List of Alberta provincial electoral districts explained

Alberta provincial electoral districts are currently single member ridings that each elect one member to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta. There are 87 districts fixed in law in Alberta.

History

The original twenty five districts were drawn up by Liberal Member of Parliament Frank Oliver prior to the first general election of 1905. The original boundaries were widely regarded as being gerrymandered to favour the Alberta Liberal Party, although the Liberal Party did receive the majority of votes in the 1905 election and thus rightly formed majority government. Every boundary redistribution since 1905 has been based on the original boundaries, with districts being split or merged.

Starting in 1909, districts were grouped to make multiple-member districts. Most members continued to be elected in single-member districts but every election from 1909 to 1955 saw members elected in one or more multi-member districts.

From 1905 to 1924 with only a few exceptions each district elected a single member on the First Past the Post system. Calgary and Edmonton as well as Medicine Hat were elected on a plurality block vote, where 2 or 5 members were elected in a city-wide district and each voter could cast as many votes as seats to be filled.

There were also two cases where members were elected outside of the geographical districts and did not represent any districts. Such was the case in the world wars when Albertans serving overseas voted for their own representatives.

From 1924 to 1956 Calgary and Edmonton MLAs were elected in multiple-member districts encompassing whole cities using Single transferable vote to elect five to seven members. In 1926, Medicine Hat was a two-member district, electing its members through Single Transferable Voting. Outside these cities single-member districts elected single MLAs using the Alternative Voting system (Instant-runoff voting), with vote transfers taking place only if no candidate had a majority of the vote in the first count.

By-elections in the two big cities during this period were conducted using Alternative Voting (Instant-runoff voting). Under STV, some results were known as soon as the first vote count was done, but some seats took a couple days of vote transfers to fill. But the mixed representation elected in each city under STV, reflective of the mixed sentiment of the city's voters, was thought worth the wait.

There were no district changes between 1926 and 1940. But Edmonton and Calgary were given one more member then reverted down to five members again in 1940.

With Alberta in a population boom in the 1950s and Calgary and Edmonton growing, single transferable vote may have been seen as too complicated, with vote counting taking days before final results could be announced. But the Social Credit government's rationale for the change away from STV and IRV was that a large number of votes were being declared spoiled. No other major social unit favored the move but the government made the change anyway. The government felt threatened by the growing number of opposition MLAs being elected (although it was still taking more than 60 percent of the seats in the Legislature).[1] In 1959 the government returned Alberta to First past the post elections in single-member districts, last used across the province in 1905. No government has since changed the electoral system (although since then the number of members has increased from 61 to 87).

In 1977 Elections Alberta was established as an independent, non-partisan office of the Legislative Assembly responsible for administering provincial elections, by-elections and referendums.

1990s

The early 1990s proved to be a contentious period for delineation of electoral districts in Alberta. The Supreme Court of British Columbia ruling in Dixon v. Attorney General of British Columbia in 1989 invalidated the provincial electoral district re-distribution due to wide variations between electoral district populations for British Columbia, finding these differences inconsistent with the Charter of Rights and Freedoms.[2] Cognizant of this the Alberta Legislature tasked a Special Committee chaired by Taber-Warner MLA Bob Bogle to evaluate the re-distribution of electoral districts in the province. The Report of the Select Special Committee on Electoral Boundaries was submitted to the Legislature in November 1990[3] and was referred to the Court of Appeal of Alberta. While the Court of Appeals reference found the boundaries consistent with the Charter,[4] the report was scrapped and amendments to the Electoral Divisions Act were introduced in early 1991 to effectively "Charter-proof" the new districts.

The same Select Committee was tasked with creating the new report which was presented to the Legislature in November 1992,[5] and once again referred to the Court of Appeal of Alberta to rule on the constitutional validity of the boundaries. The four Progressive Conservative MLAs on the Select Committee (Bob Bogle, Stockwell Day, Pat Nelson, Mike Cardinal) participated fully in developing the report, while the Opposition refused to appoint any MLAs. Subsequently, the boundaries were implemented and used for the June 1993 Alberta general election. The Court of Appeal of Alberta withheld Charter condemnation, but found numerous issues with the process and requirements put forward for the re-distribution. In particular the members of the Select Committee were unable to provide sufficient rationale to the court for a number of the boundaries and district sizes recommended in the report.[6] The court explicitly voiced the opinion that a proper electoral boundary review was necessary within the term of the present government (which expired in 1997).[7]

Following the issues in the early 1990s, a semi-independent boundary commissions were set up to tweak the boundaries to population changes that occurred after every census. Committees are composed of a neutral Judge, two members appointed by the governing party, and two members appointed by the official opposition.

2010 electoral boundary commission

See main article: 2010 Alberta electoral redistribution.

The 2009/2010 Alberta Electoral Boundaries Commission was established on 31 July 2009, and was chaired by Justice J. M. Walter and members included Keith Archer, Peter Dobbie, Brian Evans and Allyson Jeffs.[8] The Final Report by the commission with recommendations was submitted to the legislature on 24 June 2010.[8] The recommendations of the Commission were accepted and the electoral division boundaries were implemented by Bill 28, Electoral Divisions Act.[9]

The 2010 redistribution increased the number of seats in the Alberta Legislative Assembly from 83 to 87, a decision by Premier Ed Stelmach to ensure rural districts would not be removed in the increasingly urban Alberta. The Commission's final report warned that Alberta would have to reevaluate how seats are distributed to rural areas specifically in regards to the province's large northern areas. The report warned that the population discrepancy required to preserve lesser populated rural electoral districts in the face of growing urban districts remained controversial for Albertans and elected representatives.

A minority position in the Commission found the division of Alberta into three geographic areas (Calgary, Edmonton, other) problematic as it effectively ignored fast growing mid-sized cities which were fragmented into hybrid rural-urban constituencies.

2017 electoral boundary commission

Under the Electoral Boundaries Commission Act requires that a Commission be appointed during the first session of the Legislature following every second general election. The Commission requires a non-partisan chair, two government members recommended by the Premier, and two opposition members. Due to the decision by Premier Jim Prentice to call an early election in 2015, the Commission was required to be formed before the prescribed date in time for the next election in 2019. Previous Commissions had provided for modest redistributions in favour of Alberta's cities which according to Political Scientist Roger Epp brought forward "deep rural anxieties" regarding declining population and influence in Alberta.

The Commission was provided with a mandate which kept the size of the Legislature fixed at 87 seats. The Commission was appointed, led by Justice Myra Bielby made only incremental changes adding one new seat in Calgary and Edmonton, as well as a seat in the Airdrie area. The Commission did however make significant statements on the rural-urban divide in Alberta, noting "Alberta is no longer entirely or primarily rural in nature" and a "disproportionate preservation of the rural voice" was no longer acceptable or feasible under law. While the Electoral Boundaries Commission Act permits up to four districts to be formed with a population 50 per cent lower than the average population, the Commission only recommended that two of these districts be formed. The districts include Central Peace-Notley which had a population of 28,993 and area of 47,311 km², and Lesser Slave Lake which had a population of 27,818, compared to the average population of electoral districts of 46,803 following redistribution.

A minority opinion was presented by Commission members appointed by the opposition, arguing that Alberta's rate of growth was a threat to "a critical part of our history, culture, and primary economic voice" which is at risk of being lost through continued redistribution.

Number of districts

As is the case with nearly every other Canadian jurisdiction, the number of districts has not increased in proportion to the growth in the provincial population. In 1905, 25,000 votes were cast across the province to elect 25 MLAs. In 1982, 945,000 votes, almost 40 times the 1905 total, were cast across the province to choose 79 MLAs, less than four times the 1905 seat total. Prior to the 1986 election the number of districts was fixed by law at 83 thus any change to that number would have to be enacted by the legislature. Even though the population has increased by more than 40 percent between 1986 and 2009, the number of members did not change. Finally due to changes wrought in 2010, the 2012 election saw the number of members increase to 87, where it has stayed despite a 15 percent increase in the provincial population since 2009.[10]

Naming conventions

Like the federal districts in Alberta, urban ridings traditionally begin with the city name. This has generally applied where an urban area is divided and joined with rural areas, such as Grande Prairie-Wapiti and Fort McMurray-Lac La Biche. Notable exceptions are Cypress-Medicine Hat and Brooks-Medicine Hat, which follow the convention in other rural areas of listing communities in alphabetical order (another exception being Vermilion-Lloydminster-Wainwright).

Unlike federal practice, Alberta uses hyphens to join all name elements. This is true for electoral districts named for multiple communities as well as urban districts (where the city name is followed by a direction, a neighbourhood, a landmark, or the name of a historical politician). For example, compare the provincial Fort McMurray-Conklin with the federal Fort McMurray—Cold Lake, where the em dash is used instead of the hyphen to join names of separate communities. Also compare the provincial Edmonton-Strathcona with the federal Edmonton Strathcona, where a space indicates that Strathcona is a neighbourhood of Edmonton.

Current districts named for individuals include several premiers:

Three are named for former party leaders:

In addition, Edmonton-McClung is named for suffragette and MLA Nellie McClung. The abolished riding of Edmonton-Roper was named for CCF leader Elmer Roper.

List of provincial electoral districts

Current districts

See also: 30th Alberta Legislative Assembly.

NameCreatedMLAPartyPopulation (2016)
1Calgary-Acadia2012New Democrat48,966
2Calgary-Beddington2019[Alberta New Democratic Party|New Democrat]]50,220
3Calgary-Bow1971United Conservative51,358
4Calgary-Buffalo1971New Democrat49,907
5Calgary-Cross1993United Conservative50,634
6Calgary-Currie1971New Democrat48,403
7Calgary-East1963*United Conservative50,838
8Calgary-Edgemont2019New Democrat50,803
9Calgary-Elbow1971New Democrat48,618
10Calgary-Falconridge2019New Democrat52,688
11Calgary-Fish Creek1979United Conservative47,691
12Calgary-Foothills1971New Democrat45,715
13Calgary-Glenmore1959New Democrat49,543
14Calgary-Hays2004United Conservative50,782
15Calgary-Klein2012New Democrat50,338
16Calgary-Lougheed1993United Conservative42,956
17Calgary-Bhullar-McCall1971New Democrat48,735
18Calgary-Mountain View1971New Democrat49,442
19Calgary-North1957*United Conservative39,120
20Calgary-North East1959*New Democrat40,366
21Calgary-North West1979United Conservative48,766
22Calgary-Peigan2019United Conservative45,810
23Calgary-Shaw1986United Conservative45,169
24Calgary-South East1959*United Conservative40,309
25Calgary-Varsity1993New Democrat45,742
26Calgary-West1959United Conservative46,266
27Edmonton-Beverly-Clareview1997New Democrat46,496
28Edmonton-Castle Downs1997New Democrat46,112
29Edmonton-City Centre2019New Democrat47,715
30Edmonton-Decore2004New Democrat48,927
31Edmonton-Ellerslie1993New Democrat48,024
32Edmonton-Glenora1971New Democrat45,519
33Edmonton-Gold Bar1971New Democrat45,446
34Edmonton-Highlands-Norwood2004New Democrat43,550
35Edmonton-Manning1993New Democrat48,376
36Edmonton-McClung1993New Democrat44,625
37Edmonton-Meadows2019New Democrat51,776
38Edmonton-Mill Woods1979New Democrat50,265
39Edmonton-North West1959*New Democrat45,523
40Edmonton-Riverview1997New Democrat45,214
41Edmonton-Rutherford1993New Democrat47,353
42Edmonton-South1917*New Democrat45,801
43Edmonton-South West2012New Democrat45,901
44Edmonton-Strathcona1971New Democrat46,578
45Edmonton-West Henday2019New Democrat43,046
46Edmonton-Whitemud1971New Democrat46,833
47Airdrie-Cochrane2019United Conservative51,170
48Airdrie-East2019United Conservative49,978
49Athabasca-Barrhead-Westlock2019United Conservative46,920
50Banff-Kananaskis2019New Democrat46,824
51Bonnyville-Cold Lake-St. Paul2019United Conservative53,809
52Brooks-Medicine Hat2019United Conservative51,070
53Camrose1921*United Conservative44,082
54Cardston-Siksika2019United Conservative42,655
55Central Peace-Notley2019United Conservative28,993
56Chestermere-Strathmore2019United Conservative48,203
57Cypress-Medicine Hat1993United Conservative50,109
58Drayton Valley-Devon2012United Conservative46,637
59Drumheller-Stettler2004United Conservative41,535
60Fort McMurray-Lac La Biche2019United Conservative44,166
61Fort McMurray-Wood Buffalo2004United Conservative41,420
62Fort Saskatchewan-Vegreville2004United Conservative52,141
63Grande Prairie1930*United Conservative46,343
64Grande Prairie-Wapiti1993United Conservative48,481
65Highwood1971United Conservative48,813
66Innisfail-Sylvan Lake1993United Conservative46,717
67Lac Ste. Anne-Parkland2019United Conservative46,546
68Lacombe-Ponoka2004United Conservative44,898
69Leduc-Beaumont2012United Conservative48,337
70Lesser Slave Lake1971United Conservative27,818
71Lethbridge-East1971United Conservative46,204
72Lethbridge-West1971New Democrat46,525
73Livingstone-Macleod1997United Conservative48,120
74Maskwacis-Wetaskiwin2019United Conservative43,798
75Morinville-St. Albert2019United Conservative50,225
76Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills1997United Conservative49,418
77Peace River1905United Conservative39,974
78Red Deer-North1986United Conservative47,672
79Red Deer-South1986United Conservative52,743
80Rimbey-Rocky Mountain House-Sundre2012United Conservative45,138
81Sherwood Park1986New Democrat45,992
82Spruce Grove-Stony Plain2019United Conservative51,267
83St. Albert1905New Democrat47,745
84Strathcona-Sherwood Park2012United Conservative47,853
85Taber-Warner1963*United Conservative42,625
86Vermilion-Lloydminster-Wainwright2019United Conservative46,042
87West Yellowhead1986United Conservative50,604
[11]

Districts prior to 2019 election

NameCreatedLast MLA PartyPopulationMedian
Income, 2011[12]
2011[13] 2016[14]
Airdrie2012United Conservative45,95557,930$60,524
Athabasca-Sturgeon-Redwater2012New Democratic37,06038,051$56,741
Banff-Cochrane1940*New Democratic46,07563,990$56,603
Barrhead-Morinville-Westlock2004 United Conservative40,67045,030$48,588
Battle River-Wainwright2004 United Conservative37,67536,905$46,988
Bonnyville-Cold Lake1997United Conservative35,16539,696$59,996
Calgary-Acadia2012New Democratic37,89043,000$53,262
Calgary-Bow1971New Democratic39,52045,049$64,985
Calgary-Buffalo1971New Democratic39,41552,963$54,913
Calgary-Cross1993New Democratic46,19559,406$42,992
Calgary-Currie1971New Democratic44,45051,611$53,241
Calgary-East1963*Independent47,73556,618$43,880
Calgary-Elbow1971Alberta Party45,76048,363$67,959
Calgary-Fish Creek1979United Conservative38,45540,566$64,793
Calgary-Foothills1971United Conservative43,01554,180$65,262
Calgary-Fort1997New Democratic41,66051,083$46,862
Calgary-Glenmore1959New Democratic46,09548,972$58,712
Calgary-Greenway2012Independent46,13056,474$41,333
Calgary-Hawkwood2012New Democratic47,52052,223$64,978
Calgary-Hays2004United Conservative41,50546,893$66,327
Calgary-Klein2012New Democratic42,80049,130$55,235
Calgary-Lougheed1993United Conservative47,28554,734$60,144
Calgary-Mackay-Nose Hill2012Alberta Party42,53556,625$54,491
Calgary-McCall1971New Democratic45,24568,523$42,245
Calgary-Mountain View1971Liberal40,85047,808$64,783
Calgary-North West1979New Democratic46,46051,011$76,108
Calgary-Northern Hills2012New Democratic51,61061,377$58,324
Calgary-Shaw1986New Democratic43,94048,056$63,218
Calgary-South East1959*Alberta Party48,94579,034$64,020
Calgary-Varsity1993New Democratic40,87548,107$60,908
Calgary-West1959United Conservative40,95045,966$85,624
Cardston-Taber-Warner1997United Conservative38,50543,467$44,658
Chestermere-Rocky View2012United Conservative45,92546,966$64,826
Cypress-Medicine Hat1993United Conservative40,34541,148$50,184
Drayton Valley-Devon2012United Conservative40,21547,883$50,869
Drumheller-Stettler2004United Conservative36,84037,852$43,459
Dunvegan-Central Peace-Notley2012New Democratic23,05025,192$44,932
Edmonton-Beverly-Clareview1997New Democratic45,47551,834$49,755
Edmonton-Calder1971*New Democratic44,65553,918$52,833
Edmonton-Castle Downs1997New Democratic45,74052,775$54,878
Edmonton-Centre1959New Democratic40,75051,659$48,993
Edmonton-Decore2004New Democratic43,75549,942$48,398
Edmonton-Ellerslie1993New Democratic42,54059,091$54,820
Edmonton-Glenora1971New Democratic42,00048,138$50,122
Edmonton-Gold Bar1971New Democratic42,54044,691$58,042
Edmonton-Highlands-Norwood2004New Democratic43,02054,804$46,860
Edmonton-Manning1993New Democratic44,86051,953$53,328
Edmonton-McClung1993New Democratic39,26542,971$55,752
Edmonton-Meadowlark1971New Democratic41,92552,039$49,474
Edmonton-Mill Creek1997New Democratic41,49556,995$52,849
Edmonton-Mill Woods1979New Democratic41,03048,364$49,154
Edmonton-Riverview1997New Democratic40,00045,517$57,990
Edmonton-Rutherford1993New Democratic40,18545,255$57,782
Edmonton-South West2012New Democratic43,78066,489$64,343
Edmonton-Strathcona1971New Democratic40,31544,400$51,350
Edmonton-Whitemud1971New Democratic48,86052,574$72,504
Fort McMurray-Conklin2012United Conservative26,07529,533$98,417
Fort McMurray-Wood Buffalo2004United Conservative40,85559,576$106,908
Fort Saskatchewan-Vegreville2004New Democratic42,94549,399$57,137
Grande Prairie-Smoky1993United Conservative44,11557,580$57,038
Grande Prairie-Wapiti1993United Conservative48,80056,975$60,916
Highwood1971United Conservative48,94056,268$60,078
Innisfail-Sylvan Lake1993United Conservative42,23043,996$51,930
Lac La Biche-St. Paul-Two Hills2012United Conservative30,79038,260$43,825
Lacombe-Ponoka2004United Conservative39,76044,389$49,907
Leduc-Beaumont2012New Democratic46,55052,734$58,093
Lesser Slave Lake1971New Democratic27,70030,094$49,192
Lethbridge-East1971New Democratic43,17544,927$45,912
Lethbridge-West1971New Democratic40,28546,211$49,241
Little Bow1913United Conservative37,75539,627$41,775
Livingstone-Macleod1997United Conservative42,70042,794$46,943
Medicine Hat1905*New Democratic38,35044,469$48,013
Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills1997United Conservative43,01047,038$47,923
Peace River1905New Democratic35,68041,492$49,380
Red Deer-North1986New Democratic43,76558,914$49,891
Red Deer-South1986New Democratic46,80051,627$54,916
Rimbey-Rocky Mountain House-Sundre2012United Conservative40,20541,942$44,905
Sherwood Park1986New Democratic41,47545,474$69,023
Spruce Grove-St. Albert2012New Democratic51,80059,453$63,117
St. Albert1905New Democratic44,42048,430$67,036
Stony Plain1905New Democratic42,43047,018$63,712
Strathcona-Sherwood Park2012New Democratic46,62046,971$71,299
Strathmore-Brooks1997Freedom Conservative44,90052,474$50,121
Vermilion-Lloydminster1993Progressive Conservative36,54040,544$52,877
West Yellowhead1986New Democratic30,99536,901$62,422
Wetaskiwin-Camrose1993New Democratic41,89043,350$47,164
Whitecourt-Ste. Anne1993New Democratic37,19039,128$53,828

Historical provincial electoral districts

References

Bibliography

Election related reports

External links

Notes and References

  1. A Report on Alberta Elections
  2. ,BCSC . Dixon v. Attorney General of British Columbia . 1989 . 248 . http://canlii.ca/t/1p6rb.
  3. Book: Select Special Committee on Electoral Boundaries . Bob Bogle . Robert Bogle . Report of the Select Special Committee on Electoral Boundaries . November 1990 . Legislative Assembly of Alberta . Edmonton, AB . 20 June 2020.
  4. ,ABCA . Reference re: Order in Council O.C. 91/91 in Respect of the Electoral Boundaries Commission Act . 1991 . 317 . http://canlii.ca/t/2dtrv.
  5. Book: Select Special Committee on Electoral Boundaries . Bob Bogle . Robert Bogle . Report of the Select Special Committee on Electoral Boundaries: established by Motion 24, July 2, 1992 . November 1992 . Legislative Assembly of Alberta . Edmonton, AB . 20 June 2020.
  6. Web site: Knowing Where to Draw the Line. Stinson. Douglas. 1 July 1999. albertaviews.ca. en-CA. 31 May 2018.
  7. ,ABCA . Reference re: Order in Council 215/93 Respecting the Electoral Divisions Statutes Amendment Act. 1994 . 342 . http://canlii.ca/t/2dbkg.
  8. Web site: Proposed Electoral Division Areas, Boundaries, and Names for Alberta. Final Report to the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta . June 2010 . 29 May 2020 . Alberta Electoral Boundaries Commission . Legislative Assembly of Alberta.
  9. Web site: Bill 28 Electoral Divisions Act. Legislative Assembly of Alberta. 2010.
  10. Web site: Focus on Geography Series, 2021 Census - Alberta . 13 July 2022 .
  11. Web site: Election Results . 2024-08-18 . Elections Alberta . en.
  12. Web site: Alberta Finance, 2011 Census. 14 December 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304220404/http://www.finance.alberta.ca/aboutalberta/ped_profiles/2011-profiles/_PED-Summary-Tables.pdf. 4 March 2016. dead.
  13. Web site: Alberta Finance, 2011 Census. 14 December 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304220404/http://www.finance.alberta.ca/aboutalberta/ped_profiles/2011-profiles/_PED-Summary-Tables.pdf. 4 March 2016. dead.
  14. Web site: Alberta Electoral Boundaries Commission: Stats. 13 January 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20170108123740/http://abebc.ca/about/stats/. 8 January 2017. dead.