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1926 Alberta general election

The 1926 Alberta general election was held on June 28, 1926, to elect members of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta. The United Farmers of Alberta government that had first been elected in 1921 was re-elected, taking a majority of the seats in the Alberta Legislature. Herbert Greenfield had resigned as United Farmers leader and premier, and John E. Brownlee led the UFA to this second election victory, increasing the UFA's number of seats.

1926 Alberta general election

← 1921 June 28, 1926 (1926-06-28) 1930 →

61 seats in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta
31 seats were needed for a majority
Turnout67 percent[1]
  Majority party Minority party
 
Leader John E. Brownlee Joseph Tweed Shaw
Party United Farmers Liberal
Leader since November 23, 1925 April 21, 1926
Leader's seat Ponoka Bow Valley
Last election 38 seats, 28.9% 15 seats, 34.1%
Seats before 40 9
Seats won 43 7
Seat change 3 2
Popular vote 71,967 47,450
Percentage 39.7% 26.2%
Swing 10.8% 7.9%

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Fred J. White Alexander McGillivray
Party Dominion Labor Conservative
Leader since between 1921 & 1926 1925
Leader's seat Calgary Calgary
Last election 4 seats, 11.4% 0 seats, 11.0%
Seats before 3 0
Seats won 5 4
Seat change 2 4
Popular vote 14,123 40,091
Percentage 7.8% 22.1%
Swing 3.6% 11.1%

Premier before election

John E. Brownlee
United Farmers

Premier after election

John E. Brownlee
United Farmers

The writs of election were issued on May 10, 1926, allowing an election period of 40 days.

1926 was Alberta's first general election where Single transferable voting (STV) was used in the three largest cities and Instant-runoff voting was used everywhere else.

Calgary, Edmonton and Medicine Hat continued to be multi member districts. Edmonton elected five members; Calgary elected five members; and Medicine Hat elected two. Previously they had elected members by Plurality block voting. Now they elected members using STV-PR, through the Hare Proportional representation system.

Outside the large cities, districts were single member districts and MLAs were elected under Alternative Voting system. Rural voters, like their city counterparts, cast preferential ballots and had ability to rank the candidates. The seat was filled by the candidate who received a majority of the votes whether through first-choice votes or a combination of first-choice votes and votes transferred from less-popular candidates.[2]

This dual system of voting would last until 1956. Medicine Hat after 1926 changed to a single-member constituency, whose MLA was elected through Alternative Voting.

Under STV in Edmonton, the UFA captured one seat in Edmonton where it had taken no seats in 1921 under the Liberal government's Block Voting system. The Labour party also for the first time elected an MLA in Edmonton. As well, Edmonton voters elected a Liberal and two Conservatives. This mixed crop of representatives was much better balanced than the single-party sweeps that Edmonton had previously elected through other electoral systems.

The UFA also took a great share of the rural seats, taking 42 of the province's 49 rural seats. It took four rural seats that had been captured by Liberal candidates in 1921 (Beaver River, Leduc, Sedgewick and Whitford), and one that had been won by an Independent in 1921 (Claresholm). The UFA also won the district of Empress formerly known as Redcliffe, which had been won by the UFA in 1921. No UFA candidate ran for re-election to its seat in Medicine Hat. It gained a seat in the newly created next-door Cypress district. It also lost its St. Albert seat.

The UFA derived no benefit from Alternative Voting - it would have won all but one of the seats it won under Alternative Voting if the contest had been conducted using Plurality voting. And it lost one seat that it would have won if the contest had been held using Plurality voting (in Bow Valley).

Conservatives, being a less popular party, had been badly treated under FPTP and Block Voting in 1921 but now did better. It won two seats each in Edmonton and Calgary, where Block Voting had been replaced by STV.

At the time of the election call, six seats were sitting vacant. They had been vacated by MLAs who had run in the 1925 federal election. MLA C.W. Cross was elected in the federal election. William McCartney Davidson, Calgary Independent MLA, was another one of those who had left. [3]

The UFA vote share went up 10 percent in this election compared to 1921. This shows effect of the change in voting system - the UFA actually received 15,000 fewer votes in 1926 than in 1921. The Liberals received 54,000 fewer. The change in percentage of UFA support is likely more a result of urban voters not being allowed to cast multiple voters as they had done in 1921. That had artificially raised the Liberal vote count and percentage and had lowered the UFA percentage recorded for the 1921 election.

In 1926 the UFA vote count outside the cities was 69,000, having gone down from the 81,000 the party's candidates had received outside the cities in 1921. The UFA's vote total was about 50 percent of the first-preference votes cast outside the cities. Through transfers it received a majority of votes in each of the 42 districts where its candidate won.[4]

Under STV Edmonton elected a mixed bag of representatives. UFA, Liberal, Conservative and Labour MLAs were all elected, which compared well with the total sweep that Liberals made in 1921 under Block Voting.

In Calgary Conservative supporters found representation under STV where they had been shut out under Block Voting in 1921.

Under STV in Medicine Hat, a Liberal and a Conservative took the city's two seats - which was fair as the two parties had about equal support there.

Under Alternative Voting outside the cities, if no candidate took a majority of votes in the first count, votes were transferred until a candidate acceptable to a majority of the voters was determined. In Bow Valley the UFA candidate leading in the first count did not have as much support from Conservative supporters and a Liberal took the seat.

In four districts only two candidates ran so vote transfers were not needed. Three-way contests would be a feature of most elections from here on in, as Canada had passed the point when only two parties dominated politics. Labour and farmer parties were here to stay to fight it out against the two old-line parties.

In fifteen of the province's 49 rural districts, three or more candidates ran and vote-splitting meant no one candidate took a majority of the votes on the first count. A UFA candidate was in the top spot in most of these contests. Liberal and Conservative party supporters were split on whether to support the other old-line party or the UFA, if their candidate was eliminated and their ballots able to be transferred to another. In many cases many Conservative and Liberal back-up preferences were marked for the UFA candidate, and in eight of those 15 districts the UFA candidate who had been leading in the first count won the seat, in three the Liberal leading was elected in the end, and in two the Labour candidate was leading and elected in the end.

The only turn-overs where the candidate leading in the first count was not elected were in Bow Valley and Pincher Creek. In Pincher Creek, back-up preferences on votes at first placed on the Conservative candidate favoured the UFA candidate, who took the seat over the previously-leading Liberal candidate. In Bow Valley, vote transfers from the Conservative candidate went mostly to the Liberal, who passed the UFA candidate in popularity. Overall party-wise the two turn-overs cancelled each other but two different individuals were elected due to the Alternative Voting system than would have been elected under FPTP.

The UFA's seat majority was due to its victories in the rural areas. Its moral right to power rested on the fact that to be elected in a rural district a candidate had to have support from a majority of a district's voters. The UFA was elected through majority support in 42 of the province's 52 districts, and its candidate in Edmonton was the most popular of all the candidates who ran there as well.[5]

Results

1926 Alberta provincial election[6]
Party Party Leader # of
candidates
Seats Popular Vote
1921 Elected % Change # % % Change
United Farmers John E. Brownlee 46 38 43 +13.2% 71,967 39.68% +10.76%
Liberal Joseph Tweed Shaw 54 15 7 -36.4% 47,450 26.17% -7.90%
Labour 12 4 5 +25.0% 14,123 7.79% -3.25%
Conservative Alexander McGillivray 56 - 4   40,091 22.10% +11.12%
Independent Labour 1 - 1   2,467 1.37% -1.69%
Independent Liberal 5 - -   2,728 1.51% 1.02%
Independent 3 4 - -100% 1,254 0.70% -8.96%
Independent UFA 5   -   999 0.55%  
Liberal–Progressive A. D. Campbell 1   -   252 0.13%  
Total 183 61 60 - 181,331 100%  
Popular vote
United Farmers
39.68%
Liberal
26.17%
Conservative
22.10%
Labour
7.79%
Others
4.26%
Seats summary
United Farmers
71.67%
Liberal
11.67%
Labour
8.33%
Conservative
6.67%
Ind. Labour
1.67%

Actually five Conservatives were elected -- two in Edmonton, two in Calgary and one in Medicine Hat. This change from four brings the total number of seats to 61, not 60.

Members elected

For complete electoral history, see individual districts

6th Alberta Legislative Assembly
  District Member Party
  Acadia Lorne Proudfoot United Farmers
  Alexandra Peter Enzenauer United Farmers
  Athabasca John Frame Liberal
  Beaver River John Delisle United Farmers
  Bow Valley Joseph Shaw Liberal
  Calgary Alexander McGillivray Conservative
  George Harry Webster Liberal
  John Irwin Conservative
  Fred J. White Dominion Labor
  Robert Parkyn Independent Labor
  Camrose Vernor Smith United Farmers
  Cardston George Stringam United Farmers
  Claresholm Gordon Walker United Farmers
  Cochrane Robert McCool United Farmers
  Coronation George Johnston United Farmers
  Cypress Perren Baker United Farmers
  Didsbury Austin Claypool United Farmers
  Edmonton John Lymburn United Farmers
  Charles Weaver Conservative
  Charles Gibbs Dominion Labor
  Warren Prevey Liberal
  David Milwyn Duggan Conservative
  Edson Christopher Pattinson Dominion Labor
  Empress William Smith United Farmers
  Gleichen John Buckley United Farmers
  Grouard Leonidas Giroux Liberal
  Hand Hills Gordon Forster United Farmers
  High River Samuel Brown United Farmers
  Innisfail Donald Cameron United Farmers
  Lac Ste. Anne Charles McKeen United Farmers
  Lacombe Irene Parlby United Farmers
  Leduc Douglas Breton United Farmers
  Lethbridge Andrew Smeaton Dominion Labor
  Little Bow Oran McPherson United Farmers
  Macleod William Shield United Farmers
  Medicine Hat Charles Pingle Liberal
  J.J. Hendricks Conservative
  Nanton Daniel Harcourt Galbraith United Farmers
  Okotoks George Hoadley United Farmers
  Olds Nelson Smith United Farmers
  Peace River Hugh Allen United Farmers
  Pembina George MacLachlan United Farmers
  Pincher Creek Earle Cook* United Farmers
  Ponoka John Brownlee United Farmers
  Red Deer George Wilbert Smith United Farmers
  Ribstone William Farquharson United Farmers
  Rocky Mountain Philip Christophers Dominion Labor
  Sedgewick Albert Andrews United Farmers
  St. Albert Lucien Boudreau Liberal
  St. Paul Laudas Joly United Farmers
  Stettler Albert Sanders United Farmers
  Stony Plain Willard Washburn United Farmers
  Sturgeon Samuel Carson United Farmers
  Taber Lawrence Peterson United Farmers
  Vegreville Archie Matheson United Farmers
  Vermilion Richard Reid United Farmers
  Victoria Rudolph Hennig United Farmers
  Wainwright John Russell Love United Farmers
  Warner Maurice Conner United Farmers
  Wetaskiwin Evert Sparks United Farmers
  Whitford George Mihalcheon United Farmers

(* Cook's defeat of Liberal candidate Bossenberry is the only instance in this election where a candidate who led in the first count was not elected in a second round count, under the preferential balloting system.)

See also

References

  1. ^ Report on Alberta Elections, p. 42
  2. ^ A Report on Alberta Elections 1905-1982, p. 193-200
  3. ^ Strathmore Standard, Feb. 24, 1926, p. 1
  4. ^ A Report on Alberta Elections, 1905-1982 p. 12
  5. ^ A Report on Alberta Elections, 1905-1982 p. 12
  6. ^ . Elections Alberta. Archived from the original on February 11, 2008. Retrieved 2008-01-13.

Further reading

  • Hopkins, J. Castell, ed. (1926). The Canadian Annual Review of Public Affairs, 1925–26. Toronto: The Annual Review Company.

1926, alberta, general, election, held, june, 1926, elect, members, legislative, assembly, alberta, united, farmers, alberta, government, that, first, been, elected, 1921, elected, taking, majority, seats, alberta, legislature, herbert, greenfield, resigned, u. The 1926 Alberta general election was held on June 28 1926 to elect members of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta The United Farmers of Alberta government that had first been elected in 1921 was re elected taking a majority of the seats in the Alberta Legislature Herbert Greenfield had resigned as United Farmers leader and premier and John E Brownlee led the UFA to this second election victory increasing the UFA s number of seats 1926 Alberta general election 1921 June 28 1926 1926 06 28 1930 outgoing membersmembers 61 seats in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta 31 seats were needed for a majorityTurnout67 percent 1 Majority party Minority party Leader John E Brownlee Joseph Tweed ShawParty United Farmers LiberalLeader since November 23 1925 April 21 1926Leader s seat Ponoka Bow ValleyLast election 38 seats 28 9 15 seats 34 1 Seats before 40 9Seats won 43 7Seat change 3 2Popular vote 71 967 47 450Percentage 39 7 26 2 Swing 10 8 7 9 Third party Fourth party Leader Fred J White Alexander McGillivrayParty Dominion Labor ConservativeLeader since between 1921 amp 1926 1925Leader s seat Calgary CalgaryLast election 4 seats 11 4 0 seats 11 0 Seats before 3 0Seats won 5 4Seat change 2 4Popular vote 14 123 40 091Percentage 7 8 22 1 Swing 3 6 11 1 Premier before electionJohn E BrownleeUnited Farmers Premier after election John E BrownleeUnited FarmersThe writs of election were issued on May 10 1926 allowing an election period of 40 days 1926 was Alberta s first general election where Single transferable voting STV was used in the three largest cities and Instant runoff voting was used everywhere else Calgary Edmonton and Medicine Hat continued to be multi member districts Edmonton elected five members Calgary elected five members and Medicine Hat elected two Previously they had elected members by Plurality block voting Now they elected members using STV PR through the Hare Proportional representation system Outside the large cities districts were single member districts and MLAs were elected under Alternative Voting system Rural voters like their city counterparts cast preferential ballots and had ability to rank the candidates The seat was filled by the candidate who received a majority of the votes whether through first choice votes or a combination of first choice votes and votes transferred from less popular candidates 2 This dual system of voting would last until 1956 Medicine Hat after 1926 changed to a single member constituency whose MLA was elected through Alternative Voting Under STV in Edmonton the UFA captured one seat in Edmonton where it had taken no seats in 1921 under the Liberal government s Block Voting system The Labour party also for the first time elected an MLA in Edmonton As well Edmonton voters elected a Liberal and two Conservatives This mixed crop of representatives was much better balanced than the single party sweeps that Edmonton had previously elected through other electoral systems The UFA also took a great share of the rural seats taking 42 of the province s 49 rural seats It took four rural seats that had been captured by Liberal candidates in 1921 Beaver River Leduc Sedgewick and Whitford and one that had been won by an Independent in 1921 Claresholm The UFA also won the district of Empress formerly known as Redcliffe which had been won by the UFA in 1921 No UFA candidate ran for re election to its seat in Medicine Hat It gained a seat in the newly created next door Cypress district It also lost its St Albert seat The UFA derived no benefit from Alternative Voting it would have won all but one of the seats it won under Alternative Voting if the contest had been conducted using Plurality voting And it lost one seat that it would have won if the contest had been held using Plurality voting in Bow Valley Conservatives being a less popular party had been badly treated under FPTP and Block Voting in 1921 but now did better It won two seats each in Edmonton and Calgary where Block Voting had been replaced by STV At the time of the election call six seats were sitting vacant They had been vacated by MLAs who had run in the 1925 federal election MLA C W Cross was elected in the federal election William McCartney Davidson Calgary Independent MLA was another one of those who had left 3 The UFA vote share went up 10 percent in this election compared to 1921 This shows effect of the change in voting system the UFA actually received 15 000 fewer votes in 1926 than in 1921 The Liberals received 54 000 fewer The change in percentage of UFA support is likely more a result of urban voters not being allowed to cast multiple voters as they had done in 1921 That had artificially raised the Liberal vote count and percentage and had lowered the UFA percentage recorded for the 1921 election In 1926 the UFA vote count outside the cities was 69 000 having gone down from the 81 000 the party s candidates had received outside the cities in 1921 The UFA s vote total was about 50 percent of the first preference votes cast outside the cities Through transfers it received a majority of votes in each of the 42 districts where its candidate won 4 Under STV Edmonton elected a mixed bag of representatives UFA Liberal Conservative and Labour MLAs were all elected which compared well with the total sweep that Liberals made in 1921 under Block Voting In Calgary Conservative supporters found representation under STV where they had been shut out under Block Voting in 1921 Under STV in Medicine Hat a Liberal and a Conservative took the city s two seats which was fair as the two parties had about equal support there Under Alternative Voting outside the cities if no candidate took a majority of votes in the first count votes were transferred until a candidate acceptable to a majority of the voters was determined In Bow Valley the UFA candidate leading in the first count did not have as much support from Conservative supporters and a Liberal took the seat In four districts only two candidates ran so vote transfers were not needed Three way contests would be a feature of most elections from here on in as Canada had passed the point when only two parties dominated politics Labour and farmer parties were here to stay to fight it out against the two old line parties In fifteen of the province s 49 rural districts three or more candidates ran and vote splitting meant no one candidate took a majority of the votes on the first count A UFA candidate was in the top spot in most of these contests Liberal and Conservative party supporters were split on whether to support the other old line party or the UFA if their candidate was eliminated and their ballots able to be transferred to another In many cases many Conservative and Liberal back up preferences were marked for the UFA candidate and in eight of those 15 districts the UFA candidate who had been leading in the first count won the seat in three the Liberal leading was elected in the end and in two the Labour candidate was leading and elected in the end The only turn overs where the candidate leading in the first count was not elected were in Bow Valley and Pincher Creek In Pincher Creek back up preferences on votes at first placed on the Conservative candidate favoured the UFA candidate who took the seat over the previously leading Liberal candidate In Bow Valley vote transfers from the Conservative candidate went mostly to the Liberal who passed the UFA candidate in popularity Overall party wise the two turn overs cancelled each other but two different individuals were elected due to the Alternative Voting system than would have been elected under FPTP The UFA s seat majority was due to its victories in the rural areas Its moral right to power rested on the fact that to be elected in a rural district a candidate had to have support from a majority of a district s voters The UFA was elected through majority support in 42 of the province s 52 districts and its candidate in Edmonton was the most popular of all the candidates who ran there as well 5 Contents 1 Results 2 Members elected 3 See also 4 References 5 Further readingResults Edit1926 Alberta provincial election 6 Party Party Leader ofcandidates Seats Popular Vote1921 Elected Change ChangeUnited Farmers John E Brownlee 46 38 43 13 2 71 967 39 68 10 76 Liberal Joseph Tweed Shaw 54 15 7 36 4 47 450 26 17 7 90 Labour 12 4 5 25 0 14 123 7 79 3 25 Conservative Alexander McGillivray 56 4 40 091 22 10 11 12 Independent Labour 1 1 2 467 1 37 1 69 Independent Liberal 5 2 728 1 51 1 02 Independent 3 4 100 1 254 0 70 8 96 Independent UFA 5 999 0 55 Liberal Progressive A D Campbell 1 252 0 13 Total 183 61 60 181 331 100 Popular voteUnited Farmers 39 68 Liberal 26 17 Conservative 22 10 Labour 7 79 Others 4 26 Seats summaryUnited Farmers 71 67 Liberal 11 67 Labour 8 33 Conservative 6 67 Ind Labour 1 67 Actually five Conservatives were elected two in Edmonton two in Calgary and one in Medicine Hat This change from four brings the total number of seats to 61 not 60 Members elected EditFor complete electoral history see individual districts 6th Alberta Legislative Assembly District Member Party Acadia Lorne Proudfoot United Farmers Alexandra Peter Enzenauer United Farmers Athabasca John Frame Liberal Beaver River John Delisle United Farmers Bow Valley Joseph Shaw Liberal Calgary Alexander McGillivray Conservative George Harry Webster Liberal John Irwin Conservative Fred J White Dominion Labor Robert Parkyn Independent Labor Camrose Vernor Smith United Farmers Cardston George Stringam United Farmers Claresholm Gordon Walker United Farmers Cochrane Robert McCool United Farmers Coronation George Johnston United Farmers Cypress Perren Baker United Farmers Didsbury Austin Claypool United Farmers Edmonton John Lymburn United Farmers Charles Weaver Conservative Charles Gibbs Dominion Labor Warren Prevey Liberal David Milwyn Duggan Conservative Edson Christopher Pattinson Dominion Labor Empress William Smith United Farmers Gleichen John Buckley United Farmers Grouard Leonidas Giroux Liberal Hand Hills Gordon Forster United Farmers High River Samuel Brown United Farmers Innisfail Donald Cameron United Farmers Lac Ste Anne Charles McKeen United Farmers Lacombe Irene Parlby United Farmers Leduc Douglas Breton United Farmers Lethbridge Andrew Smeaton Dominion Labor Little Bow Oran McPherson United Farmers Macleod William Shield United Farmers Medicine Hat Charles Pingle Liberal J J Hendricks Conservative Nanton Daniel Harcourt Galbraith United Farmers Okotoks George Hoadley United Farmers Olds Nelson Smith United Farmers Peace River Hugh Allen United Farmers Pembina George MacLachlan United Farmers Pincher Creek Earle Cook United Farmers Ponoka John Brownlee United Farmers Red Deer George Wilbert Smith United Farmers Ribstone William Farquharson United Farmers Rocky Mountain Philip Christophers Dominion Labor Sedgewick Albert Andrews United Farmers St Albert Lucien Boudreau Liberal St Paul Laudas Joly United Farmers Stettler Albert Sanders United Farmers Stony Plain Willard Washburn United Farmers Sturgeon Samuel Carson United Farmers Taber Lawrence Peterson United Farmers Vegreville Archie Matheson United Farmers Vermilion Richard Reid United Farmers Victoria Rudolph Hennig United Farmers Wainwright John Russell Love United Farmers Warner Maurice Conner United Farmers Wetaskiwin Evert Sparks United Farmers Whitford George Mihalcheon United Farmers Cook s defeat of Liberal candidate Bossenberry is the only instance in this election where a candidate who led in the first count was not elected in a second round count under the preferential balloting system See also EditList of Alberta political partiesReferences Edit Report on Alberta Elections p 42 A Report on Alberta Elections 1905 1982 p 193 200 Strathmore Standard Feb 24 1926 p 1 A Report on Alberta Elections 1905 1982 p 12 A Report on Alberta Elections 1905 1982 p 12 Alberta provincial election results Elections Alberta Archived from the original on February 11 2008 Retrieved 2008 01 13 Further reading EditHopkins J Castell ed 1926 The Canadian Annual Review of Public Affairs 1925 26 Toronto The Annual Review Company Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1926 Alberta general election amp oldid 1122475107, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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