The Alberta general election of 1971 was the seventeenth general election for the Province of Alberta, Canada. It was held on August 30, 1971 to elect members of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta.
The Progressive Conservative Party, led by Peter Lougheed, broke the 36-year hegemony on Alberta politics of the Social Credit Party. Ernest C. Manning had resigned Social Credit leader and premier in 1968, a year after leading the Socreds to their ninth consecutive majority government. His successor, Harry E. Strom, had been unable to revive what was seen as a tired regime. Meanwhile, Lougheed had significant momentum going into the 1971 election, increasing his caucus from six members to ten after two floor crossings and two by-election wins. The collapse of the other opposition parties made the PCs the only credible challenger to the Socreds. Lougheed, with 46% of the popular vote, won 49 of the 75 seats in the legislature, and formed a strong majority government.
Ironically, Social Credit garnered a record number of votes in this election compared to previous elections. Although Social Credit lost only a small share of its popular vote from 1967, their support in the province's two largest cities, Edmonton and Calgary, almost disappeared. The party lost all of its seats in Edmonton, and all but five seats in Calgary. Due to a quirk in the first past the post system, this decimated the Socred caucus, knocking them down to 25 seats.
The defeat sent Social Credit into headlong decline. While it managed to stay in the legislature until 1982, it has never again been a significant force in Alberta politics.
The Liberal Party was shut out of the legislature, and had no momentum going into the election with one member crossing the floor to the PCs and the rest resigning long before the 1971 vote, while Alberta New Democratic Party leader Grant Notley was the only NDPer to win election. He sat as the only New Democrat in the legislature until 1982.
Contents |
Results
| Party | Party leader | # of candidates |
Seats | Popular vote | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1967 | Elected | % Change | # | % | % Change | ||||
| Progressive Conservative |
|
75 | 6 | 49 | +717% | 296,934 | 46.40% | +20.40% | |
| Social Credit |
|
75 | 55 | 25 | -54.5% | 262,953 | 41.10% | -3.5% | |
| New Democrats |
|
70 | - | 1 | 73,038 | 11.42% | -4.56% | ||
| Liberal |
|
20 | 3 | - | -100% | 6,475 | 1.01% | -9.80% | |
| Independent | 3 | 1 | - | -100% | 462 | 0.07% | -1.31% | ||
| Total | 243 | 65 | 75 | +15.4% | 639,862 | 100% |
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| Source: Elections Alberta | |||||||||
Note:
* Party did not nominate candidates in the previous election.
Daylight saving time plebiscite
The province of Alberta voted on its fourth provincial plebiscite. Voters were again asked to endorse a proposal to adopt daylight saving time (summer time). The proposal was rejected by a very slim margin in 1967. This time however it passed with a wide margin of 61.37% of the vote.
| Do you favour province-wide daylight saving time? | |||
| For | Against | ||
| 386,846 61.47% | 242,431 38.53% | ||
For break down of results see individual districts
Members elected
For complete electoral history, see individual districts
| 17th Alberta Legislative Assembly | |||
| District | Member | Party | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Athabasca | Frank Appleby | Progressive Conservative | |
| Banff-Cochrane | Clarence Copithorne | Progressive Conservative | |
| Barrhead | Hugh Horner | Progressive Conservative | |
| Bonnyville | Donald Hansen | Progressive Conservative | |
| Bow Valley | Fred Mandeville | Social Credit | |
| Calgary-Bow | Roy Wilson | Social Credit | |
| Calgary-Buffalo | Ron Ghitter | Progressive Conservative | |
| Calgary Currie | Fred Peacock | Progressive Conservative | |
| Calgary Elbow | David John Russell | Progressive Conservative | |
| Calgary-Egmont | Merv Leitch | Progressive Conservative | |
| Calgary-Foothills | Len Werry | Progressive Conservative | |
| Calgary-Glenmore | Bill Dickie | Progressive Conservative | |
| Calgary-McCall | George Ho Lem | Social Credit | |
| Calgary-McKnight | Calvin Lee | Progressive Conservative | |
| Calgary-Millican | Arthur J. Dixon | Social Credit | |
| Calgary-Mountain View | Albert Ludwig | Social Credit | |
| Calgary-North Hill | Roy Farran | Progressive Conservative | |
| Calgary West | Peter Lougheed | Progressive Conservative | |
| Camrose | Gordon Stromberg | Progressive Conservative | |
| Cardston | Edgar Hinman | Social Credit | |
| Clover Bar | Walt Buck | Social Credit | |
| Cypress | Harry Strom | Social Credit | |
| Drayton Valley | Rudolph Zander | Progressive Conservative | |
| Drumheller | Gordon Taylor | Social Credit | |
| Edmonton-Avonmore | Horst Schmid | Progressive Conservative | |
| Edmonton-Belmont | Bert Hohol | Progressive Conservative | |
| Edmonton-Beverly | Bill Diachuk | Progressive Conservative | |
| Edmonton-Calder | Tom Chambers | Progressive Conservative | |
| Edmonton Centre | Gordon Miniely | Progressive Conservative | |
| Edmonton-Glenora | Lou Hyndman | Progressive Conservative | |
| William Yurko | Progressive Conservative | ||
| Edmonton-Highlands | David Thomas King | Progressive Conservative | |
| Edmonton Jasper Place | Leslie Young | Progressive Conservative | |
| Edmonton-Kingsway | Kenneth Paproski | Progressive Conservative | |
| Edmonton Meadowlark | Gerard Amerongen | Progressive Conservative | |
| Edmonton-Norwood | Catherine Chichak | Progressive Conservative | |
| Edmonton-Ottewell | John Ashton | Progressive Conservative | |
| Edmonton-Parkallen | Neil Crawford | Progressive Conservative | |
| Edmonton-Strathcona | Julian Koziak | Progressive Conservative | |
| Edmonton-Whitemud | Don Getty | Progressive Conservative | |
| Edson | Robert Dowling | Progressive Conservative | |
| Grande Prairie | Winston Backus | Progressive Conservative | |
| Hanna-Oyen | Clinton French | Social Credit | |
| Highwood | Edward Benoit | Social Credit | |
| Innisfail | Clifford Doan | Progressive Conservative | |
| Lac La Biche-McMurray | Damase Bouvier | Social Credit | |
| Lacombe | Jack Cookson | Progressive Conservative | |
| Lesser Slave Lake | Dennis Barton | Social Credit | |
| Lethbridge-East | John Anderson | Social Credit | |
| Lethbridge-West | Richard Gruenwald | Social Credit | |
| Little Bow | Raymond Speaker | Social Credit | |
| Lloydminster | Bud Miller | Progressive Conservative | |
| Macleod | Leighton Buckwell | Social Credit | |
| Medicine Hat-Redcliff | William Wyse | Social Credit | |
| Olds-Didsbury | Robert Curtis Clark | Social Credit | |
| Peace River | Al Adair | Progressive Conservative | |
| Pincher Creek-Crowsnest | Charles Drain | Social Credit | |
| Ponoka | Don McCrimmon | Progressive Conservative | |
| Red Deer | James Foster | Progressive Conservative | |
| Redwater-Andrew | George Topolnisky | Progressive Conservative | |
| Rocky Mountain House | Helen Hunley | Progressive Conservative | |
| Sedgewick-Coronation | Ralph Sorenson | Social Credit | |
| Smoky River | Marvin Moore | Progressive Conservative | |
| Spirit River-Fairview | Grant Notley | NDP | |
| St. Albert | Ernie Jamison | Progressive Conservative | |
| St. Paul | Mick Fluker | Progressive Conservative | |
| Stettler | Jack Robertson | Progressive Conservative | |
| Stony Plain | William Purdy | Progressive Conservative | |
| Taber-Warner | Douglas Miller | Social Credit | |
| Three Hills | Allan Warrack | Progressive Conservative | |
| Vegreville | John Batiuk | Progressive Conservative | |
| Vermilion-Viking | Ashley Cooper | Social Credit | |
| Wainwright | Henry Ruste | Social Credit | |
| Wetaskiwin-Leduc | James Henderson | Social Credit | |
| Whitecourt | Peter Trynchy | Progressive Conservative | |
See also
- 1948 Electrification Plebiscite
- 1957 Liquor Plebiscite
- 1967 Daylight Saving Plebiscite
- List of Alberta political parties
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