Strathmore-Brooks

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Strathmore-Brooks
Flag of Alberta.svg Alberta electoral district
StrathmoreBrooks in Alberta.jpg
2004 boundaries
Defunct provincial electoral district
Legislature Legislative Assembly of Alberta
District created1996
District abolished2019
First contested 1997
Last contested 2015

Strathmore-Brooks was a provincial electoral district in Alberta, Canada, mandated to return a single member to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta using the first-past-the-post method of voting from 1997 to 2019.

Contents

History

The electoral district was created in the 1996 boundary re-distribution from most of the old electoral district of Bow Valley. [1]

The 2004 electoral boundary re-distribution saw the boundaries revised to include a portion of land from the dissolved Drumheller-Chinook electoral district, and losing a small portion of the south-east portion of the district to Little Bow. [2]

The 2010 electoral boundary re-distribution saw the electoral district completely untouched using exactly the same boundaries as set in 2003. [2]

The Strathmore-Brooks electoral district was dissolved in the 2017 electoral boundary re-distribution, and portions of the district would form the Brooks-Medicine Hat, Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills, and Chestermere-Strathmore electoral districts. [3]

Boundary history

Representation history

Members of the Legislative Assembly for Strathmore-Brooks
AssemblyYearsMemberParty
See Bow Valley 1971–1993
24th 1997–2001 Lyle Oberg Progressive Conservative
25th 2001–2004
26th 2004–2006
2006Independent
2006–2008Progressive Conservative
27th 2008–2012 Arno Doerksen
28th 2012–2014 Jason Hale Wildrose
2014–2015Progressive Conservative
29th 2015–2016 Derek Fildebrandt Wildrose
2016Independent [5]
2016–2017Wildrose
2017 United Conservative
2017–2018Independent
2018–2019 Freedom Conservative
See Brooks-Medicine Hat, Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills and Chestermere-Strathmore 2019–

The electoral district was created in 1997. The first election that year saw Progressive Conservative incumbent Lyle Oberg win the new district with over 70% of the popular vote. Oberg had served as MLA for Bow Valley from 1993 to 1997 before it was abolished.

After the election Oberg was appointed to serve in the cabinet of Premier Ralph Klein. He ran for his third term in the 2001 general election and won. He took a slightly higher percentage of the popular vote.

Oberg ran for his third term in the district and fourth as an MLA. His popularity started to slide. He was re-elected with a reduced majority losing over 10% of his popular vote.

Controversy would follow in 2006 after Oberg resigned his cabinet post to seek the leadership of the Progressive Conservative party in the wake of Ralph Klein's resignation. He was removed from Progressive Conservative caucus days later on March 22, 2006, and forced to sit as an Independent after suggesting that he knew where the skeletons were in the closet of the Progressive Conservative government.

Oberg ran for leadership of the party as an Independent and lost. He was readmitted to the caucus on July 25, 2006, by Premier Ed Stelmach and returned to cabinet. Oberg did not stand for re-election in 2008. The election that year returned Progressive Conservative candidate Arno Doerksen with a landslide majority.

In the 2012 general election, Wildrose candidate Jason Hale defeated Doerksen by a comfortable margin as the party went on to dominate rural southern Alberta.

In December 2014, Hale crossed the floor with eight other Wildrose MLAs to the Progressive Conservative Party. In January 2015, Derek Fildebrandt announced that he would seek the Wildrose nomination to challenge Hale. Hale announced his retirement from politics soon afterwards.

Fildebrandt went on to win the riding by a huge margin over PC candidate Molly Douglass in the 2015 general election. [6] Fildebrandt was subsequently appointed the Official Opposition Shadow Minister of Finance and Chairman of the Public Accounts Committee.

On July 22, Wildrose and PC members voted to join and form the United Conservative Party of Alberta (UCP). Fildebrandt was officially recognized as a UCP MLA on July 24. However, he was again removed from caucus and, this time, permanently banned from re-joining the UCP after a string of scandals including an illegal hunting charge that had not been disclosed to the party. [7]

In 2018 Fildebrandt joined, and became leader of, the Freedom Conservative Party of Alberta (previously known as Alberta First, the Separation Party of Alberta, and the Western Freedom Party).

Legislative election results

1997

1997 Alberta general election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Progressive Conservative Lyle Oberg 7,23572.57%
Liberal Roger Nelson1,27212.76%
Social Credit Dan Borden8628.65%
New Democratic Richard Knutson6006.02%
Total9,969
Rejected, spoiled and declined24
Eligible electors / turnout21,27146.98%
Progressive Conservative pickup new district.
Source(s)
Source: "Strathmore-Brooks Official Results 1997 Alberta general election". Alberta Heritage Community Foundation. Retrieved May 21, 2020.

2001

2001 Alberta general election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Progressive Conservative Lyle Oberg 8,58575.09%2.51%
Liberal Barry Morishita 1,77415.52%2.76%
Independent Christopher Sutherland5114.47%
New Democratic Don MacFarlane2902.54%-3.48%
Social Credit Rudy Martens2732.39%-6.26%
Total11,433
Rejected, spoiled and declined29
Eligible electors / turnout24,37247.03%0.05%
Progressive Conservative hold Swing -0.12%
Source(s)
Source: "Strathmore-Brooks Official Results 2001 Alberta general election". Alberta Heritage Community Foundation. Retrieved May 21, 2020.

2004

2004 Alberta general election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Progressive Conservative Lyle Oberg 5,91664.05%-11.04%
Liberal Carrol Jaques1,17812.75%-2.76%
Alberta Alliance Mark D. Ogden8319.00%
Separation Jay Kolody5766.24%
New Democratic Don MacFarlane4164.50%1.97%
Social Credit Rudy Martens3193.45%1.07%
Total9,236
Rejected, spoiled and declined67
Eligible electors / turnout25,68636.22%-10.81%
Progressive Conservative hold Swing -4.14%

2008

2008 Alberta general election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Progressive Conservative Arno Doerksen 7,62374.5610.51
Liberal Gerry Hart9919.69-3.06
Wildrose Alliance Amanda H. Shehata9359.150.15
Green Chris Bayford3623.54
New Democratic Brian Stokes3133.06-1.44
Total10,22499.47
Rejected, spoiled and declined540.53
Turnout10,27833.02
Eligible electors31,127
Progressive Conservative hold Swing 6.78

2012

2012 Alberta general election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Wildrose Jason Hale 8,15755.58+46.44
Progressive Conservative Arno Doerksen 5,74339.13-35.43
New Democratic Brad Bailey4092.79-0.27
Liberal Alex Wychopen2992.04-7.66
Separation Glen Dundas680.46
Total14,67699.31
Rejected, spoiled and declined1020.69+0.16
Turnout14,77852.79+19.77
Eligible electors27,996
Wildrose gain from Progressive Conservative Swing +40.93
Source(s)
Source: "83 - Strathmore-Brooks Official Results 2012 Alberta general election". officialresults.elections.ab.ca. Elections Alberta . Retrieved May 21, 2020.

2015

2015 Alberta general election
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Wildrose Derek Fildebrandt 8,65252.55-3.03
Progressive Conservative Molly Douglass4,45227.04-12.09
New Democratic Lynn MacWilliam2,46314.96+12.17
Green Mike Worthington3221.96
Alberta Party Einar Davison3041.85
Liberal Ali Abdulbaki2001.21-0.82
Alberta First Glen Dundas720.44-0.03
Total16,46599.49
Rejected, spoiled and declined850.51-0.18
Turnout16,55049.83-2.96
Eligible electors33,215
Wildrose hold Swing 4.53
Source(s)
Source: "83 - Strathmore-Brooks Official Results 2015 Alberta general election". officialresults.elections.ab.ca. Elections Alberta . Retrieved May 21, 2020.

^ Alberta First change calculated from Separation Party.

Senate nominee election results

2004

2004 Senate nominee election results: Strathmore-Brooks [8] Turnout 36.18%
AffiliationCandidateVotes% votes% ballotsRank
Progressive Conservative Bert Brown 4,99918.61%59.79%1
Progressive Conservative Betty Unger 3,75413.98%44.90%2
Progressive Conservative Jim Silye 3,16011.77%37.80%5
Progressive Conservative Cliff Breitkreuz 2,94910.98%35.27%3
Progressive Conservative David Usherwood2,6519.87%31.71%6
 Independent Link Byfield 2,5469.48%30.45%4
Alberta Alliance Vance Gough1,9727.34%23.59%8
Alberta Alliance Michael Roth1,9577.29%23.41%7
Alberta Alliance Gary Horan1,5985.95%19.11%10
 Independent Tom Sindlinger 1,2714.73%15.20%9
Total votes26,857100%
Total ballots8,3613.21 votes per ballot
Rejected, spoiled and declined932

Voters had the option of selecting four candidates on the ballot.

Student vote results

2004

Participating schools [9]
Eastbrook Elementary
Hussar School
Lathom Colony School
Newell Christian School
Sacred Heart Academy
Strathmore High School

On November 19, 2004, a student vote was conducted at participating Alberta schools to parallel the 2004 Alberta general election results. The vote was designed to educate students and simulate the electoral process for persons who had not yet reached the legal majority. The vote was conducted in 80 of the 83 provincial electoral districts with students voting for actual election candidates. Schools with a large student body that resided in another electoral district had the option to vote for candidates outside of the electoral district than where they were physically located.

2004 Alberta student vote results [10]
AffiliationCandidateVotes%
Progressive Conservative Lyle Oberg 31947.12%
  Liberal Carrol Jaques11216.54%
Separation Jay Kolody8612.70%
Alberta Alliance Mark Ogden6910.19%
  NDP Don Macfarlane679.90%
Social Credit Rudy Martens243.55%
Total677100%
Rejected, spoiled and declined24

2012

2012 Alberta student vote results
AffiliationCandidateVotes%
Progressive Conservative Arno Doerksen %
Wildrose Jason Hale
  Liberal Alex Wychopen%
  NDP Brad Bailey%
Total100%

See also

References

  1. Alberta Electoral Boundaries Commission (June 1996). "Proposed Electoral Division Areas, Boundaries, and Names for Alberta. Final Report to the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta". Legislative Assembly of Alberta . Retrieved May 29, 2020.
  2. 1 2 3 Alberta Electoral Boundaries Commission (June 2010). Proposed Electoral Division Areas, Boundaries, and Names for Alberta. Final Report to the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta (PDF). Legislative Assembly of Alberta. ISBN   978-0-9865367-1-7 . Retrieved May 29, 2020.
  3. Alberta Electoral Boundaries Commission (October 2017). Proposed Electoral Division Areas, Boundaries, and Names for Alberta. Final Report to the Speaker of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta (PDF). Legislative Assembly of Alberta. ISBN   978-1-988620-04-6 . Retrieved May 29, 2020.
  4. Electoral Divisions Act , S.A. 2003, c. E-4.1
  5. "Wildrose's Derek Fildebrandt suspended for 'unacceptable' comment on social media". CBC News. Retrieved July 27, 2017.
  6. "Alberta Election 2015: Wildrose's Derek Fildebrandt wins Strathmore-Brooks | Globalnews.ca". May 5, 2015.
  7. "'A very fiery and short political career': Derek Fildebrandt barred from rejoining UCP". Calgary Herald. February 3, 2018. Retrieved May 10, 2018.
  8. "Senate Nominee Election 2004 Tabulation of Official Results" (PDF). Elections Alberta. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 4, 2009. Retrieved March 1, 2010.
  9. "School by School results". Student Vote Canada. Archived from the original on October 5, 2007. Retrieved April 27, 2008.
  10. "Riding by Riding Results - the Candidates". Student Vote Canada. Archived from the original on October 6, 2007. Retrieved April 19, 2008.

Further reading