Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

First Byelection Since NDP Victory In Alberta Goes To Wildrose Party

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 04 Sep, 2015 12:27 PM
    CALGARY — Moments after messing up the NDP's momentum with a provincial byelection win in Calgary on Thursday night, the Opposition Wildrose encouraged its members to readjust their sights to the federal vote and a victory for Conservative Leader Stephen Harper.
     
    Wildrose Leader Brian Jean, a former Conservative MP under Harper, told party supporters to take a short breather before getting back to the campaign grind.
     
    "Many of us, most of us — I'm hoping all of us — will continue to campaign for Stephen Harper's Conservative government," he said. "That is the very best option for Canada."
     
    The rowdy Wildrose crowd chanted, "Harper! Harper! Harper!"
     
    The Calgary-Foothills byelection provided the first stumble in the NDP's unprecedented climb to power, and took place in a constituency that had been held by the Conservatives since 1971.
     
    With all 66 polls reporting, Wildrose candidate Prasad Panda won with 38 per cent of the vote compared to 26 per cent for NDP candidate Bob Hawkesworth, a former MLA and Calgary city councillor.
     
    Tory candidate Blair Houston, a restaurant owner, was third with 22 per cent of the vote.
     
    Less than 90 minutes after polls closed, the NDP had issued a concession through a news release from Alberta Finance Minister Joe Ceci congratulating Panda on the victory.
     
    "We knew that it would be an uphill battle given the history of the riding and the economic challenges we face because of the collapse in oil prices," said Ceci.
     
    "We hear the concerns about oil prices loud and clear. And we are working hard to release an economic recovery plan in the coming weeks."
     
    Hawkesworth urged his supporters to put things into perspective.
     
    "In a byelection less than a year ago, we polled less than five per cent in Calgary Foothills. So before we say it's too bad about tonight, at least we were contenders and we came close."
     
    Panda told his raucous supporters he wanted to keep the evening celebratory and didn't want to talk policy, but he did have one message for the NDP government.
     
    "Calgary is worried about jobs and the premier needs to understand that," he said. "People are so worried about the NDP's ideology. They didn't want to experiment with this risky agenda."
     
    The byelection in Calgary-Foothills was called after former Tory premier Jim Prentice won the riding on election night in May only to resign from politics the same night when his party was handed their walking papers by Premier Rachel Notley's NDP.
     
    Some pollsters, including Janet Brown of Calgary, expected it to be a hotly contested race between the NDP and the Wildrose.
     
    She suggested the NDP was eager to win to prove their general election victory wasn't a fluke, while the Wildrose needed to prove it could win an urban riding.
     
    Notley rejected the premise, saying the outcome of the byelection was not a "litmus test" for her government, which has a comfortable 53-seat majority in the 87-seat legislature.
     
    Nevertheless, she paid multiple visits to the constituency during the month-long campaign.
     
    The race was nasty at times.
     
    The Wildrose, which doesn't hold a seat in Edmonton or Calgary, accused the NDP of trying to scare voters by suggesting the Wildrose backs sweeping and punishing civil service job cuts.
     
    The NDP fired back at the Wildrose for a campaign pamphlet, written in Cantonese, that compared the government to communists. The Wildrose said it meant to say socialists and that was lost in translation.
     
    It was the third time in a little over 10 months that Calgary-Foothills voters had gone to the ballot box.
     
    In preparation for taking over the Alberta Conservatives after the resignation of former premier Alison Redford, Prentice had won the constituency in a byelection in October 2014.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Feds Award $114m Grant To University Of Toronto For Regenerative Medicine Program

    Feds Award $114m Grant To University Of Toronto For Regenerative Medicine Program
    Prof. Peter Zandstra says the new initiative called Medicine By Design could make it possible to improve treatments for such conditions as cancer, diabetes and blindness.

    Feds Award $114m Grant To University Of Toronto For Regenerative Medicine Program

    Dead Indian American Woman Hinal Patel, 22, Was To Go To Medical School

    Dead Indian American Woman Hinal Patel, 22, Was To Go To Medical School
    A New Jersey-based Indian American woman emergency health worker, who died when a car slammed into her ambulance on July 25, was all set to go to medical school from July 27

    Dead Indian American Woman Hinal Patel, 22, Was To Go To Medical School

    BC Appeal Court Upholds Dangerous Offender Status For Sexually Predator Kolten Mastronardi

    BC Appeal Court Upholds Dangerous Offender Status For Sexually Predator Kolten Mastronardi
    Kolten Mastronardi was declared a dangerous offender in 2012 and given an indeterminate sentence after being found guilty on 12 counts of sexual assault,

    BC Appeal Court Upholds Dangerous Offender Status For Sexually Predator Kolten Mastronardi

    Two Calgary Men Convicted In Elaborate Ponzi Scheme Sentenced To 12 Years Each

    Two Calgary Men Convicted In Elaborate Ponzi Scheme Sentenced To 12 Years Each
    Gary Sorenson, 71, and Milowe Brost, 61, were found guilty of fraud and theft in February for an elaborate, multimillion-dollar scheme in which investors were promised unrealistic returns.

    Two Calgary Men Convicted In Elaborate Ponzi Scheme Sentenced To 12 Years Each

    Nearly Two Thirds Of Canadians Watched At Least Some Pan Am Games Coverage: CBC

    Nearly Two Thirds Of Canadians Watched At Least Some Pan Am Games Coverage: CBC
    TORONTO — New data show nearly two-thirds of Canadians tuned in to televised coverage of the Pan Am Games, with an average audience of almost 2.2 million watching Sunday's closing ceremony.

    Nearly Two Thirds Of Canadians Watched At Least Some Pan Am Games Coverage: CBC

    Alberta Appeal Court Judge Russell Brown Named To Supreme Court Of Canada

    Alberta Appeal Court Judge Russell Brown Named To Supreme Court Of Canada
    OTTAWA — Prime Minister Stephen Harper has named Alberta Court of Appeal Justice Russell Brown as his latest appointment to the Supreme Court of Canada.

    Alberta Appeal Court Judge Russell Brown Named To Supreme Court Of Canada