Categories
2008 Alberta Provincial Election Edmonton-Meadowlark

alberta election 2008: edmonton-meadowlark.

One of the most hotly contested races in this election is taking place in the west-end Edmonton constituency of Edmonton-Meadowlark…

After electing Alberta Liberal MLAs Grant Mitchell and Karen Leibovici from 1986 to 2001, Edmonton-Meadowlark was once known as a reliably Liberal voting constituency. In 2001, Meadowlark moved into the ‘swing constituency’ category when Leibovici was unexpectedly defeated by former High School Principal turned Progressive Conservative candidate Bob Maskell. In 2004, after spending four years lingering in the Tory backbenches Maskell was defeated by Alberta Liberal Maurice Tougas (by a slim margin of 193 votes – the third closest race in the province). Tougas surprised political watchers when it was revealed that his campaign only spent $5,367, compared to Maskell’s $46,457 – meaning that Tougas’ campaign spent $1.21 per vote compared to Maskell’s $10.95 per vote. You’d have to try pretty hard to find a clearer example that money isn’t always everything in politics than the 2004 Edmonton-Meadowlark race.

With Tougas not seeking re-election, Meadowlark is again a battleground with both the Alberta Liberals and PCs lining up strong candidates at the O-Meadowlark Corral (yeah, I went there…).

This time, the Alberta Liberals are running Debbie Cavaliere. Cavaliere is a familiar local name having been elected Chair and Trustee of the Edmonton Catholic School District from 2001 until 2007. The Tories are challenging Cavaliere with Dr. Raj Sherman, an Emergency Room doctor and former President for the Emergency Physicians of Alberta at the Alberta Medical Association (AMA). Both Cavaliere and Sherman are strong candidates with solid professional backgrounds, but it is their former political backgrounds that add an even more interesting flavour to this race. Just over a year ago, Sherman was knee deep in the Federal Liberal Leadership campaign of Gerard Kennedy during race that elected Stéphane Dion. Cavaliere originally ran for the PC nomination against Sherman, but later left the race and opted to instead run for the Alberta Liberal nomination against lawyer Bruce King (don’t worry if you’re a little confused about both of them, so am I…). It will be interesting to see how (or if) these candidates former political allegiances play in the minds of Meadowlark voters.

Both Cavaliere’s and Sherman’s teams will be campaigning hard in Meadowlark, but if the Tories pick up any constituencies in Edmonton, Meadowlark will be near the top on the list (as I told Sherman last fall, if the Tories win Meadowlark, he’ll “make a great official opposition health critic.“).

Other candidates include second-time Green challenger Amanda Doyle, Wildrose Alliance candidate (and owner of the World Trade Center Memorial Tribute site) Richard Guyon, and New Democrat Pascal Ryffel.

Because of the sheer amount of growth since the last election, population shift is an unusually important factor in races like Meadowlark. Between the 2004 Election and the 2006 Census, Edmonton-Meadowlark grew by 14.69% bringing over 3,500 new residents to the constituency.

2008 Edmonton-Meadowlark Candidates

Alberta Liberal – Debbie Cavaliere
Green – Amanda Doyle
ND – Pascal Ryffel
PC – Raj Sherman
Wildrose Alliance – Richard Guyon

Edmonton-Meadowlark Past Election Results

2004
Maurice Tougas, Lib – 4,435
x Bob Maskell, PC – 4,242
Lance Burns, NDP – 1,306
Aaron Campbell, AA – 446
Amanda Doyle, Grn – 243
Peggy Morton, Ind – 76
Voter Turnout: 45.3%

2001
Bob Maskell, PC – 6,108
x Karen Leibovici, Lib – 5,674
Mike Hudema, NDP – 636
Peggy Morton, Ind – 144
Voter Turnout: 56%

1997
x Karen Leibovici, Lib – 6,047
Laurie Pushor, PC – 4,672
Terry McNally, NDP – 831
Aaron Hinman, SC – 435
Geoff Toane, NLP – 55
Voter Turnout: 56%

Categories
2008 Alberta Provincial Election

lawn signs and debate.

This morning, a week into the 2008 Alberta Election campaign, I saw my first PC lawn sign – belonging to David Doward in Edmonton-Gold Bar. Doward is running against Alberta Liberal MLA Hugh MacDonald (who has about a 10 times more lawn signs out in Gold Bar). In 2004, Hugh MacDonald was re-elected with the second largest margin of victory in the province and earned 62% of the vote.

The date of the Leaders Debate will be at 6:30pm on Thursday, February 21, 2008 and will include Tory leader Ed Stelmach, Alberta Liberal Leader Kevin Taft, Wildrose Alliance leader Paul Hinman, and New Democrat Brian Mason.

Categories
2008 Alberta Provincial Election Change that works for Tory Insiders Conflict-of-Interest Legislation Ed Stelmach Ralph Klein

more on change that works for tory insiders.

As I wrote earlier this week, only hours before the March 3 election was called Tory leader Ed Stelmach and his cabinet changed the date that Alberta’s new conflict-of-interest legislation take effect. This change means that the tougher conflict-of-interest rules don’t apply to retiring or defeated Tory cabinet ministers and MLAs.

A quick look back in time shows that when former Tory leader Ralph Klein implemented new conflict-of-interest rules he did so over three months before the 1993 election, instead of waiting until after the election. I didn’t think that this is what Ed Stelmach meant when he started trying to distance himself from Klein…

The timing of the change raises some important questions:

Which cabinet ministers supported this decision? Did retiring cabinet ministers Lyle Oberg and Greg Melchin participate or influence this decision?

Which cabinet ministers believed that their fellow Tories shouldn’t been held to account under the new rules?

Does 37-years in power give you the right to decide that your friends are above the rules?

These are only some of the questions that Albertans shouldn’t hesitate to ask their Progressive Conservative candidates, MLAs, and cabinet ministers. Albertans deserve to know the answers.
Albertans deserve better from their elected representatives. Albertans deserve better from their government.

Categories
2008 Alberta Provincial Election Blogs

get rich or die trying.

A new Alberta political blog has popped up.

Say a big hello to Alberta: Get Rich or Die Trying.

Categories
2008 Alberta Provincial Election Alberta NDP Alberta Politics

alberta ndp. on your side?

Okay, let’s take a close look at the Alberta NDP this morning…

September 21, 2007: NDP MLA Ray Martin writes to Alberta unions to shake them down for a minimum of $5,000 to fund another NDP election campaign.

Fall 2007: NDP leader Brian Mason writes in his Edmonton-Highlands-Norwood MLA newsletter that he supports eliminating corporate and union donations to political parties.

Furthermore, NDP leader Brian Mason said in Calgary yesterday that “Liberals and Conservatives accepted $1.5 million from big oil and other large corporations in 2006, and almost $1.6 million in 2005.” The statement is not just misleading, but wrong.

According to Elections Alberta breakdowns, the Alberta Liberals received roughly $273,000 from all corporate sources in 2005, and $336,000 in 2006. When you actually look at the numbers, lumping the Alberta Liberals together with the Progressive Conservative fundraising totals is disingenuous.

Mason also stated the NDP received $18,000 from unions in 2006. While this is correct, the NDP received over $100,000 in donations from union sources in 2004, an election year.

One wonders how much the NDP raised in 2007, when NDP MLA Ray Martin demanded his $5,000 shakedown…

Categories
2008 Alberta Provincial Election edspedia.ca Laura Shutiak Tim Stock-Bateman

youtubing around alberta’s election.

As promised, here’s the weekly round of Alberta election 2008 videos that caught my eye…

The good folks at edspedia.ca have brought us this lovely video…

This next one is from Laura Shutiak, Alberta Liberal candidate in Calgary-Fish Creek with her top 10 reasons to vote for Laura Shutiak in Calgary-Fish Creek (#5 is my favorite). Shutiak is taking on former Tory cabinet minister Heather Forsyth.

From the campaign of Tim Stock-Bateman, ND candidate in Calgary-Varsity.

If you come across some good Alberta political videos, send a link to daveberta.ca@gmail.com.

Click here to check out more YouTube videos.

Categories
2008 Alberta Provincial Election

stelmach’s nep.

Good grief. I wonder if anyone actually knows what the NEP really was anymore. Of course, it doesn’t really matter.

Alan Dunn, an outspoken member of Strathcona County council, compares the new regional board to the infamous NEP, the Trudeau government’s national energy program that caused an uproar in Alberta in 1980.

“This is a kind of mini-NEP that is being imposed on the surrounding areas for the benefit of Edmonton,” said Dunn.

This said, I’m not sure Ed Stelmach knows what it was either.

Categories
2008 Alberta Provincial Election Conflict-of-Interest Legislation Ed Stelmach

change that works for tory insiders.

Hours before the election was called on Monday, Tory leader Ed Stelmach and his cabinet amended the newly adopted conflict of interest rules so that they wouldn’t apply to Tory Ministers or MLAs who are retiring or are defeated in the March 3 election.

…the Tory cabinet approved an order-in-council to have the Conflicts of Interest Amendment Act take effect on April 1, nearly a month after the March 3 vote. A government worker had earlier told The Journal the rules would be in place before the campaign began.

It means retiring finance ministers Lyle Oberg and Greg Melchin don’t have to wait 12 months before they can start lobbying their former government on behalf of auto insurers or oilsands companies — only the six months for ex-ministers under the old law.

And the premier’s chief of staff, his deputies and all ministers’ senior aides have no restrictions on their dealings if they hit the exits following the election, which they traditionally do in droves.

Ed Stelmach introduced the new conflict of interest legislation last year as part of his then-commitment to Albertans be open and accountable (maybe he meant after he got re-elected). Here’s a list of retiring Tory Ministers and MLAs who are getting a pass on Alberta’s conflict-of-interest laws:

* Tony Abbott, Drayton Valley-Calmar
* Mike Cardinal, Athabasca-Redwater
* Harvey Cenaiko, Calgary Buffalo
* David Coutts, Livingstone-Macleod
* Victor Doerksen, Red Deer South
* Denis Ducharme, Bonnyville-Cold Lake

* Clint Dunford, Lethbridge West
* Gordon Graydon, Grande Prairie Wapiti

* Carol Haley, Airdrie-Chestermere
* Denis Herard, Calgary Egmont
* LeRoy Johnson, Wetaskiwin-Camrose
* Rob Lougheed, Strathcona
* Greg Melchin, Calgary North West
* Richard Magnus, Calgary North Hill
* Lyle Oberg, Strathmore-Brooks
* Hung Pham, Calgary Montrose
* Ivan Strang, West Yellowhead

Ten of these Tory MLAs are former Tory cabinet ministers (in bold) and two were in Ed Stelmach‘s cabinet when the amendment was made on Monday.

Here’s a question for Albertans to ask Ed Stelmach and local Tory candidates:

Why don’t Alberta’s conflict-of-interest rules apply to Tory insiders?

Categories
2008 Alberta Provincial Election Alberta Politics Alberta Social Credit

on the second day he created more doctors.

Here’s a quick look at how campaign 2008 is shaping out in Alberta…

1. Alberta Liberal Leader Kevin Taft released his party’s plans for Alberta’s two largest cities in an Edmonton Regional plan and Calgary Regional plan. Watch for the Alberta Liberals to focus on coalition building in Alberta’s two largest municipalities and their regions. As the Alberta Liberals probably aren’t going to gain waves of support from deep rural Tory strongholds, building an urban coalition is a smart strategy for a party looking to break Ed Stelmach‘s Tories’ 37-year-old grip on Alberta’s Legislature.

2. The Stelmach Tories have released their first TV ad with the first being on the topic of health care. Yesterday, Ed Stelmach promised to train hundreds of new doctors, nurses and health-care workers over the next four years (just in time to get rid of health care premiums).

The medical community was quick to throw in their two cents on Stelmach’s health care announcement:

…according to Dr. Trevor Theman, registrar of the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Alberta, that is likely not possible: although the need is there, it would require a near-doubling of current training spending from the province and involve recruiting dozens of more people to train them – with staff to train physicians already an issue for the existing 250 spots.

“Edmonton and Calgary are already maxed out in their ability to train, and even if there were more money, it’s an issue of human resources,” said Theman. “You need trainers available and you need people who have clinical experience to handle that training.”

In fact, the only way to achieve the province’s doctor target, said Theman, would be by relying chiefly on recruitment of overseas physicians, which is already the province’s principal new source of doctors.

3. Word on the street has it that the Stelmach Tories being sticks in the mud and are holding out in negotiations for this election’s Leaders’ Debate. The debates would have Stelmach face Kevin Taft, Wildrose Alliance leader Paul Hinman, and ND leader Brian Mason in a live province-wide radio and televised debate. Does this mean that the Tories concerned about Stelmach’s public debating skills?

4. The Social Credit Party has laid out their ambitious plan for Alberta:

Social Credit will be fielding 12 candidates and asking Albertans in the coming weeks to consider the only alternative to the Liberals or ruling Conservatives – Social Credit, a party with a rich history of governing the province and a party eager to rekindle a flame under the people of Alberta.

5. As the Alberta Greens, Soreds, and Wildrose Alliance continue to nominate candidates across the province, the Stelmach Tories have appointed two candidates in difficult constituencies: Manmeet Bhullar in Calgary-Montrose and T.J. Keil in Edmonton-Strathcona. Bhullar was appointed after the Tories rejected the Calgary-Montrose PC Association choice-candidate Robin Leech.

6. The list of 2008 Alberta Election candidates continues to grow. If I’ve missed any candidates or their websites, send me an email at daveberta.ca@gmail.com.

Categories
2008 Alberta Provincial Election edspedia.ca

book your flight today on edspedia.ca.


Edspedia.ca is an Internet-based travel agency and a part of Edspedia, Inc.. It allows Alberta PC MLAs and their credit card wielding staffers to books airline tickets, hotel reservations, car rentals, cruises, vacation packages, and Las Vegas bachelor parties and services via the World Wide Web.

Categories
2008 Alberta Provincial Election

alberta votes 2008! daveberta.ca special election coverage.

Over the course of the election campaign the daveberta.ca election team will be bringing a number of Alberta Election 2008 Special Features to your desktop. But, I can’t do it without you – so I’ll need your help!

Each Wednesday of the campaign (starting next week) I will be posting pictures from the campaign trail. If you have collected any interesting pictures of campaign offices, candidates, events, etc that you want to see on this blog send them to daveberta.ca@gmail.com.

Each Friday of the campaign, I will be posting the best YouTube videos of the week from the election campaign. So, if you come across some good Alberta political videos, send a link to daveberta.ca@gmail.com.

February 8, 2008: edspedia.ca, Laura Shutiak, Tim Stock-Bateman
February 15, 2008: 2008: alberta election odyssey

Also, as part of daveberta.ca Alberta Election 2008 coverage, I will be profiling some of the interesting and “hot” races in constituencies across Alberta. A week or two ago, I asked daveberta.ca readers to send in their suggestions to what constituencies I should profile, after an overwhelming response of almost 40 emails, I’ve decided which constituencies to cover. If you see a constituency race that I’ve missed, feel free to send me an email at daveberta.ca@gmail.com and I’ll try to include them in my Saturday Wild Card races.

Here is the constituency profile schedule (subject to change):

Click here for a list of nominated candidates in the 2008 Alberta Election.

Categories
2008 Alberta Provincial Election Alberta Liberals Kevin Taft YouTube

kevin taft on youtube.

In what I only expect to be the beginning of many YouTube videos released during the 2008 Alberta election campaign, the Alberta Liberals have released a video highlighting Alberta Liberal Leader Kevin Taft

Categories
2008 Alberta Provincial Election Alberta Politics

alberta votes 2008! throne speech recap.

Welcome to Alberta’s 2008 provincial election campaign!

Before I get started on some serious election coverage, here’s a quick recap of yesterday’s Speech from the Throne. Though I don’t think Tory leader Ed Stelmach‘s campaign launch throne speech was as fabulous as one of my fellow bloggers has gushed, I don’t think it was really anything awful either. It felt like a typical Ed Stelmach-sytle Throne Speech – inoffensive, filled with re-announcements, and promises to continue projects that are already underway. Because of this, I’ll focus on some key points that I piqued my interest…

– Though there was nearly no mention of Alberta’s municipalities in the speech, there was a lot of talk of catching up and building modern infrastructure. I’m assuming this means that Ed Stelmach had nothing to do with Alberta falling behind on infrastructure development while he was Minister of Infrastructure & Transportation from 1999 to 2004.

– As had been previously semi-announced, Health Care Premiums are on the chopping block within four years. I’m not sure why it’s going to take four years (I assume a 37-year-old government can only move so fast), but this is generally a positive step that Alberta’s opposition parties and public interest groups been advocating for over the past decade.

Ed Stelmach has made a commitment to remain vigilant in his fight the Pine Beetle. I’m not sure how Stelmach is planning to fight the beetles, but I can’t help but imagine Ed Stelmach and Ray Danyluk running around the forest dressed up like Batman and Robin and squishing thousands of helpless little Pine Beetles with the bottoms of their boots. Go get ’em, Ed!

The Edmonton Journal’s Graham Thomsons picked up a good point raised by Alberta Liberal Leader Kevin Taft as to why Ed Stelmach was using the taxpayer provided Legislature Media Conference room for what was essentially a campaign launch announcement (equipped with PC Campaign Staff). I was standing in the back of the room during the media conference and it was interesting to see Stelmach is slowly beginning to improve his public speaking skills compared to when he became Premier a year ago.

Ed Stelmach may be slowly improving his public speaking skills, but he’ll need to do better than he did yesterday if he’s serious about communicating with Albertans in a meaningful way over the next 28 days.

Categories
2008 Alberta Provincial Election

alberta election called for march 3.

Well, the election has been called! I just got back from the Speech from the Throne and Ed Stelmach‘s post-Throne Speech media conference. I’m off to class until 8 p.m. and will post an update then…

Game on!

Categories
2008 Alberta Provincial Election Alberta Politics

alberta election 2008 – march 3?

Here is probably what will be the last pre-election rundown…

– The Edmonton Journal is reporting that Tory Leader Ed Stelmach will lead his 37-year-old Progressive Conservative government to a March 3rd General Election.

– As part of their campaign launch last week, the Alberta Liberals released a video highlighting Leader Kevin Taft.
– Jeremy Klaszus from Calgary’s FFWD magazine has an interesting article on Ed Stelmach’s media scrum following his recent announcement on arts funding in Alberta.
– The list of 2008 Alberta Election candidates has been updated. If I’m missing any candidates or website links, feel free to post them in the comment section and I’ll add the links.
– Speaking of change, the recent results of a recent daveberta.ca poll asking readers
After 37 years of Tory governments, is it time for a change?
Yes – 61%
No – 34%
Undecided – 3%
– At 7% in the polls, ND Leader Brian Mason is arguing that he is leading the most relevant party in Alberta as he continues to focus his verbal attacks on the Alberta Liberals rather then the 37-year-old Tory government. With a 1% and 3% showing in the Drumheller-Stettler and Calgary-Elbow by-elections this summer, Mason may be waiting a while is he’s looking to catch a ride on a big orange wave across the province.
Edmonton-Glenora: Arlene Chapman has replaced Brian Fleck as the ND candidate in this constituency after Fleck dropped out of the race. Chapman will face Alberta Liberal MLA Bruce Miller and Tory candidate Heather Klimchuk in a constituency that generated one of the hottest races in 2004. But by showing up this late in the race, it could be difficult for Chapman to make her mark in this race.
Edmonton-Strathcona: Tory candidate Hughena Gagne has reportedly dropped out of the race, leaving the Stelmach Tories candidate-less on the eve of an election call. Strathcona is being contested by Alberta Liberal Tim Vant, ND Rachel Notley, and Green Adrian Cole.