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Mayor and 12 councilors to Edmonton City Council | |||||||||||||||||
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The 2004 Edmonton municipal election was held on October 18, 2004 to elect a mayor and twelve councillors to sit on Edmonton City Council, nine trustees to sit on the public school board, and seven trustees to sit on the separate school board.
There were 212,105 ballots cast out of 507,577 eligible voters, for a voter turnout of 41.8%.
(bold indicates elected, italics indicate incumbent)
Candidate | Votes | % |
---|---|---|
Stephen Mandel | 85,887 | 40.68% |
Bill Smith | 68,767 | 32.57% |
Robert Noce | 52,640 | 24.93% |
Tilo Paravalos | 921 | 0.44% |
Dieter Peske | 905 | 0.43% |
Dave Dowling | 858 | 0.41% |
Thomas "Buffalo Terminator" Tomilson | 768 | 0.36% |
Jean-Paul Noujaim | 390 | 0.18% |
Twelve councillors, two elected in each of six wards, with voters having up two votes each.
Ward 1 | Ward 2 | Ward 3 | Ward 4 | Ward 5 | Ward 6 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Candidate | Votes | Candidate | Votes | Candidate | Votes | Candidate | Votes | Candidate | Votes | Candidate | Votes |
Karen Leibovici | 23,793 | Ron Hayter | 18,386 | Janice Melnychuk | 21,020 | Michael Phair | 23,219 | Bryan Anderson | 19,650 | Dave Thiele | 16,128 |
Linda Sloan | 12,353 | Kim Krushell | 12,966 | Ed Gibbons | 17,524 | Jane Batty | 14,352 | Mike Nickel | 16,803 | Terry Cavanagh | 14,725 |
Karen Lynch | 10,909 | Dave Loken | 7,512 | Tony Caterina | 9,416 | Ben Henderson | 12,475 | Donna Finucane | 15,123 | Chinwe Okelu | 12,877 |
Charlene Davis | 6,888 | Don Koziak | 7,289 | Joan Duiker | 5,978 | Debbie Yeung | 10,500 | Al Slemko | 6,576 | Amarjeet Sohi | 8,077 |
Terry Demers | 3,306 | Tim Hajar | 4,542 | Kyle Balombin | 3,334 | Thomas Roberts | 1,945 | Ian Crawford | 5,307 | Barbara Ann Thompson | 6,339 |
Joe Hudson | 3,046 | Mimi Williams | 3,978 | Dale Ferris | 1,702 | Jung-Suk Ryu | 3,817 | Terry McKinnon | 2,908 | ||
Samir Ghossein | 1,534 | Kerry Hutton | 1,820 | Paul Welke | 1,417 | Katie Oppen | 2,029 | Sean Diakiw | 1,013 | ||
Rory Koopmans | 1,332 | Larry Thomson | 1,629 | Adil Pirbhai | 533 | ||||||
Trent Soholt | 1,149 | Jabin Caouette | 1,526 |
Ward A | Ward B | Ward C | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bev Esslinger | 9,702 | 70.53% | Wendy Keiver | 6,511 | 51.28% | Don Williams | 5,929 | 38.45% |
Perry Chahal | 2,486 | 18.07% | Bob Dean | 6,187 | 48.72% | Sherry Adams | 5,719 | 37.09% |
Victor Varvis | 1,567 | 11.39% | Phill McNabb | 3,773 | 24.47% | |||
Ward D | Ward E | Ward F | ||||||
David Colburn | 5,011 | 44.92% | Ken Gibson | Acclaimed | Don Fleming | 8,767 | 57.02% | |
Terry Sulyma | 4,017 | 36.01% | Susan O'Neil | 6,608 | 42.98% | |||
Emil van der Poorten | 2,127 | 19.07% | ||||||
Ward G | Ward H | Ward I | ||||||
Svend Hansen | 12,202 | 66.25% | George Nicholson | 9,868 | 50.41% | Gerry Gibeault | 6,296 | 44.17% |
Kam Gill | 6,217 | 33.75% | Catherine Ripley | 9,706 | 49.59% | Judith Axelson | 6,020 | 42.23% |
Neal Gray | 1,939 | 13.60% |
One trustee is elected from each ward, and the non-victorious candidate with the most total votes is also elected.
Ward 1 | Ward 2 | Ward 3 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Debbie Engel | Acclaimed | Janice Sarich | 8,084 | 65.09% | Mark Razzolini | 7,786 | 69.08% | |
Jim Urlacher | 4,336 | 34.91% | John Beke | 3,485 | 30.92% | |||
Ward 4 | Ward 5 | Ward 6 | ||||||
Debbie Cavaliere | 4,699 | 57.12% | Judy Buddle | 3,336 | 40.23% | Patrick McDonald | 3,803 | 46.17% |
Joe Filewych | 2,329 | 28.31% | Marilyn Bergstra | 3,313 | 39.95% | Kara Pelech | 2,840 | 34.48% |
Rudy Arcilla | 1,199 | 14.57% | Doug McCarthy | 1,643 | 19.81% | Jim Shinkaruk | 1,594 | 19.35% |
The 1913 municipal election was held December 8, 1913 to elect a mayor and five aldermen to sit on Edmonton City Council, trustees to sit on the public school board, and four trustees to sit on the separate school board.
The 1921 municipal election was held December 12, 1921 to elect a mayor and seven aldermen to sit on Edmonton City Council and four trustees to sit on the public school board. F A French, Paul Jenvrin, Thomas Magee, and Joseph Henri Picard were acclaimed to two-year terms on the separate school board.
The 1923 municipal election was held December 10, 1923 to elect a mayor and six aldermen to sit on Edmonton City Council and four trustees to sit on the public school board. Robert Crossland, Paul Jenvrin, Thomas Magee, and Joseph Henri Picard were acclaimed to two-year terms on the separate school board.
The 1924 municipal election was held December 8, 1924, to elect a mayor and five aldermen to sit on Edmonton City Council and three trustees to sit on each of the public and separate school boards.
The 1925 municipal election was held December 14, 1925 to elect a mayor and seven aldermen to sit on Edmonton City Council and four trustees to sit on each of the public and separate school boards. In the election's only plebiscite, the voters also rejected a proposal to increase the mayor's term from one year to two.
The 1926 municipal election was held December 13, 1926, to elect a mayor and six aldermen to sit on Edmonton City Council and three trustees to sit on the public school board. Harry Carrigan, J O Pilon, and W D Trainor were acclaimed to two-year terms on the separate school board.
The 1927 municipal election was held December 12, 1927 to elect a mayor and five aldermen to sit on Edmonton City Council and four trustees to sit on each of the public and separate school boards. There were also two plebiscite questions.
The 1928 municipal election was held December 10, 1928 to elect a mayor and six aldermen to join Edmonton City Council and three trustees to join the public school board during the year of 1929 and 1930. Three trustees were elected by acclamation to join the separate school board for 1929 and 1930.
The 1934 municipal election was held November 14, 1934 to elect a mayor and six aldermen to sit on Edmonton City Council and three trustees to sit on each of the public and separate school boards.
The 1962 municipal election was held October 17, 1962 to elect five aldermen to sit on Edmonton City Council and three trustees to sit on each of the public and separate school boards. The electorate also decided two plebiscite questions. No election for mayor was held because Elmer Roper was one year into a two-year term.
The 1971 municipal election was held October 13, 1971 to elect a mayor and twelve aldermen to sit on Edmonton City Council and seven trustees to sit on each of the public and separate school boards.
The 1977 municipal election was held October 19, 1977 to elect a mayor and twelve aldermen to sit on Edmonton City Council, nine trustees to sit on the public school board, and seven trustees to sit on the separate school board.
The 1980 municipal election was held October 15, 1980 to elect a mayor and twelve aldermen to sit on Edmonton City Council, nine trustees to sit on the public school board, and seven trustees to sit on the separate school board.
The Edmonton municipal election, 1989 was held on October 16 that year to elect a mayor and twelve aldermen to sit on Edmonton City Council, nine trustees to sit on the public school board, and seven trustees to sit on the separate school board. Edmontonians also voted in the Senate nominee election in conjunction with the municipal election.
The 1992 municipal election was held October 22, 1992 to elect a mayor and twelve aldermen to sit on Edmonton City Council, nine trustees to sit on the public school board, and seven trustees to sit on the separate school board. Edmontonians also decided one plebiscite question.
The 1995 Edmonton municipal election was held October 16, 1995 to elect a mayor and twelve aldermen to sit on Edmonton City Council, nine trustees to sit on the public school board, and seven trustees to sit on the separate school board. Edmontonians also decided two plebiscite questions.
The 1998 Edmonton municipal election was held October 26, 1998, to elect a mayor and 12 councillors to sit on Edmonton City Council, 9 trustees to sit on the public school board, and 7 trustees to sit on the separate school board. Edmontonians also decided one plebiscite question and participated in the Senate election.
The 2001 Edmonton municipal election was held on October 15, 2001 to elect a mayor and twelve councilors to sit on Edmonton City Council, nine trustees to sit on the public school board, seven trustees to sit on the separate school board, and seven members of the Capital Health Board of Directors.
Municipal elections were held in Alberta, Canada on Monday, October 15, 2007. Since 1968, provincial legislation has required every municipality to hold triennial elections. Mayors (reeves), councillors (aldermen), and trustees were elected to office in 15 of the 16 cities, all 111 towns, all 99 villages, all 4 specialized municipalities, all 64 municipal districts, 3 of the 7 improvement districts, and the advisory councils of the 3 special areas. The City of Lloydminster is on the Saskatchewan schedule, and held elections on October 25, 2006 and October 28, 2009, while 4 improvement districts have no councils and are led solely by the Minister of Municipal Affairs. Since the 2004 municipal elections, the Town of Lac La Biche and Lakeland County amalgamated to form Lac La Biche County, the villages of Irricana and Onoway became towns, the Town of Brooks became a city, and the Village of Sangudo was dissolved.
The 2010 Edmonton municipal election was held Monday, October 18, 2010 to elect a mayor and 12 councillors to the city council, seven of the nine trustees to Edmonton Public Schools, and the seven trustees to the Edmonton Catholic Schools. Two incumbent public school trustees had no challengers. Since 1968, provincial legislation had required every municipality to hold triennial elections.