a comfortable majority to pick up the seat for his party. He was easily re-elected in the 1989 general election with a larger majority. Orman retired from the legislature at dissolution in 1993.
The 1993 election saw Progressive Conservative candidate Hung Pham win a sizable majority to hold the seat for his party. He was re-elected three more times winning in the 1997, 2001 and 2004 general elections. He retired from the legislature in 2008 after a bitter fall out with the Progressive Conservatives.
The 2008 election saw Progressive Conservative candidate Manmeet Bhullar win a hotly contested race over Independent Ron Leech. The pair had been in a disputed nomination race before the general election with the PC constituency association choosing Leech and the party hand-choosing Bhullar as the representative. Leech would petition the Alberta Court of Queen's Bench to overturn the results of the election with allegations that Bhullar and his supporters spurring ineligible voters to cast ballots, interfering with and influencing ballots cast, and violating the secrecy of the voting process.[4]
2004 Senate nominee election results Calgary-Montrose[5] | Turnout 29.39% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Affiliation | Candidate | Votes | % votes | % ballots | Rank | Progressive Conservative | Bert Brown | 2,587 | 15.71% | 50.55% | 1 | Progressive Conservative | Betty Unger | 2,198 | 13.35% | 42.95% | 2 | Progressive Conservative | Jim Silye | 2,032 | 12.34% | 39.70% | 5 | Progressive Conservative | David Usherwood | 1,712 | 10.40% | 33.45% | 6 | Progressive Conservative | Cliff Breitkreuz | 1,529 | 9.29% | 29.88% | 3 | Independent | Link Byfield | 1,435 | 8.72% | 28.04% | 4 | Independent | Tom Sindlinger | 1,153 | 7.00% | 22.53% | 9 | |
Total votes | 16,465 | 100% | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total ballots | 5,118 | 3.22 votes per ballot | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Rejected, spoiled and declined | 1,349 |
2004 Alberta student vote results[7] | |||||||||||||||||||
Affiliation | Candidate | Votes | % | Progressive Conservative | Hung Pham | 7 | 35.00% | Kevin Colton | 6 | 30.00% | Liberal | Arthur Danielson | 5 | 25.00% | NDP | Jason Nishiyama | 1 | 5.00% | |
Total | 20 | 100% | |||||||||||||||||
Rejected, spoiled and declined | 0 |