Lacombe-Ponoka Explained

Lacombe-Ponoka
Province:Alberta
Prov-Rep:Jennifer Johnson
Prov-Rep-Party:UCP
Prov-Status:active
Prov-Created:2003
Prov-Election-First:2004
Prov-Election-Last:2023

Lacombe-Ponoka is a provincial electoral district in central Alberta, Canada created in 2003. The district is mandated to return a single member to the Legislative Assembly.

History

The electoral district was created in the 2003 boundary redistribution mostly from the abolished electoral districts of Lacombe-Stettler and Ponoka-Rimbey.

The 2010 boundary redistribution saw the riding lose the town of Rimbey to the new district of Rimbey-Rocky Mountain House-Sundre and it also lost land that resided within Camrose County to the electoral district of Battle River-Wainwright.[1]

Boundary history

Representation history

Members of the Legislative Assembly for Lacombe-Ponoka
AssemblyYearsMemberParty
Riding created from Lacombe-Stettler,
Ponoka-Rimbey, and Rocky Mountain House
26th2004–2008Ray PrinsProgressive Conservative
27th2008–2012
28th2012–2014Rod FoxWildrose
2014–2015Progressive Conservative
29th2015–2017Ron OrrWildrose
2017-2019United Conservative
30th2019–2023
31st2023–2024Jennifer JohnsonIndependent
2024–presentUnited Conservative

The electoral district and its predecessor ridings have been returning conservative candidates since the 1970s. The current representative is Ray Prins who was first elected to office in 2004 when the district was created. He represented the district for two terms with majorities well above half the popular vote.

Legislative election results

2004

Senate nominee election results

2004

2004 Senate nominee election results

Lacombe-Ponoka[4]

Turnout 49.84%
AffiliationCandidateVotes% votes% ballotsRankIndependentLink Byfield3,58210.68%34.29%4Michael Roth3,2939.82%31.53%7Vance Gough2,8598.53%27.37%8Gary Horan2,7298.14%26.13%10IndependentTom Sindlinger1,9005.66%18.19%9
Total votes33,535100%
Total ballots10,4453.21 votes per ballot
Rejected, spoiled and declined2,700
Voters had the option of selecting four candidates on the ballot

2012

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Proposed Electoral Division Areas, Boundaries, and Names for Alberta . June 2010 . January 14, 2012 . Alberta Electoral Boundaries Commission . 21 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110927115425/http://www.altaebc.ab.ca/EBCFINALReport.pdf . September 27, 2011 .
  2. Book: Statutes of the Province of Alberta. E‑4.1. Government of Alberta. 2003. 53–54.
  3. Web site: Bill 28 Electoral Divisions Act. Legislative Assembly of Alberta. 2010.
  4. Web site: Senate Nominee Election 2004 Tabulation of Official Results . Elections Alberta . February 28, 2010 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20090704143923/http://www.elections.ab.ca/Public%20Website/files/Reports/SN_snetabulation.pdf . July 4, 2009 .