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1935 Alberta general election

8th general election


8th general election

FieldValue
election_name1935 Alberta general election
countryAlberta
flag_year1921
typelegislative
party_colourno
party_nameno
previous_election1930 Alberta general election
previous_year1930
outgoing_members7th Alberta Legislative Assembly
election_date
elected_mps[members](8th-alberta-legislative-assembly)
next_election1940 Alberta general election
next_year1940
seats_for_election63 seats in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta
32 seats were needed for a majority
turnout81.8%
image1[[File:W aberhart (cropped).jpg150x150px]]
colour1
leader1William Aberhart *(de facto)*
party1
leader_since1September 3, 1935
leaders_seat1*Did not run*
last_election1pre-creation
seats_before10
seats1**56**
seat_change156
popular_vote1**163,700**
percentage1**54.2%**
swing1
image2**LIB**
colour2
leader2William R. Howson
party2
leader_since2October 21, 1932
leaders_seat2Edmonton
last_election211 seats, 24.6%
seats_before213
seats25
seat_change28
popular_vote269,845
percentage223.1%
swing21.5%
image3[[File:David Milwyn Duggan.JPG150x150px]]
colour3
leader3David M. Duggan
party3
leader_since31930
leaders_seat3Edmonton
last_election36 seats, 14.8%
seats_before36
seats32
seat_change34
popular_vote319,358
percentage36.4%
swing38.4%
image4[[File:Richard Reid.jpg150x150px]]
colour4
leader4Richard G. Reid
party4
leader_since41934
leaders_seat4Vermilion *(lost re-election)*
last_election439 seats, 39.4%
seats_before436
seats40
seat_change436
popular_vote433,063
percentage411.0%
swing428.4%
image5[[File:Fred J. White c.1929.jpg150x150px]]
colour5
leader5Fred J. White
party5
leader_since5between 1921 & 1926
last_election54 seats, 7.6%
seats_before54
seats50
seat_change54
popular_vote55,086
percentage51.7%
swing55.9%
titlePremier
posttitlePremier after election
before_electionRichard G. Reid
before_party
after_electionWilliam Aberhart
after_party

32 seats were needed for a majority The 1935 Alberta general election was held on August 22, 1935, to elect members of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta. The newly founded Social Credit Party of Alberta won a sweeping victory, unseating the 14-year government of the United Farmers of Alberta. It was one of only five times that Alberta has changed governments.

Premier John E. Brownlee had resigned on July 10, 1934, when he was sued and found liable for the seduction of a young clerk working in the Attorney-General's office. Although the verdict was immediately set aside by the presiding judge, the scandal seriously damaged the UFA's reputation among socially conservative Albertans. Provincial Treasurer Richard G. Reid succeeded him, but was unable to change the party's fortunes. The government had fallen into disfavour as it had proven unable to address the Depression, which had hit Alberta particularly hard, and due to the government's unwillingness to accede to demands to adopt Social Credit policies and programs.

Social Credit won 56 of the 63 seats in the legislature, and over 50% of the popular vote, well beyond even the most optimistic Socred projections. Many of those gains came at the expense of the UFA, which lost all of its seats in one of the worst defeats ever suffered by a provincial government in Canada. Reid and Brownlee, for instance, were heavily defeated by Socred challengers, with Reid being pushed into third place. The UFA did receive 11 percent of the vote so its due share was about ten members - the province's limited use of PR did not ensure that it won any seats at all.

The UFA's wipeout happened just a month after the Prince Edward Island Tories lost all 18 of their seats at that year's provincial election. A similar wipeout would not happen again until the 1987 New Brunswick general election, when the governing New Brunswick Tories lost all 39 of their seats.

The Alberta Liberals in this election ran with the tactically fatal slogan, the "rest of Canada can't be wrong"—referring to the popularity of the Liberal Party in the rest of the country. It did not work; they had their seat count cut in half. However, due to the UFA being swept from the legislature, the Liberals wound up as the Official Opposition. The Conservatives lost four of their six seats.

The Socreds' expectations for the election had been so low that they had not even named a formal leader for the campaign. When the newly elected Socred MLAs held their first caucus meeting, the first order of business was to select a leader and premier-designate. The obvious choice was the party's founder and guiding force, Calgary-based Baptist pastor William Aberhart. Persuaded to accept the mantle of leadership, Aberhart was sworn in as premier on September 3.

This provincial election, like the previous two, saw district-level proportional representation (Single transferable voting) used to elect the MLAs of Edmonton and Calgary. City-wide districts were used to elect multiple MLAs in the cities. All the other MLAs were elected in single-member districts through Instant-runoff voting.

The turnout of the 1935 election topped 80%, and no election in Alberta has come close to this mark.

This election campaign is seen as the most negative in Alberta's history, with reports of Social Credit members, operating openly and on Aberhart's directives, defacing the campaign signs of opponents and drowning their speeches by honking car horns. Many campaign ads also focused mostly on attacking the opposing parties.

After the 1935 election results were in, newspapers across North America took notice, with the Boston Herald running the headline "Alberta Goes Crazy!".

This shift marked the first in Social Credit's nine consecutive election victories, for a total of 36 years in office–one of the longest unbroken runs in government in the Commonwealth. The UFA never recovered from this wipeout defeat, withdrawing from politics altogether in 1937. Many of UFA's erstwhile supporters shifted to supporting the CCF, whose full name "CCF (Farmer-Labour-Socialist)" indicates how it was a merging of UFA and other previous farmer and labor parties.

Results

PartyLeaderCandidatesFirst-preference votesSeatsVotes±% FpvChange (pp)[1930](1930-alberta-general-election)1935±301,752100.00%
William Aberhart63163,700163,70054.25{{bartable54.25-11embackground:green}}56Richard G. Reid4533,06341,124
**Total**240
Rejected ballots8,269562
Turnout310,021114,09581.8%15.1
Registered voters378,24984,454

MLAs elected

Synopsis of results

RidingFirst-preference votesTurnout
including spoilt ballotsFinal countsWinning partyNameSCUFALibConLabCommIndTotalSCUFALibI-Lib[1930](1930-alberta-general-election)1935
Acadia1,8346282892,75190.3%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Alexandra2,4799245612021974,36378.3%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Athabasca1,7649503153,02971.0%*Elected on 1st count*LibSC
Beaver River1,7515727751473,24566.8%*Elected on 1st count*LibSC
Bow Valley1,7764015912042,97285.9%*Elected on 1st count*IndSC
Camrose4,3351,0391,3956,76986.7%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Cardston2,0275654713,06395.4%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Clover Bar2,5038441,1052644,71686.0%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Cochrane1,8805916283373,43687.9%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Coronation2,6748446254,14387.4%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Cypress1,689587798513,12583.0%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Didsbury2,7316106073034,25185.0%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Drumheller2,1583413427783,61984.4%*Elected on 1st count*IndSC
Edson2,1541,620John Sedgwick Cowper was previously a member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia.1,4145,18876.0%2,4432,068LabSC
Empress1,4533242392,01684.5%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Gleichen2,0938955694393,99684.3%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Grande Prairie2,7411,8092,3874647,40175.6%3,1423,061UFASC
Grouard1,4473462,2724,06578.1%*Elected on 1st count*LibLib
Hand Hills3,2707075524,52986.5%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Innisfail2,8053865833184,09287.5%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Lac Ste. Anne1,6681,0808971333,77875.6%1,7911,518UFASC
Lacombe3,4837218385195,56186.6%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Leduc2,9403571,3051664,76882.0%*Elected on 1st count*LibSC
Lethbridge3,7001,9463416546,64181.6%*Elected on 1st count*LabSC
Little Bow2,3227044743,50087.9%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Macleod1,6806503872,71786.1%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Medicine Hat3,2361,2526535,14183.3%*Elected on 1st count*LibSC
Nanton-Claresholm1,7676125122693,16586.3%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Okotoks-High River3,0621,0059704525,48985.8%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Olds3,5386949551675,35491.6%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Peace River2,4749941,3893085,16569.6%2,2691,898UFASC
Pembina3,1331,0301,1451835,49180.1%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Pincher Creek1,2142965283122,35088.4%*Elected on 1st count*LibSC
Ponoka2,2958796963,87086.6%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Red Deer3,5657886122916225,87885.6%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Ribstone2,6844995893,77287.3%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Rocky Mountain2,9961,0331,0803895,49882.0%*Elected on 1st count*IndSC
St. Albert1,4311164461,253Lucien Boudreau (Ind-Liberal) - 955 votes; A.S. McRae (Ind-Conservative) - 258 votes.3,20686.4%1,6191,445UFASC
St. Paul2,5679461,9635,47682.2%2,6792,364LibSC
Sedgewick3,6429336325,10788.7%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Stettler3,6035228822715,27889.9%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Stony Plain2,8323121,4721714,78782.8%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Sturgeon2,4658571,5333615605,77680.8%2,7292,053UFASC
Taber2,8797576424,27879.9%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Vegreville2,8179951,6811095,60282.5%3,0472,065UFASC
Vermilion2,4528761,0622448385,47282.8%2,6641,437UFASC
Victoria2,0453191,1811413,68677.8%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Wainwright2,3828119531944,34083.6%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Warner1,7025885342273,05182.7%*Elected on 1st count*UFASC
Wetaskiwin2,7625061,1491871414,74585.7%*Elected on 1st count*LibSC
Whitford1,2659406159663,78677.8%1,3701,121UFASC

: = Open seat : = turnout is above provincial average : = Candidate was in previous Legislature : = Incumbent had switched allegiance : = Previously incumbent in another riding : = Not incumbent; was previously elected to the Legislature : = Incumbency arose from by-election gain : = previously an MP in the House of Commons of Canada : = Multiple candidates

Multi-member districts

DistrictSeats won
(in order declared)
CalgaryABSocial Creditbackground}}
Edmonton
Conservative

: = Candidate was in previous Legislature : = First-time MLA : = Previously incumbent in another district.

STV analysis

Exhausted votes

Twelve districts went beyond first-preference counts in order to determine winning candidates:

DistrictCountsExhausted1st preferenceFinalVotes% of 1st pref
Calgary41,19337,8273,366{{bartable8.1721embackground:red}}
Edmonton37,26735,6251,642{{bartable4.4121embackground:red}}
Edson5,1884,511677{{bartable13.0521embackground:red}}
Grande Prairie7,4016,2031,198{{bartable16.1921embackground:red}}
Lac Ste. Anne3,7783,309469{{bartable12.4121embackground:red}}
Peace River5,1654,167998{{bartable19.3221embackground:red}}
St. Albert3,2063,064142{{bartable4.4321embackground:red}}
St. Paul5,4765,043433{{bartable7.9121embackground:red}}
Sturgeon5,7764,782994{{bartable17.2121embackground:red}}
Vegreville5,6025,112490{{bartable8.7521embackground:red}}
Vermilion5,4724,1011,371{{bartable25.0521embackground:red}}
Whitford3,7862,4911,295{{bartable34.2021embackground:red}}

Calgary

There were more contestants in the race compared to 1930, but only Social Credit ran a full slate of candidates:

PartyCandidatesMLAs elected19351930±19351930±
4413233
**Total**2013766

Eighteen counts were needed to determine the outcome, but count-by-count results are not available. There are only detailed results for the later counts. Manning, Irwin, Anderson, Bowlen and Gostick achieved quota, and Hugill obtained the next best result on the final count.

Edmonton

The 1935 race had a broader field of candidates compared to 1930:

PartyCandidatesMLAs elected19351930±19351930±
66132642
**Total**27171066

As a result, the number of counts needed to select the six MLAs expanded from 14 to 23. Howson, Barnes and Van Allen won on achieving quota; Duggan, Mullen and O'Connor had the best results in the final round.

Transferred fromNon-transferrable% transferred toTotalSocredLiberalUFAConservativeLabourCommunistReconstruction0.10%1.44%93.08%1.52%2.78%0.73%0.24%0.10%100.00%0.94%5.31%15.08%9.69%68.13%0.86%100.00%0.80%95.98%1.61%0.34%0.80%0.11%0.34%100.00%10.56%9.68%33.59%46.17%100.00%39.24%19.45%22.87%13.35%5.10%100.00%
(Howson)4553,5515810628943,815
(Jamieson)1268193124872111,280
(King)7836143713871
(Lymburn)3493201,1101,5263,305
(Lakeman)585290341199761,491

Notes

References

References

  1. (1987). "Bible Bill: A Biography of William Aberhart". Reidmore Books.
  2. . (2006). ["A Century of Democracy: Elections of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta, 1905-2005"](https://archive.org/details/centennialseries04perr/page/116/mode/2up). *[[Legislative Assembly of Alberta]]*.
  3. . (August 23, 1935). "4 Social Credit, Conservative and Liberal Win Here". *[[Calgary Herald]]*.
  4. . (August 24, 1935). "Progress Chart of Edmonton City Balloting". *[[Edmonton Bulletin]]*.
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