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1967 Alberta general election

The 1967 Alberta general election was held on May 23, 1967, to elect members of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta to the 16th Alberta Legislature. The election was called after the 15th Alberta Legislature was prorogued on April 11, 1967, and dissolved on April 14, 1967.[1]

1967 Alberta general election

← 1963 May 23, 1967 (1967-05-23) 1971 →

65 seats in Legislative Assembly of Alberta
33 seats were needed for a majority
  Majority party Minority party Third party
 
LIB
Leader Ernest Manning Peter Lougheed Michael Maccagno
Party Social Credit Progressive Conservative Liberal
Leader since May 31, 1943 1965 January 28, 1967
Leader's seat Strathcona East Calgary-West Lac La Biche
Last election 60 seats, 54.8% 0 seats, 12.7% 2 seats, 19.8%
Seats before 57 0 3
Seats won 55 6 3
Seat change 2 6 ±0
Popular vote 222,270 129,544 53,847
Percentage 44.6% 26.0% 10.8%
Swing 10.2% 13.3% 9.0%

Premier before election

Ernest Manning
Social Credit

Premier after election

Ernest Manning
Social Credit

Ernest C. Manning led the Social Credit Party to its ninth consecutive majority government, winning 55 of the 65 seats in the legislature, despite getting less than 45 per cent of the popular vote. Although it was not apparent at the time, this proved to be an ominous sign for the party. The 1967 election was the first time the Social Credit government had won less than half the popular vote since 1955.

The once-moribund Progressive Conservatives, led by young lawyer Peter Lougheed, emerged as the main opposition to Social Credit. They won over a quarter of the popular vote and six seats, mostly in Calgary and Edmonton. Social Credit was slow to adapt to the changes in Alberta as its two largest cities gained increasing influence.

Despite losing close to half of the share of the popular vote they had won in the 1963 election, the Liberals managed to increase their number of seats from two to three as a result of the decline in the Social Credit vote.

New Democrat Party candidates received 16 percent of the vote but no seats.

Voters also decided upon the adoption of daylight saving time, in a province-wide plebiscite. It was defeated by a very slim margin with 51.25 per cent voting against.

Amendments to the Election Act in 1965 provided voting rights for Treaty Indians in provincial elections, making the 1967 election the first opportunity for Indigenous Albertans to vote in a provincial election.[2][3]

Background Edit

Social Credit campaign Edit

The Social Credit government had prepared well for the election in advance, with the party maintaining a significant war chest.[4] The Social Credit government came under criticism for low non-renewable resource royalty rates compared to other developed nations, which it counted by saying the royalties were the highest in Canada.[4] Social Credit focused on their governance record rather than make significant policy commitments, although the Social Credit government did commit to study rising car insurance rates.[4] Furthermore the Social Credit government argued they spent the most per capita on social issues despite having the lowest tax rate.[4]

An internal controversy occurred when Albert Bourcier, a Social Credit MLA from 1935–1952 filed papers to contest the Edmonton-Jasper Place constituency against incumbent Social Credit MLA John Horan. Bourcier was still an active member of the Social Credit Party, but was ejected from the party prior to the election. It was the second time Bourcier was ejected from the party, the first being in 1949 as a sitting MLA.[5] Horan was re-elected with 36.3 per cent of the vote, while Bourcier received 1.5 per cent of the vote.[6]

New Democratic Party campaign Edit

The New Democratic Party (NDP) built a campaign on the foundation of higher oil royalties, greater participation by small businesses in oil and gas resources, transition electricity utilities to provincial ownership, provide for provincial car insurance, and development of rural natural gas infrastructure.[4]

Progressive Conservative campaign Edit

New leader Peter Lougheed and his supporters worked tirelessly to convince candidates to run in all 65 constituencies, however the Progressive Conservatives were only able to nominate 47 candidates,[7] two more than the Liberal Party, but less than a full slate put forward by the Social Credit Party and the New Democratic Party. Lougheed sought candidates who were already public figures, often meeting with editors of local weekly newspapers, mayors and presidents of boards of trade to inquire who the community's leaders were.[8] As the writ came closer Lougheed and the Progressive Conservative realized they could not form government and instead focused on a strategy of capturing Lougheed's seat in Calgary-West and forming opposition.[7][9] The campaign created red, white and blue promotional materials with the slogan "Alberta Needs an Alternative", while Lougheed's own material added his personal slogan "Let's Start It in Calgary West".[9]

Lougheed sought a public debate amongst the four party leaders, however as a long time incumbent Manning was not willing to risk a debate which could not benefit him.[10] Manning's position on the debate changed when a group of Edmonton church leaders decided to host a leaders debate, Manning a devout Christian and host of "Back to the Bible Hour" radio broadcasts accepted the debate.[10][11] Lougheed's performance in the debate was lauded by the Edmonton Journal and was credited by biographer George Wood with the growth in the Conservative movement in the Edmonton area, including Don Getty's improbable victory over Social Credit Education Minister Randolph McKinnon in Strathcona West.[12] Other media began to take notice with Maclean's stating the only politician capable of having "an outside chance of challenging Manning" was Lougheed.[13]

During the campaign, the Progressive Conservatives called for the sale of Alberta Government Telephones.[4]

Lougheed was subsequently elected to the legislature in Calgary-West capturing 62 per cent of the vote, and the Progressive Conservatives captured 26 per cent of the vote province-wide with five other successful candidates,[14] and subsequently Lougheed became Leader of the Opposition. The group of elected Conservatives known as the "original six" included Calgary MLAs Len Werry, David Russell; Edmonton area MLAs Lou Hyndman and Don Getty, and the party's only rural candidate and former federal Member of Parliament Hugh Horner.[15] The Edmonton Journal positively remarked on Lougheed's success following the 1967 election, stating Albertans had a responsible and credible alternative as opposition.[15]

Eligibility to vote Edit

The 1967 Alberta general election had four sets of criteria for a person to be eligible to vote. A eligible voter must be a Canadian citizen or British subject prior to April 14, 1967; 19 years of age or older on voting day; a resident of Alberta for 12 months preceding April 14, 1967; and a resident of the constituency on April 14, 1967.[16] Indigenous Albertans were eligible to vote for the first time in a provincial general election.

Results Edit

 
Party Party leader # of
candidates
Seats Popular vote
1963 Dissolution Elected % Change # % % Change
  Social Credit Ernest C. Manning 65 60 57 55 -8.3% 222,270 44.60% -10.21%
Progressive Conservative Peter Lougheed 47 - - 6   129,544 26.00% +13.29%
Liberal Michael Maccagno 45 2 3 3 +50.0% 53,847 10.81% -8.95%
  Independent 7 - - 1   6,916 1.38% +0.40%
  NDP Neil Reimer 65 - 1 - - 79,610 15.98% +6.53%
Coalition Frank Gainer 2 1 1 - -100% 3,654 0.73% +0.19%
  Independent Progressive Conservative 2 * - - * 1,118 0.22% *
Liberal/Progressive Conservative Ross Ellis 1 - - - - 699 0.14% -0.14%
Independent Social Credit 2 - 1 - - 693 0.14% -0.65%
Total 236 63 63 65 +3.2% 498,351 100%
Source:

Note:

* Party did not nominate candidates in the previous election

Popular vote
Social Credit
44.60%
PC
26.00%
New Democratic
15.98%
Liberal
10.81%
Others
2.61%
Seats summary
Social Credit
84.62%
PC
9.23%
Liberal
4.62%
Independent
1.54%

Daylight saving time plebiscite Edit

Daylight saving time plebiscite
May 23, 1967 (1967-05-23)
Do you favour province-wide daylight saving time?
Results
Choice
Votes %
  Yes 236,555 48.75%
  No 248,680 51.25%
Total votes 485,235 100.00%

The Province of Alberta voted on its fifth provincial plebiscite. Voters were asked to endorse a proposal to adopt daylight saving time (summer time). The proposal was rejected by a very slim margin. The question was asked again in the next election, and passed at that time.

Background Edit

In 1948, the Government of Alberta formally set the province's time zone with the passage of The Daylight Saving Time Act,[17] which mandated the entire province observe Mountain Standard Time, and prevented any municipality from observing daylight saving time or any other time zone. The bill came after Calgary (1946 and 1947), and Edmonton (1946) held municipal plebiscites which approved the move to daylight saving time. Edmonton under Mayor Harry Ainlay actually began to use DLT, which was forbidden under the new law.

Alberta's urban municipalities were in favour of daylight saving time and pressured the provincial government to hold a plebiscite or provide the authority for municipalities to locally observe daylight saving time. A joint motion of Calgary City Council and Edmonton City Council for a plebiscite was put to the Legislature in July 1963, with the support of Social Credit Minister and Edmonton Alderman Ethel Sylvia Wilson,[18] without success.

A further effort in March 1964 by Liberal MLA and Calgary Alderman Bill Dickie to allow the mater to be settled by a municipal plebiscite also failed in the Legislature. Inhe debate, Social Credit MLA William Patterson described daylight saving time as "that fandangled thing", and Minister Allen Russell Patrick stated municipal daylight savings time would be difficult for tourists to understand.[19]

A motion introduced by Bill Dickie was approved by the Legislature in February 1966 to hold a plebiscite on daylight saving time.[20] And on March 29, 1966, Minister Alfred Hooke introduced An Act to amend The Daylight Saving Time Act (Bill 75),[21] to permit the government to hold a plebiscite on the issue.

On April 17, 1967 the Government of Alberta approved Order-in-Council 607/67 which provided the instructions for the plebiscite on daylight saving time.

The prescribed question was "Do you favour Province-wide Daylight Saving Time?" with the two available responses as "Yes" and "No".[22]

Across Canada, by 1967, each province besides Alberta and Saskatchewan had adopted daylight saving time. Many Alberta businesses provided for modified summer hours, including the Alberta Stock Exchange which started at 7 a.m. to align with exchanges in Toronto and Montreal. Air Canada released a statement expressing the difficulty of distributing flight schedules with flights in Alberta.[23]

Arguments for and against Edit

Arguments for daylight saving time were put forward by the construction industry including the Alberta Construction Association and Edmonton Home Builders Association.[24][25] The Calgary Herald editorial board published a number of editorials in advance of the plebiscite advocating for the province to observe daylight saving time, and further advocated for all of Canada to move to daylight saving time.[26][27] Calgary residents and businessmen Bill Creighton and David Matthews led a campaign for daylight saving times, arguing the benefits of an additional hour of late sunlight for sports.[28] Creighton was able to garner endorsements from the Alberta Amateur Athletics Union and other local golf, baseball, football and tennis associations.[29][30] The Calgary Tourist and Convention Association endorsed daylight saving, noting that tourists perceived the province as "backwards" for not adopting the time shift.[31] Liberal leader Michael Maccagno personally supported observing daylight saving time.[32]

Arguments against daylight saving time were made by the group Alberta Council for Standard Time founded by Calgary lawyer and drive-in movie operator R.H. Barron.[33] The Council ran a number of advertisements in local papers advocating for standard time, those arguments included the danger for children walking to school in the dark or twilight, and possible reductions to academic performance.[34]

Aftermath Edit

The plebiscite resulted in a narrow victory for retaining Mountain Standard Time, with 51.25 per cent of the population voting against daylight saving time.[28] Alberta's large urban communities of Calgary, Edmonton, Lethbridge and Medicine Hat voted in favour, while the rural parts of the province voted against the proposal.[28]

The new Progressive Conservative caucus continued to pressure the Social Credit government to provide individual municipalities the power to institute Daylight Saving Time. A February 1968 motion by Edmonton MLA Don Getty and Bill Dickie for municipal authority to institute daylight saving time was rejected by the Legislature.[35]

In the aftermath of the plebiscite, the Calgary Herald blamed the defeat on "rural cousins" and the well organized Council for Standard Time, noting Calgarians voted two-to-one in favour of adopting daylight saving.[36] The editorial board for the Calgary Herald decried the failure of the plebiscite, but predicted that the province would eventually adopt daylight saving time.[37]

Results Edit

Do you favour province-wide daylight saving time?[22]
For Against
236,555     48.75% 248,680     51.25%

Results by riding Edit

Electoral district Candidates Incumbent
Social Credit PC Liberal NDP Other
Alexandra Anders O. Aalborg
2,880
57.85%
Kenneth E. Oates
940
18.88%
Charles F. Swan
304
6.11%
Lester A. Lindgren
835
16.77%
Anders O. Aalborg
Athabasca Antonio Aloisio
1,733
45.08%
Dave Hunter
939
24.43%
George Opryshko
1,170
30.44%
Antonio Aloisio
Banff-Cochrane Roy Wilson
2,066
42.17%
Jack Fraser
374
7.63%
Clarence Copithorne (Ind.)
2,428
49.56%
Francis Leo Gainer
Bonnyville Romeo B. Lamothe
2,339
54.12%
Kenneth Joseph Kerr
316
7.31%
Romeo B. Lamothe
Bow Valley-Empress Fred T. Mandeville
2,525
49.16%
Calvin Steinley
549
10.69%
Ben M. MacLeod (Coal.)
2,018
39.63%
William Delday
Calgary Bowness Charles E. Johnston
6,461
37.63%
Len F. Werry
6,828
39.77%
John Donachie
1,876
10.93%
Evelyn Moore
1,905
11.09%
Charles E. Johnston
Calgary Centre Frederick C. Colborne
3,873
40.47%
Charles Henry Cook
3,359
35.10%
John Starchuk
1,275
13.32%
Mrs. Margaret Hanley
973
10.17%
Frederick C. Colborne
Calgary-East Albert W. Ludwig
5,563
50.43%
Jim Crawford
2,613
23.69%
Sandy Skoryko
803
7.28%
Kurt Gebauer
1,955
17.72%
Albert W. Ludwig
Calgary-Glenmore Len Pearson
3,840
27.43%
Ronald M. Helmer
3,406
24.33%
William Daniel Dickie
5,743
41.02%
Max Wolfe
950
6.79%
William Daniel Dickie
Calgary-North Robert A. Simpson
4,308
42.74%
Henry M. Beaumont
3,915
38.84%
Charles W. Loughridge
638
6.33%
Walter H. Siewert
1,157
11.48%
Robert A. Simpson
Calgary Queens Park Lea Leavitt
4,943
42.13%
Eric Charles Musgreave
3,820
32.56%
Darryl Raymaker
1,702
14.51%
Lisa Baldwin
1,220
10.40%
Calgary-South Arthur J. Dixon
5,401
41.76%
Joe Clark
4,940
38.19%
Willis E. O'Leary
1,146
8.86%
Jack D. Peters
1,388
10.73%
Arthur J. Dixon
Calgary Victoria Park Art Davis
3,956
35.49%
David J. Russell
4,796
43.03%
Reginald J. Gibbs
1,088
9.76%
Ted Takacs
1,229
11.03%
Calgary-West Donald S. Fleming
4,028
28.95%
Peter Lougheed
8,548
61.43%
Natalie Chapman
402
2.89%
Allan M. Early
868
6.24%
Donald S. Fleming
Camrose Chester I. Sayers
3,083
44.25%
Emmett G. Mohler
1,736
24.91%
G. Rod Knaut
699
10.03%
Rudy P. Swanson
1,412
20.26%
Chester I. Sayers
Cardston Alvin F. Bullock
2,120
47.11%
Larry L. Lang
1,692
37.60%
Leslie N. Howard
104
2.31%
Robert D. Burt (Ind.)
573
12.73%
Edgar W. Hinman
Clover Bar Walt A. Buck
4,101
51.35%
Daniel F. Hollands
2,215
27.73%
Kazmer D. Curry
468
5.86%
Alfred O. Arnston
1,175
14.71%
Floyd M. Baker
Cypress Harry E. Strom
2,577
76.65%
William George McFall
769
22.87%
Harry E. Strom
Drumheller-Gleichen Gordon Edward Taylor
4,018
67.46%
Tom Hanson
1,579
26.51%
Garry B. Law
345
5.79%
Gordon Edward Taylor
Dunvegan Ernest L. Lee
1,280
41.52%
Phil Thompson
1,080
35.03%
John A. Hammond (Coal.)
547
18.82%
Ernest L. Lee
Edmonton North Ethel Sylvia Wilson
4,698
38.21%
Tony Thibaudeau
3,461
28.15%
L. John Corbiere
1,303
10.60%
Gordon S.B. Wright
2,763
22.47%
Edmonton-Centre Ambrose Holowach
3,146
39.12%
Harold W. Veale
2,558
31.81%
Joseph A. Tannous
747
9.29%
Henry Tomaschuk
1,313
16.33%
Pat G.A. O'Hara (Ind.)
194
2.41%
Ambrose Holowach
Edmonton-Jasper Place John William Horan
4,206
36.34%
Gerard Joseph Amerongen
3,000
25.92%
Barry Vogel
1,851
15.99%
Tom Hennessey
2,210
19.09%
Albert V. Bourcier (Ind. SoCred)
176
John William Horan
Edmonton-North East Lou W. Heard
5,052
35.02%
Alan T. Cooke
3,616
25.06%
Peter Achtem
1,418
9.83%
Ivor G. Dent
4,276
29.64%
Lou W. Heard
Edmonton-North West Edgar H. Gerhart
4,674
36.10%
Paul Norris
4,205
32.48%
Thomas Leia
1,173
9.06%
Dave Belland
2,664
20.58%
Oscar A. Green (Ind.)
188
1.45%
Edgar H. Gerhart
Edmonton-Norwood William Tomyn
3,450
43.01%
Ronald W. Downey
2,023
25.22%
Grant W. Notley
2,433
30.33%
William Tomyn
Edmonton-West William A. Johnson
4,016
32.46%
Lou Hyndman
4,753
38.42%
J. Bernard Feehan
2,316
18.72%
Thomas C. Pocklington
1,254
10.14%
Stanley Gordon Geldart
Edson Arthur O. Jorgensen
2,372
34.59%
William A. Switzer
2,803
40.87%
C. Neil Reimer
1,656
24.15%
William Switzer
Grande Prairie Ira McLaughlin
4,847
55.38%
George M. Repka
1,132
12.93%
Alan Bush
2,748
31.40%
Ira McLaughlin
Grouard Roy Ells
3,363
51.02%
Gunnar Walhstrom
985
14.94%
Stan Daniels
2,207
33.49%
Roy Ells
Hand Hills-Acadia Clinton Keith French
2,675
50.17%
Bill Cross
2,140
40.14%
Ralph G. Jorgenson
504
9.45%
Clinton Keith French
Lac La Biche Harry Lobay
1,613
34.22%
Michael Maccagno
2,212
46.93%
Fred Ustina
758
16.08%
Michael Maccagno
Lac Ste. Anne William Patterson
1,731
30.14%
Hugh F. Horner
2,573
44.80%
Raymond Mills
723
12.59%
Swen Symington
674
11.74%
William Patterson
Lacombe Allan Russell Patrick
2,690
49.11%
John William Cookson
1,999
36.49%
Glen R. Nelson
777
14.18%
Allan Russell Patrick
Leduc James D. Henderson
2,193
45.38%
Emanuel Prycz
1,206
24.96%
Russell Olekshy
383
7.93%
Alex A. Sklarenko
1,021
21.13%
James D. Henderson
Lethbridge John C. Landeryou
6,155
44.27%
Wilfred Bowns
4,128
29.69%
John I. Boras
2,237
16.09%
Klaas Buijert
1,335
9.60%
John C. Landeryou
Little Bow Raymond Albert Speaker
3,367
68.25%
John K. Head
572
11.60%
Arthur W. Ulrich (Ind.)
978
19.83%
Raymond Albert Speaker
Macleod Leighton E. Buckwell
2,822
51.68%
George Whitehead
1,773
32.47%
Melba J. Cochlan
149
2.73%
Sid J. Cornish
673
12.32%
James Hartley
Medicine Hat Harry C. Leinweber
4,390
39.96%
James Horsman
2,701
24.59%
Roy Weidermann
2,025
18.43%
Ted. J. Grimm
1,819
16.56%
Harry C. Leinweber
Okotoks-High River Edward P. Benoit
2,289
48.50%
Thomas E. Hughes
2,097
44.43%
Ron A. Baker
88
1.86%
Georgina M. Smith
212
4.49%
Edward P. Benoit
Olds-Didsbury Robert Curtis Clark
4,052
65.02%
Stan Bell
1,129
18.12%
Eva Banta
485
7.78%
Chas. Purvis (Ind. Con.)
547
8.80%
Robert Curtis Clark
Peace River Robert H. Wiebe
2,860
53.49%
Harry Reinders
1,338
25.02%
Edward R. Whitney (Ind.)
1,149
21.49%
Euell F. Montgomery
Pembina Adam Carl Muller
2,866
47.23%
Edward G. Samuel
2,098
34.57%
Edward P. MacCallum
484
7.98%
George A.E. Garnett
576
9.49%
Robin D. Jorgenson
Pincher Creek-Crowsnest Charles Duncan Drain
2,345
45.78%
Alexander B. Wells
722
14.10%
F. Benton Murphy
255
4.98%
Garth A. Turcott
1,772
34.60%
Garth Turcott
Ponoka Neville S. Roper
3,286
62.04%
Derek R. Broughton
514
9.70%
Ed Nelson
1,464
27.64%
Glen F. Johnston
Red Deer William Kenneth Ure
6,166
46.42%
James L. Foster
4,628
34.84%
Robert H. Scammell
636
4.79%
Ethel Taylor
1,799
13.54%
William Kenneth Ure
Redwater Michael Senych
1,588
43.42%
Basil Zailo
1,314
35.93%
Norman T. Flack
737
20.15%
Michael Senych
Rocky Mountain House Alfred J. Hooke
2,538
53.21%
Gilbert H.C. Farthing
792
16.60%
Will Sinclair (Ind.)
1,406
29.48%
Alfred J. Hooke
Sedgewick-Coronation Jack C. Hillman
3,470
59.41%
Ernie Moore
1,103
18.88%
Eugene F. Price
547
9.36%
Arthur C. Bunney
680
11.64%
Jack C. Hillman
Spirit River Adolph O. Fimrite
2,627
56.12%
John L. Listhaeghe
413
8.82%
Bert M. Strand
1,634
34.91%
Adolph O. Fimrite
St. Albert Keith Everitt
2,824
35.44%
Stanley M. Walker
1,469
18.43%
Robert A. Russell
2,297
28.82%
Norman Dolman
1,339
16.80%
Keith Everitt
St. Paul Raymond Reierson
2,275
44.29%
Armand Lamothe
1,489
28.99%
Pierre M. Vallee
788
15.34%
Leroy P. Christensen (Ind. P.C.)
571
11.12%
Raymond Reierson
Stettler Galen C. Norris
2,659
54.88%
Bob McKnight
1,461
30.15%
Morton H. Neilson
635
13.11%
Galen C. Norris
Stony Plain Ralph A. Jespersen
2,316
36.25%
Frank Flanagan
1,670
26.14%
Maurice R. McCullagh
1,855
29.03%
Cornelia R. Wood (Ind. SoCred)
517
8.13%
Cornelia R. Wood
Strathcona Centre Joseph Donovan Ross
4,052
40.50%
Larry Boddy
2,493
24.92%
Ian Nicoll
1,794
17.93%
Gordon E. Weese
1,627
16.26%
Joseph Donovan Ross
Strathcona East Ernest C. Manning
6,314
49.70%
C. Jack Thorpe
2,976
23.43%
Percy Marshall
1,458
11.48%
Ray Field
1,909
15.03%
Ernest C. Manning
Strathcona South Joe G. Radstaak
3,934
40.73%
Oscar H. Kruger
2,594
26.86%
John Kloster
968
10.02%
Bill McLean
2,123
21.98%
Strathcona West Randolph H. McKinnon
5,153
36.87%
Donald Ross Getty
6,764
48.39%
Edmund H. Leger
890
6.37%
Frank Kuzemski
1,115
7.98%
Randolph H. McKinnon
Taber-Warner Douglas Miller
3,451
61.24%
Emil D. Gundlock
1,170
20.76%
Theodore Rudd
683
12.12%
Dick Verwoerd
292
5.18%
Leonard C. Halmrast
Three Hills Raymond Ratzlaff
2,762
50.48%
Gordon Leslie
1,113
20.34%
James A. Lore
1,317
24.07%
George E. Pieper
268
4.90%
Roy Davidson
Vegreville-Bruce Alex W. Gordey
2,497
44.41%
Mike W. Kawulych
1,742
30.98%
Wilfrid L. Horton
345
6.14%
Albin Lukawiecki
1,010
17.96%
Alex W. Gordey
Vermilion Ashley H. Cooper
2,545
57.80%
Hilda Wilson
1,199
27.23%
Harry E. Yaremchuk
642
14.58%
Ashley H. Cooper
Wainwright Henry A. Ruste
3,807
82.15%
Glenn Valleau
789
17.03%
Henry A. Ruste
Wetaskiwin Albert W. Strohschein
2,879
45.67%
Dallas Schmidt
2,408
38.20%
Robert P. Christensen
1,000
15.86%
Albert W. Strohschein
Willingdon-Two Hills Nicholas A. Melnyk
2,160
62.25%
Louis Souter
1,298
37.41%
Nicholas A. Melnyk

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ Perry & Footz 2006, p. 498.
  2. ^ "Alberta Session Winds Up". Calgary Herald. Edmonton. April 13, 1965. p. 1. ProQuest 2253686786.
  3. ^ An Act to amend The Election Act, SA 1965, c 23, retrieved from CanLII on July 21, 2021
  4. ^ a b c d e f Baird 1968, p. 184.
  5. ^ "Socreds Again Kick Out Bourcier; Opposition To Horan The Reason". Edmonton Journal. May 15, 1967. p. 14. ProQuest 2397632581.
  6. ^ "Edmonton-Jasper Place Official Results 1967 Alberta general election". Alberta Heritage Community Foundation. Retrieved May 21, 2020.
  7. ^ a b Perry & Craig 2006, p. 523.
  8. ^ Wood 1985, p. 47.
  9. ^ a b Wood 1985, p. 57.
  10. ^ a b Wood 1985, p. 59.
  11. ^ Tupper 2004, p. 208.
  12. ^ Wood 1985, p. 60.
  13. ^ Wood 1985, p. 58.
  14. ^ Wood 1985, p. 61.
  15. ^ a b Perry & Craig 2006, p. 524.
  16. ^ "Important Notice. Alberta Provincial Election. May 23rd, 1967". Calgary Herald. May 12, 1967. p. 6. ProQuest 2253760324.
  17. ^ An Act Respecting the use of Daylight Saving Time within the Province, SA 1948, c 18, retrieved from CanLII on July 21, 2021
  18. ^ "Daylight Saving Vote Sought". Edmonton Journal. July 9, 1963. p. 31. ProQuest 2396983702.
  19. ^ Cove, Lynne (March 11, 1964). "Under the Dome". Calgary Herald. Edmonton. p. 1. ProQuest 2253643631.
  20. ^ "Daylight Time: Legislature Votes to Hold Plebiscite". Edmonton Journal. February 25, 1966. p. 15. ProQuest 2397521988.
  21. ^ An Act to amend The Daylight Saving Time Act, SA 1966, c 27, retrieved from CanLII on July 21, 2021
  22. ^ a b Alberta. Legislative Assembly 1967, p. 272.
  23. ^ "Daylight Saving...Everyone Out Of Step". Calgary Herald. April 29, 1967. p. 31. ProQuest 2253792698.
  24. ^ "Daylight Saving Time Supported By Builders". Calgary Herald. January 15, 1966. p. 19. ProQuest 2253705569.
  25. ^ "Vote for more of me". Edmonton Journal. May 20, 1967. p. 56. ProQuest 2397616130.
  26. ^ "Short-Changed". Calgary Herald. May 19, 1967. p. 4. ProQuest 2253807084.
  27. ^ "Fast Time". Calgary Herald. April 29, 1967. p. 4. ProQuest 2253793181.
  28. ^ a b c Boyer, J. Patrick (1992). Direct democracy in Canada: the history and future of referendums. Toronto: Dundurn Press. p. 128. ISBN 978-1-55002-183-7.
  29. ^ Tate, Bob (May 18, 1967). "City Sportsmen In Favor of Daylight Savings Time". Calgary Herald. p. 55. ProQuest 2253666272.
  30. ^ "47 years later, Alberta's original daylight time activist still wants extra sunlight". CBC News. March 13, 2017. Retrieved July 21, 2021.
  31. ^ "Tourist Official Supports Provincial DST Campaign". Calgary Herald. May 15, 1967. p. 27. ProQuest 2253778098.
  32. ^ "Maccagno Supports DST Move". Calgary Herald. May 9, 1967. p. 7. ProQuest 2253639613.
  33. ^ Jackson, Lawrence (May 12, 1967). "Opposing Forces Line up for Daylight Time Battle". Calgary Herald. pp. 1–2. 2253760250.
  34. ^ "On May 23 Vote for Bill Jones". Edmonton Journal. May 11, 1967. p. 7. ProQuest 2397601865.
  35. ^ Alberta. Legislative Assembly 1968, p. 68.
  36. ^ "Rural Cousins Defeat DST". Calgary Herald. May 24, 1967. p. 1. ProQuest 2253765277.
  37. ^ "Another Time". Calgary Herald. May 25, 1967. p. 4. ProQuest 2253687989.
Works cited
  • Baird, Richard E. (1968). "Alberta". In Saywell, John (ed.). Canadian Annual Review for 1967. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. pp. 180–186. ISBN 978-0-8020-1549-5.
  • Perry, Sandra E.; Footz, Valerie L. (2006). Massolin, Philip A. (ed.). A Higher Duty: Speakers of the Legislative Assemblies. Edmonton, AB: Legislative Assembly of Alberta. ISBN 0-9689217-3-6. Retrieved August 9, 2020.
  • Perry, Sandra E.; Craig, Jessica J. (2006). The Mantle of Leadership: Premiers of the Northwest Territories and Alberta. Edmonton, Alberta: Legislative Assembly of Alberta. ISBN 0-9689217-2-8.
  • Tupper, Allan (2004). "Peter Lougheed". In Bradford J. Rennie (ed.). Alberta Premiers of the Twentieth Century. Regina, Saskatchewan: Canadian Plains Research Center, University of Regina. ISBN 0-88977-151-0.
  • Wood, David G. (1985). The Lougheed legacy. Toronto: Key Porter Books. ISBN 0-919493-48-3. OCLC 910363674.
Primary Sources
  • Alberta. Legislative Assembly (1967). Alberta Gazette 1967, Part 2. Edmonton: Queen's Printer.
  • Alberta. Legislative Assembly (1968). Alberta Journals, 1968, 16th Leg., 1st Sess. Vol. LXXIV. Edmonton: Queen's Printer.

1967, alberta, general, election, held, 1967, elect, members, legislative, assembly, alberta, 16th, alberta, legislature, election, called, after, 15th, alberta, legislature, prorogued, april, 1967, dissolved, april, 1967, 1963, 1967, 1967, 1971, outgoing, mem. The 1967 Alberta general election was held on May 23 1967 to elect members of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta to the 16th Alberta Legislature The election was called after the 15th Alberta Legislature was prorogued on April 11 1967 and dissolved on April 14 1967 1 1967 Alberta general election 1963 May 23 1967 1967 05 23 1971 outgoing membersmembers 65 seats in Legislative Assembly of Alberta 33 seats were needed for a majority Majority party Minority party Third party LIBLeader Ernest Manning Peter Lougheed Michael MaccagnoParty Social Credit Progressive Conservative LiberalLeader since May 31 1943 1965 January 28 1967Leader s seat Strathcona East Calgary West Lac La BicheLast election 60 seats 54 8 0 seats 12 7 2 seats 19 8 Seats before 57 0 3Seats won 55 6 3Seat change 2 6 0Popular vote 222 270 129 544 53 847Percentage 44 6 26 0 10 8 Swing 10 2 13 3 9 0 Premier before electionErnest ManningSocial Credit Premier after election Ernest ManningSocial CreditErnest C Manning led the Social Credit Party to its ninth consecutive majority government winning 55 of the 65 seats in the legislature despite getting less than 45 per cent of the popular vote Although it was not apparent at the time this proved to be an ominous sign for the party The 1967 election was the first time the Social Credit government had won less than half the popular vote since 1955 The once moribund Progressive Conservatives led by young lawyer Peter Lougheed emerged as the main opposition to Social Credit They won over a quarter of the popular vote and six seats mostly in Calgary and Edmonton Social Credit was slow to adapt to the changes in Alberta as its two largest cities gained increasing influence Despite losing close to half of the share of the popular vote they had won in the 1963 election the Liberals managed to increase their number of seats from two to three as a result of the decline in the Social Credit vote New Democrat Party candidates received 16 percent of the vote but no seats Voters also decided upon the adoption of daylight saving time in a province wide plebiscite It was defeated by a very slim margin with 51 25 per cent voting against Amendments to the Election Act in 1965 provided voting rights for Treaty Indians in provincial elections making the 1967 election the first opportunity for Indigenous Albertans to vote in a provincial election 2 3 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Social Credit campaign 1 2 New Democratic Party campaign 1 3 Progressive Conservative campaign 1 4 Eligibility to vote 2 Results 3 Daylight saving time plebiscite 3 1 Background 3 2 Arguments for and against 3 3 Aftermath 3 4 Results 4 Results by riding 5 See also 6 ReferencesBackground EditSocial Credit campaign Edit The Social Credit government had prepared well for the election in advance with the party maintaining a significant war chest 4 The Social Credit government came under criticism for low non renewable resource royalty rates compared to other developed nations which it counted by saying the royalties were the highest in Canada 4 Social Credit focused on their governance record rather than make significant policy commitments although the Social Credit government did commit to study rising car insurance rates 4 Furthermore the Social Credit government argued they spent the most per capita on social issues despite having the lowest tax rate 4 An internal controversy occurred when Albert Bourcier a Social Credit MLA from 1935 1952 filed papers to contest the Edmonton Jasper Place constituency against incumbent Social Credit MLA John Horan Bourcier was still an active member of the Social Credit Party but was ejected from the party prior to the election It was the second time Bourcier was ejected from the party the first being in 1949 as a sitting MLA 5 Horan was re elected with 36 3 per cent of the vote while Bourcier received 1 5 per cent of the vote 6 New Democratic Party campaign Edit The New Democratic Party NDP built a campaign on the foundation of higher oil royalties greater participation by small businesses in oil and gas resources transition electricity utilities to provincial ownership provide for provincial car insurance and development of rural natural gas infrastructure 4 Progressive Conservative campaign Edit New leader Peter Lougheed and his supporters worked tirelessly to convince candidates to run in all 65 constituencies however the Progressive Conservatives were only able to nominate 47 candidates 7 two more than the Liberal Party but less than a full slate put forward by the Social Credit Party and the New Democratic Party Lougheed sought candidates who were already public figures often meeting with editors of local weekly newspapers mayors and presidents of boards of trade to inquire who the community s leaders were 8 As the writ came closer Lougheed and the Progressive Conservative realized they could not form government and instead focused on a strategy of capturing Lougheed s seat in Calgary West and forming opposition 7 9 The campaign created red white and blue promotional materials with the slogan Alberta Needs an Alternative while Lougheed s own material added his personal slogan Let s Start It in Calgary West 9 Lougheed sought a public debate amongst the four party leaders however as a long time incumbent Manning was not willing to risk a debate which could not benefit him 10 Manning s position on the debate changed when a group of Edmonton church leaders decided to host a leaders debate Manning a devout Christian and host of Back to the Bible Hour radio broadcasts accepted the debate 10 11 Lougheed s performance in the debate was lauded by the Edmonton Journal and was credited by biographer George Wood with the growth in the Conservative movement in the Edmonton area including Don Getty s improbable victory over Social Credit Education Minister Randolph McKinnon in Strathcona West 12 Other media began to take notice with Maclean s stating the only politician capable of having an outside chance of challenging Manning was Lougheed 13 During the campaign the Progressive Conservatives called for the sale of Alberta Government Telephones 4 Lougheed was subsequently elected to the legislature in Calgary West capturing 62 per cent of the vote and the Progressive Conservatives captured 26 per cent of the vote province wide with five other successful candidates 14 and subsequently Lougheed became Leader of the Opposition The group of elected Conservatives known as the original six included Calgary MLAs Len Werry David Russell Edmonton area MLAs Lou Hyndman and Don Getty and the party s only rural candidate and former federal Member of Parliament Hugh Horner 15 The Edmonton Journal positively remarked on Lougheed s success following the 1967 election stating Albertans had a responsible and credible alternative as opposition 15 Eligibility to vote Edit The 1967 Alberta general election had four sets of criteria for a person to be eligible to vote A eligible voter must be a Canadian citizen or British subject prior to April 14 1967 19 years of age or older on voting day a resident of Alberta for 12 months preceding April 14 1967 and a resident of the constituency on April 14 1967 16 Indigenous Albertans were eligible to vote for the first time in a provincial general election Results Edit nbsp Party Party leader ofcandidates Seats Popular vote1963 Dissolution Elected Change Change Social Credit Ernest C Manning 65 60 57 55 8 3 222 270 44 60 10 21 Progressive Conservative Peter Lougheed 47 6 129 544 26 00 13 29 Liberal Michael Maccagno 45 2 3 3 50 0 53 847 10 81 8 95 Independent 7 1 6 916 1 38 0 40 NDP Neil Reimer 65 1 79 610 15 98 6 53 Coalition Frank Gainer 2 1 1 100 3 654 0 73 0 19 Independent Progressive Conservative 2 1 118 0 22 Liberal Progressive Conservative Ross Ellis 1 699 0 14 0 14 Independent Social Credit 2 1 693 0 14 0 65 Total 236 63 63 65 3 2 498 351 100 Source Elections AlbertaNote Party did not nominate candidates in the previous electionPopular voteSocial Credit 44 60 PC 26 00 New Democratic 15 98 Liberal 10 81 Others 2 61 Seats summarySocial Credit 84 62 PC 9 23 Liberal 4 62 Independent 1 54 Daylight saving time plebiscite EditDaylight saving time plebisciteMay 23 1967 1967 05 23 Do you favour province wide daylight saving time ResultsChoice Votes nbsp Yes 236 555 48 75 nbsp No 248 680 51 25 Total votes 485 235 100 00 The Province of Alberta voted on its fifth provincial plebiscite Voters were asked to endorse a proposal to adopt daylight saving time summer time The proposal was rejected by a very slim margin The question was asked again in the next election and passed at that time Background Edit In 1948 the Government of Alberta formally set the province s time zone with the passage of The Daylight Saving Time Act 17 which mandated the entire province observe Mountain Standard Time and prevented any municipality from observing daylight saving time or any other time zone The bill came after Calgary 1946 and 1947 and Edmonton 1946 held municipal plebiscites which approved the move to daylight saving time Edmonton under Mayor Harry Ainlay actually began to use DLT which was forbidden under the new law Alberta s urban municipalities were in favour of daylight saving time and pressured the provincial government to hold a plebiscite or provide the authority for municipalities to locally observe daylight saving time A joint motion of Calgary City Council and Edmonton City Council for a plebiscite was put to the Legislature in July 1963 with the support of Social Credit Minister and Edmonton Alderman Ethel Sylvia Wilson 18 without success A further effort in March 1964 by Liberal MLA and Calgary Alderman Bill Dickie to allow the mater to be settled by a municipal plebiscite also failed in the Legislature Inhe debate Social Credit MLA William Patterson described daylight saving time as that fandangled thing and Minister Allen Russell Patrick stated municipal daylight savings time would be difficult for tourists to understand 19 A motion introduced by Bill Dickie was approved by the Legislature in February 1966 to hold a plebiscite on daylight saving time 20 And on March 29 1966 Minister Alfred Hooke introduced An Act to amend The Daylight Saving Time Act Bill 75 21 to permit the government to hold a plebiscite on the issue On April 17 1967 the Government of Alberta approved Order in Council 607 67 which provided the instructions for the plebiscite on daylight saving time The prescribed question was Do you favour Province wide Daylight Saving Time with the two available responses as Yes and No 22 Across Canada by 1967 each province besides Alberta and Saskatchewan had adopted daylight saving time Many Alberta businesses provided for modified summer hours including the Alberta Stock Exchange which started at 7 a m to align with exchanges in Toronto and Montreal Air Canada released a statement expressing the difficulty of distributing flight schedules with flights in Alberta 23 Arguments for and against Edit Arguments for daylight saving time were put forward by the construction industry including the Alberta Construction Association and Edmonton Home Builders Association 24 25 The Calgary Herald editorial board published a number of editorials in advance of the plebiscite advocating for the province to observe daylight saving time and further advocated for all of Canada to move to daylight saving time 26 27 Calgary residents and businessmen Bill Creighton and David Matthews led a campaign for daylight saving times arguing the benefits of an additional hour of late sunlight for sports 28 Creighton was able to garner endorsements from the Alberta Amateur Athletics Union and other local golf baseball football and tennis associations 29 30 The Calgary Tourist and Convention Association endorsed daylight saving noting that tourists perceived the province as backwards for not adopting the time shift 31 Liberal leader Michael Maccagno personally supported observing daylight saving time 32 Arguments against daylight saving time were made by the group Alberta Council for Standard Time founded by Calgary lawyer and drive in movie operator R H Barron 33 The Council ran a number of advertisements in local papers advocating for standard time those arguments included the danger for children walking to school in the dark or twilight and possible reductions to academic performance 34 Aftermath Edit The plebiscite resulted in a narrow victory for retaining Mountain Standard Time with 51 25 per cent of the population voting against daylight saving time 28 Alberta s large urban communities of Calgary Edmonton Lethbridge and Medicine Hat voted in favour while the rural parts of the province voted against the proposal 28 The new Progressive Conservative caucus continued to pressure the Social Credit government to provide individual municipalities the power to institute Daylight Saving Time A February 1968 motion by Edmonton MLA Don Getty and Bill Dickie for municipal authority to institute daylight saving time was rejected by the Legislature 35 In the aftermath of the plebiscite the Calgary Herald blamed the defeat on rural cousins and the well organized Council for Standard Time noting Calgarians voted two to one in favour of adopting daylight saving 36 The editorial board for the Calgary Herald decried the failure of the plebiscite but predicted that the province would eventually adopt daylight saving time 37 Results Edit Do you favour province wide daylight saving time 22 For Against236 555 48 75 248 680 51 25 Results by riding EditElectoral district Candidates IncumbentSocial Credit PC Liberal NDP OtherAlexandra Anders O Aalborg2 88057 85 Kenneth E Oates94018 88 Charles F Swan3046 11 Lester A Lindgren83516 77 Anders O AalborgAthabasca Antonio Aloisio1 73345 08 Dave Hunter93924 43 George Opryshko1 17030 44 Antonio AloisioBanff Cochrane Roy Wilson2 06642 17 Jack Fraser3747 63 Clarence Copithorne Ind 2 42849 56 Francis Leo GainerBonnyville Romeo B Lamothe2 33954 12 Kenneth Joseph Kerr3167 31 Romeo B LamotheBow Valley Empress Fred T Mandeville2 52549 16 Calvin Steinley54910 69 Ben M MacLeod Coal 2 01839 63 William DeldayCalgary Bowness Charles E Johnston6 46137 63 Len F Werry6 82839 77 John Donachie1 87610 93 Evelyn Moore1 90511 09 Charles E JohnstonCalgary Centre Frederick C Colborne3 87340 47 Charles Henry Cook3 35935 10 John Starchuk1 27513 32 Mrs Margaret Hanley97310 17 Frederick C ColborneCalgary East Albert W Ludwig5 56350 43 Jim Crawford2 61323 69 Sandy Skoryko8037 28 Kurt Gebauer1 95517 72 Albert W LudwigCalgary Glenmore Len Pearson3 84027 43 Ronald M Helmer3 40624 33 William Daniel Dickie5 74341 02 Max Wolfe9506 79 William Daniel DickieCalgary North Robert A Simpson4 30842 74 Henry M Beaumont3 91538 84 Charles W Loughridge6386 33 Walter H Siewert1 15711 48 Robert A SimpsonCalgary Queens Park Lea Leavitt4 94342 13 Eric Charles Musgreave3 82032 56 Darryl Raymaker1 70214 51 Lisa Baldwin1 22010 40 Calgary South Arthur J Dixon5 40141 76 Joe Clark4 94038 19 Willis E O Leary1 1468 86 Jack D Peters1 38810 73 Arthur J DixonCalgary Victoria Park Art Davis3 95635 49 David J Russell4 79643 03 Reginald J Gibbs1 0889 76 Ted Takacs1 22911 03 Calgary West Donald S Fleming4 02828 95 Peter Lougheed8 54861 43 Natalie Chapman4022 89 Allan M Early8686 24 Donald S FlemingCamrose Chester I Sayers3 08344 25 Emmett G Mohler1 73624 91 G Rod Knaut69910 03 Rudy P Swanson1 41220 26 Chester I SayersCardston Alvin F Bullock2 12047 11 Larry L Lang1 69237 60 Leslie N Howard1042 31 Robert D Burt Ind 57312 73 Edgar W HinmanClover Bar Walt A Buck4 10151 35 Daniel F Hollands2 21527 73 Kazmer D Curry4685 86 Alfred O Arnston1 17514 71 Floyd M BakerCypress Harry E Strom2 57776 65 William George McFall76922 87 Harry E StromDrumheller Gleichen Gordon Edward Taylor4 01867 46 Tom Hanson1 57926 51 Garry B Law3455 79 Gordon Edward TaylorDunvegan Ernest L Lee1 28041 52 Phil Thompson1 08035 03 John A Hammond Coal 54718 82 Ernest L LeeEdmonton North Ethel Sylvia Wilson4 69838 21 Tony Thibaudeau3 46128 15 L John Corbiere1 30310 60 Gordon S B Wright2 76322 47 Edmonton Centre Ambrose Holowach3 14639 12 Harold W Veale2 55831 81 Joseph A Tannous7479 29 Henry Tomaschuk1 31316 33 Pat G A O Hara Ind 1942 41 Ambrose HolowachEdmonton Jasper Place John William Horan4 20636 34 Gerard Joseph Amerongen3 00025 92 Barry Vogel1 85115 99 Tom Hennessey2 21019 09 Albert V Bourcier Ind SoCred 176 John William HoranEdmonton North East Lou W Heard5 05235 02 Alan T Cooke3 61625 06 Peter Achtem1 4189 83 Ivor G Dent4 27629 64 Lou W HeardEdmonton North West Edgar H Gerhart4 67436 10 Paul Norris4 20532 48 Thomas Leia1 1739 06 Dave Belland2 66420 58 Oscar A Green Ind 1881 45 Edgar H GerhartEdmonton Norwood William Tomyn3 45043 01 Ronald W Downey2 02325 22 Grant W Notley2 43330 33 William TomynEdmonton West William A Johnson4 01632 46 Lou Hyndman4 75338 42 J Bernard Feehan2 31618 72 Thomas C Pocklington1 25410 14 Stanley Gordon GeldartEdson Arthur O Jorgensen2 37234 59 William A Switzer2 80340 87 C Neil Reimer1 65624 15 William SwitzerGrande Prairie Ira McLaughlin4 84755 38 George M Repka1 13212 93 Alan Bush2 74831 40 Ira McLaughlinGrouard Roy Ells3 36351 02 Gunnar Walhstrom98514 94 Stan Daniels2 20733 49 Roy EllsHand Hills Acadia Clinton Keith French2 67550 17 Bill Cross2 14040 14 Ralph G Jorgenson5049 45 Clinton Keith FrenchLac La Biche Harry Lobay1 61334 22 Michael Maccagno2 21246 93 Fred Ustina75816 08 Michael MaccagnoLac Ste Anne William Patterson1 73130 14 Hugh F Horner2 57344 80 Raymond Mills72312 59 Swen Symington67411 74 William PattersonLacombe Allan Russell Patrick2 69049 11 John William Cookson1 99936 49 Glen R Nelson77714 18 Allan Russell PatrickLeduc James D Henderson2 19345 38 Emanuel Prycz1 20624 96 Russell Olekshy3837 93 Alex A Sklarenko1 02121 13 James D HendersonLethbridge John C Landeryou6 15544 27 Wilfred Bowns4 12829 69 John I Boras2 23716 09 Klaas Buijert1 3359 60 John C LanderyouLittle Bow Raymond Albert Speaker3 36768 25 John K Head57211 60 Arthur W Ulrich Ind 97819 83 Raymond Albert SpeakerMacleod Leighton E Buckwell2 82251 68 George Whitehead1 77332 47 Melba J Cochlan1492 73 Sid J Cornish67312 32 James HartleyMedicine Hat Harry C Leinweber4 39039 96 James Horsman2 70124 59 Roy Weidermann2 02518 43 Ted J Grimm1 81916 56 Harry C LeinweberOkotoks High River Edward P Benoit2 28948 50 Thomas E Hughes2 09744 43 Ron A Baker881 86 Georgina M Smith2124 49 Edward P BenoitOlds Didsbury Robert Curtis Clark4 05265 02 Stan Bell1 12918 12 Eva Banta4857 78 Chas Purvis Ind Con 5478 80 Robert Curtis ClarkPeace River Robert H Wiebe2 86053 49 Harry Reinders1 33825 02 Edward R Whitney Ind 1 14921 49 Euell F MontgomeryPembina Adam Carl Muller2 86647 23 Edward G Samuel2 09834 57 Edward P MacCallum4847 98 George A E Garnett5769 49 Robin D JorgensonPincher Creek Crowsnest Charles Duncan Drain2 34545 78 Alexander B Wells72214 10 F Benton Murphy2554 98 Garth A Turcott1 77234 60 Garth TurcottPonoka Neville S Roper3 28662 04 Derek R Broughton5149 70 Ed Nelson1 46427 64 Glen F JohnstonRed Deer William Kenneth Ure6 16646 42 James L Foster4 62834 84 Robert H Scammell6364 79 Ethel Taylor1 79913 54 William Kenneth UreRedwater Michael Senych1 58843 42 Basil Zailo1 31435 93 Norman T Flack73720 15 Michael SenychRocky Mountain House Alfred J Hooke2 53853 21 Gilbert H C Farthing79216 60 Will Sinclair Ind 1 40629 48 Alfred J HookeSedgewick Coronation Jack C Hillman3 47059 41 Ernie Moore1 10318 88 Eugene F Price5479 36 Arthur C Bunney68011 64 Jack C HillmanSpirit River Adolph O Fimrite2 62756 12 John L Listhaeghe4138 82 Bert M Strand1 63434 91 Adolph O FimriteSt Albert Keith Everitt2 82435 44 Stanley M Walker1 46918 43 Robert A Russell2 29728 82 Norman Dolman1 33916 80 Keith EverittSt Paul Raymond Reierson2 27544 29 Armand Lamothe1 48928 99 Pierre M Vallee78815 34 Leroy P Christensen Ind P C 57111 12 Raymond ReiersonStettler Galen C Norris2 65954 88 Bob McKnight1 46130 15 Morton H Neilson63513 11 Galen C NorrisStony Plain Ralph A Jespersen2 31636 25 Frank Flanagan1 67026 14 Maurice R McCullagh1 85529 03 Cornelia R Wood Ind SoCred 5178 13 Cornelia R WoodStrathcona Centre Joseph Donovan Ross4 05240 50 Larry Boddy2 49324 92 Ian Nicoll1 79417 93 Gordon E Weese1 62716 26 Joseph Donovan RossStrathcona East Ernest C Manning6 31449 70 C Jack Thorpe2 97623 43 Percy Marshall1 45811 48 Ray Field1 90915 03 Ernest C ManningStrathcona South Joe G Radstaak3 93440 73 Oscar H Kruger2 59426 86 John Kloster96810 02 Bill McLean2 12321 98 Strathcona West Randolph H McKinnon5 15336 87 Donald Ross Getty6 76448 39 Edmund H Leger8906 37 Frank Kuzemski1 1157 98 Randolph H McKinnonTaber Warner Douglas Miller3 45161 24 Emil D Gundlock1 17020 76 Theodore Rudd68312 12 Dick Verwoerd2925 18 Leonard C HalmrastThree Hills Raymond Ratzlaff2 76250 48 Gordon Leslie1 11320 34 James A Lore1 31724 07 George E Pieper2684 90 Roy DavidsonVegreville Bruce Alex W Gordey2 49744 41 Mike W Kawulych1 74230 98 Wilfrid L Horton3456 14 Albin Lukawiecki1 01017 96 Alex W GordeyVermilion Ashley H Cooper2 54557 80 Hilda Wilson1 19927 23 Harry E Yaremchuk64214 58 Ashley H CooperWainwright Henry A Ruste3 80782 15 Glenn Valleau78917 03 Henry A RusteWetaskiwin Albert W Strohschein2 87945 67 Dallas Schmidt2 40838 20 Robert P Christensen1 00015 86 Albert W StrohscheinWillingdon Two Hills Nicholas A Melnyk2 16062 25 Louis Souter1 29837 41 Nicholas A MelnykSee also Edit1948 electrification plebiscite 1957 liquor plebiscite 1971 daylight saving time plebiscite List of Alberta political partiesReferences Edit Perry amp Footz 2006 p 498 Alberta Session Winds Up Calgary Herald Edmonton April 13 1965 p 1 ProQuest 2253686786 An Act to amend The Election Act SA 1965 c 23 retrieved from CanLII on July 21 2021 a b c d e f Baird 1968 p 184 Socreds Again Kick Out Bourcier Opposition To Horan The Reason Edmonton Journal May 15 1967 p 14 ProQuest 2397632581 Edmonton Jasper Place Official Results 1967 Alberta general election Alberta Heritage Community Foundation Retrieved May 21 2020 a b Perry amp Craig 2006 p 523 Wood 1985 p 47 a b Wood 1985 p 57 a b Wood 1985 p 59 Tupper 2004 p 208 Wood 1985 p 60 Wood 1985 p 58 Wood 1985 p 61 a b Perry amp Craig 2006 p 524 Important Notice Alberta Provincial Election May 23rd 1967 Calgary Herald May 12 1967 p 6 ProQuest 2253760324 An Act Respecting the use of Daylight Saving Time within the Province SA 1948 c 18 retrieved from CanLII on July 21 2021 Daylight Saving Vote Sought Edmonton Journal July 9 1963 p 31 ProQuest 2396983702 Cove Lynne March 11 1964 Under the Dome Calgary Herald Edmonton p 1 ProQuest 2253643631 Daylight Time Legislature Votes to Hold Plebiscite Edmonton Journal February 25 1966 p 15 ProQuest 2397521988 An Act to amend The Daylight Saving Time Act SA 1966 c 27 retrieved from CanLII on July 21 2021 a b Alberta Legislative Assembly 1967 p 272 Daylight Saving Everyone Out Of Step Calgary Herald April 29 1967 p 31 ProQuest 2253792698 Daylight Saving Time Supported By Builders Calgary Herald January 15 1966 p 19 ProQuest 2253705569 Vote for more of me Edmonton Journal May 20 1967 p 56 ProQuest 2397616130 Short Changed Calgary Herald May 19 1967 p 4 ProQuest 2253807084 Fast Time Calgary Herald April 29 1967 p 4 ProQuest 2253793181 a b c Boyer J Patrick 1992 Direct democracy in Canada the history and future of referendums Toronto Dundurn Press p 128 ISBN 978 1 55002 183 7 Tate Bob May 18 1967 City Sportsmen In Favor of Daylight Savings Time Calgary Herald p 55 ProQuest 2253666272 47 years later Alberta s original daylight time activist still wants extra sunlight CBC News March 13 2017 Retrieved July 21 2021 Tourist Official Supports Provincial DST Campaign Calgary Herald May 15 1967 p 27 ProQuest 2253778098 Maccagno Supports DST Move Calgary Herald May 9 1967 p 7 ProQuest 2253639613 Jackson Lawrence May 12 1967 Opposing Forces Line up for Daylight Time Battle Calgary Herald pp 1 2 2253760250 On May 23 Vote for Bill Jones Edmonton Journal May 11 1967 p 7 ProQuest 2397601865 Alberta Legislative Assembly 1968 p 68 Rural Cousins Defeat DST Calgary Herald May 24 1967 p 1 ProQuest 2253765277 Another Time Calgary Herald May 25 1967 p 4 ProQuest 2253687989 Works citedBaird Richard E 1968 Alberta In Saywell John ed Canadian Annual Review for 1967 Toronto University of Toronto Press pp 180 186 ISBN 978 0 8020 1549 5 Perry Sandra E Footz Valerie L 2006 Massolin Philip A ed A Higher Duty Speakers of the Legislative Assemblies Edmonton AB Legislative Assembly of Alberta ISBN 0 9689217 3 6 Retrieved August 9 2020 Perry Sandra E Craig Jessica J 2006 The Mantle of Leadership Premiers of the Northwest Territories and Alberta Edmonton Alberta Legislative Assembly of Alberta ISBN 0 9689217 2 8 Tupper Allan 2004 Peter Lougheed In Bradford J Rennie ed Alberta Premiers of the Twentieth Century Regina Saskatchewan Canadian Plains Research Center University of Regina ISBN 0 88977 151 0 Wood David G 1985 The Lougheed legacy Toronto Key Porter Books ISBN 0 919493 48 3 OCLC 910363674 Primary SourcesAlberta Legislative Assembly 1967 Alberta Gazette 1967 Part 2 Edmonton Queen s Printer Alberta Legislative Assembly 1968 Alberta Journals 1968 16th Leg 1st Sess Vol LXXIV Edmonton Queen s Printer Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1967 Alberta general election amp oldid 1174388903, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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