Wildrose Party of Alberta

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The Wildrose Party of Alberta was a centre-right political organization founded in Alberta, Canada in 2007. The organization took its name from Alberta's provincial flower.

Contents

On January 19, 2008, the members merged with the Alberta Alliance Party to form the Wildrose Alliance Party.

Objectives and philosophy

According to a media advisory issued by the party on June 26, 2007, its main emphasis was to be:

According to Don Weisbeck, Mayor of Brooks and Vice President (Communications) for the party, "the provincial government has swayed from its conservative roots. They've become one of the fastest spending and highest taxing jurisdictions in the country compared to their original roots where they tried to minimize taxes and government involvement in people's lives".

The party constitution emphasized control by the grass-roots.

History

The party was launched on June 23, 2007 at a meeting of 76 Albertans in Red Deer. According to the party, "the initiative began with an earlier Red Deer meeting (May 26) where fifty people from diverse political backgrounds mostly agreed that existing political parties can't or won't challenge the federal system and restrain provincial spending.[ citation needed ] The initiative was bolstered by two recent by-elections in which support for conservative parties plunged overall, while liberal support did not increase." The poor performance of the Alberta Alliance in the June by-elections reinforced the view that the Alberta Alliance would not be able to effectively challenge the government of Premier Ed Stelmach. Prominent former Alberta Alliance members who have joined the Wildrose Party include Eleanor Maroes.

The organization applied to Elections Alberta in June 2007, to become a registered political party; [1] however, they were never registered. [2]

Interim Executive Committee

Southern Directors:

Northern Directors:

See also

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References

  1. "Wild Rose party takes off". CBC. June 26, 2007. Retrieved January 8, 2012.
  2. "2007 Annual Report of the Chief Electoral Officer" (PDF). Elections Alberta. March 31, 2008. Retrieved January 8, 2012.