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This page lists the results of leadership elections held by the Alberta Liberal Party . Delegated conventions were held until 1988. Elections held since 1994 have been on a One member, one vote basis.
(Held August 3, 1905)
Alexander Rutherford resigned as Premier on May 26, 1910, and was succeeded by Arthur Sifton. Sifton was appointed by the Lieutendant Governor and it is assumed that Sifton was confirmed as leader at a subsequent convention.
Sifton in turn resigned as premier on October 30, 1917, and Charles Stewart was appointed by the Lieutenant Governor to replace him. It is also assumed that Stewart was confirmed as party leader at a subsequent convention.
After the Stewart government's defeat in the 1921 election and Stewart's resignation as party leader on appointment to the federal cabinet, John R. Boyle was elected by the caucus to replace him on February 2, 1922.
(Held November 27, 1924) [1]
Jeremiah Heffernan, Andrew Robert McLennan, William Thomas Henry, Stanley Tobin, Joseph Miville Dechene, Hugh John Montgomery, Jesse Gouge, William Ashbury Buchanan, William R. Howson were all nominated as candidates at the convention but immediately withdrew.
(Held April 21, 1926) [2]
(Held March 27, 1930) [3]
First Ballot:
Second Ballot:
Third Ballot (Montgomery eliminated):
(Held October 21, 1932) [4]
(Held June 4, 1937) [5]
Joseph Tweed Shaw, John J. Bowlen, Frederick William Gershaw and two others withdrew. Joseph Miville Dechene was also nominated but was not present at the convention and was declared to be ineligible.
(Held June 25, 1947) [6]
(Note: The vote totals do not appear to have been released.)
(Held November 1, 1958) [7]
(MacEwan elected on the second ballot. The vote totals for the first ballot were not released)
(Held January 14, 1962) [8]
(Note: The vote totals were not announced and Hunter's margin of victory was reported to be "decisive")
(Held January 15, 1966) [9]
First Ballot:
Second Ballot (Broughton eliminated):
Third Ballot (Freeland eliminated):
(Berry resigned as Liberal Leader on November 7, 1966, and Michael Maccagno was appointed interim leader on November 14, 1966)
(Held January 28, 1967) [10]
(Held April 26, 1969) [11]
First Ballot:
Second Ballot (Midgley eliminated):
Third Ballot (Russell eliminated):
(Held March 13, 1971) [12]
(Held March 2, 1974) [13]
(Note: There were 78 abstentions)
(Held October 9, 1988)
(Held November 13, 1994)
First Ballot:
Second Ballot (Mitchell, Chadi and Germain move to the next round):
(Note: this ballot used a preferential ballot)
Third Ballot (Germain eliminated and vote distributed):
(Held April 18, 1998)
(Following Nancy MacBeth's personal defeat in the 2001 election, Ken Nicol was appointed interim leader and was acclaimed at the ensuing leadership election)
(Held September 14–15, 2001)
(Held March 27, 2004)
(Held December 12, 2008)
(Held September 10, 2011)
(Held June 4, 2017)
Candidate | Votes | Percentage |
---|---|---|
David Khan | 54.8% | |
Kerry Cundal | 46.2% | |
Total | 1,671 | 100% |
Abstentions: 10 [14]
On December 8, 2022, then interim leader John Roggeveen was appointed permanent leader of the party after no candidate ran in the leadership election by the initial deadline. [15]
Arthur Lewis Watkins Sifton was a Canadian lawyer, judge and politician who served as the second premier of Alberta from 1910 until 1917. He became a minister in the federal cabinet of Canada thereafter. Born in Canada West, he grew up there and in Winnipeg, where he became a lawyer. He subsequently practised law with his brother Clifford Sifton in Brandon, where he was also active in municipal politics. He moved west to Prince Albert in 1885 and to Calgary in 1889. There, he was elected to the 4th and 5th North-West Legislative Assemblies; he served as a minister in the government of premier Frederick Haultain. In 1903, the federal government, at the instigation of his brother, made Sifton the Chief Justice of the Northwest Territories. After Alberta was created out of a portion of the Northwest Territories in 1905, Sifton became the first Chief Justice of Alberta in 1907 and served until 1910.
The Alberta Liberal Party is a provincial political party in Alberta, Canada. Founded in 1905, it is the oldest active political party in Alberta and was the dominant political party until the 1921 election, with the first three provincial Premiers being Liberals. Since 1921, it has formed the official opposition in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta several times, most recently from 1993 until 2012. Fourteen Liberals have served as Leader of the Opposition of Alberta.
The first three leaders of the Liberal Party of Canada were not chosen at a leadership convention. Alexander Mackenzie and Edward Blake were chosen by the party caucus. Wilfrid Laurier was also chosen by caucus members with the party convention of 1893 ratifying his leadership. The most recent leadership election was held in 2013.
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Charles Wilson Cross was a Canadian politician who served in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta and the House of Commons of Canada. He was also the first Attorney-General of Alberta. Born in Ontario, he studied law at Osgoode Hall Law School before coming west to practise in Edmonton. He became active with the Liberal Party of Canada, and when Alberta was created in 1905 he was chosen by Premier Alexander Cameron Rutherford to be its first Attorney-General. Implicated in the Alberta and Great Waterways Railway scandal, he resigned in 1910 along with the rest of Rutherford's government.
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Robert A. "Bob" Russell was a Canadian politician from Alberta. He served as the of the Alberta Liberal Party, and a municipal councillor in St. Albert, Alberta.
William Robinson Howson was a politician, judge, debt collector, soldier, banker, and real estate agent from Alberta, Canada. He served as a member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta from 1930 to 1936 sitting with the Liberal caucus in opposition. He led the caucus and the party from 1932 to 1936.
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John Walter McDonald was a Canadian lawyer, judge and provincial politician from Alberta. He served as Mayor of Fort Macleod, Alberta, Chief Judge of the District Court of Southern Alberta, and also led the Alberta Liberal Party for a brief period from 1930 to 1932.
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John Thurston (Jack) Lowery was a Calgary-based politician and leader of the Alberta Liberal Party from 1969 to 1971. He was forced to announce his resignation as leader in February 1970, after 10 months in office, shortly after it had been revealed in December 1969 that he had had talks with Premier Harry Strom of the ruling Alberta Social Credit Party about merging or forming an alliance of their two parties with the aim of moderating the conservative governing party, was rejected by the Liberal rank-and-file membership. He was born in Toronto.
The Alberta First Party French: Alberta d'abord) was an Albertan separatist political party in Alberta, Canada. It went through several iterations before becoming its current incarnation as the Freedom Conservative Party.
The Sifton Ministry was the combined Cabinet, chaired by Premier Arthur Sifton, and Ministers that governed Alberta party way through the 2nd Alberta Legislature beginning on May 26, 1910, through the 3rd Alberta Legislature to October 30, 1917.