It is pennies compared to the $1.8 million raised by Jim Prentice during the Progressive Conservative leadership race, but in the world of the Alberta NDP leadership contest, the money is flowing.
The NDP’s monthly contributions report from its leadership candidates shows Edmonton-Strathcona MLA and front-runner Rachel Notley has raised $82,826.99, Edmonton-Calder MLA David Eggen has has raised $32,924 and labour activist Rod Loyola raised $5,310 since the race started.
The largest donations made to the candidate have been from UFCW Local 401, which donated $15,000 each to Ms. Notley and Mr. Eggen, and $5,000 to Mr. Loyola. UFCW Local 401 is a major player in the provincial NDP and is expected to take up a large percentage of reserved NDP union-affiliate votes in this contest. None of the NDP supporters I have spoken with have been able to clearly explain how the union-affiliate vote process will work.
Ms. Notley’s candidacy has received a number of high profile endorsements, including those of fellow NDP MLA Deron Bilous, former NDP MLAs Barrie Chivers, Bob Hawkesworth and Jim Gurnett, former Red Deer mayor Morris Flewwelling (who ran for the PCs in the 1997 federal election), former PC MLA Tom Sindlinger and former Edmonton Public School Board trustee Dave Colburn.
While Ms. Notley appears to have the support of many NDP insiders and luminaries, I am told that Mr. Eggen’s campaign is busy selling memberships across the province. This being the party’s first contested leadership campaign since 1996, it is unclear what the benchmark for membership sales should be.
So far, the contest appears to have been a friendly affair, with no public clashing between the candidates. Ms. Notley has released a five priority platform, and she and Mr. Eggen have continued in their roles as opposition critics.
Mirroring a larger internal NDP debate on the national level, Mr. Eggen has released a statement calling for peace between Israel and the Palestinians living in Gaza. Mr. Eggen called on the provincial government to review its investments through AIMCo and look to divestment in order to pressure a peaceful solution to the Middle East conflict.
Recent polls have shown NDP support growing in Edmonton, suggesting that the party could expand its four MLA caucus in the next election. Despite being in the midst of a leadership contest, which ends with a vote on October 18, 2014, the NDP continues to nominate candidates for the next election.
This week the NDP nominated Marlin Schmidt in Edmonton-Gold Bar and, on September 30, AUPE activist Heather Sweet is expected to be nominated in Edmonton-Manning. Those are both constituencies that the NDP are said to be targeting resources toward for the next election.
While current disenchantment with the PC Party has helped the NDP increase its support in Edmonton, the political environment remains unstable. The next leader of the NDP will need to work hard to ensure that progressive voters do not flock to one conservative party in order to block another conservative party from forming government during the next election.
The NDP is hosting a series of forums with the three leadership candidates across Alberta. The follow events all begin at 7:00 p.m.
Lethbridge, GALT Museum (502 1st Street S)- September 16, 2014
Calgary, Barnsworth Theatre (750 – 9th Avenue SE)- September 17, 2014
Edmonton, Campus St. Jean Auditorium (8406 Rue Anne Gaboury)- October 2, 2014
7 replies on “Alberta NDP still running that other leadership contest”
The Calgary forum is actually at the Burnswest Theatre in Fort Calgary, there’s a typo on the website we’re in the process of fixing. Apologies!
Thanks for the update, Jennifer! Do you know what the format of the forums will be? (questions from the crowd, etc?)
There will also be a leadership forum for the 3 candidates on Thursday, September 11, 2014, at the Leduc Civic Centre, at 6:30.
There will also be an all candidate forum at the Connaught Golf Club in Medicine Hat on September 18th, 7:00 – 8:00 PM.
Yawn.
To the above respondent: That should be “uninterested,” not “disinterested.” To be disinterested means you’re unbiased or impartial, which is probably not true in your case. When you wake up, try reading a book or two.
Perhaps my sense of humour left with the good fall harvest weather, but what is with the cow-boy-thingy duds in the picture?
If this is an attempt to appeal to rural Albertans it is sadly out of touch. The Calgary Stampede is an annual urban carnival that is based more on Tin Pan Alley myths than anything that happened in the Canadian west.
I expect better from the NDP.