vertical_align_top

Edmonton-Rutherford

Provincial electoral district in Alberta, Canada
favorite
menu
in: Edmonton
add

Edmonton-Rutherford is a provincial electoral district in Alberta, Canada. The district is mandated to return a single member to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta using the first past the post method of voting.

The district was created in the boundary redistribution of 1993 from the Edmonton-Whitemud riding in South Edmonton. The district is a swing riding and has regularly changed between Liberal and Progressive Conservative control. It was named after former Premier Alexander Rutherford who represented the Strathcona constituency after the province was formed in 1905. the old Strathcona district included what is now Edmonton Rutherford.

History

edit

The electoral district was created in the 1993 boundary redistribution out of Edmonton-Whitemud.

The district saw minor changes in the 2010 redistribution. It gained some land that was part of Edmonton-Whitemud on its western boundary when the boundary was moved west from 119 Street to Whitemud Creek.

Boundary history

edit

Electoral history

edit

The electoral district was created in the boundary redistribution in 1993 from Edmonton-Whitemud riding. The first election in 1993 saw Edmonton-Whitemud incumbent Percy Wickman pickup the new district for the Liberal party with a very large majority. Wickman was re-elected in a tight race in the 1997 general election. He retired at the end of his third term in 2001 due to health issues.

The 2001 general election saw former Member of Parliament Ian McClelland pickup the district for the first time for the Progressive Conservatives. He defeated Liberal candidate Rick Miller in a hotly contested race.

McClelland and Miller would face each other for the second time in the 2004 general election. This time Miller would gain significant share of the popular vote to defeat McClelland.

Miller would only last a single term in office, he ran for re-election in 2008 but was defeated in a very close race by Progressive Conservative candidate Fred Horne.

Legislative election results

edit

1993

edit

1997

edit

2001

edit

2004

edit

2008

edit

2012

edit

2015

edit

2019

edit

2023

edit

Graphical representation

edit

Senate nominee election results

edit

2004

edit

Voters had the option of selecting four candidates on the ballot

2012

edit

Student vote results

edit

2004

edit

On November 19, 2004 a student vote was conducted at participating Alberta schools to parallel the 2004 Alberta general election results. The vote was designed to educate students and simulate the electoral process for persons who have not yet reached the legal majority. The vote was conducted in 80 of the 83 provincial electoral districts with students voting for actual election candidates. Schools with a large student body that reside in another electoral district had the option to vote for candidates outside of the electoral district then where they were physically located.

2012

edit
edit

Connected lists

expand_more
0
edit
add
No connected lists found.

Categories

expand_more
0
edit
add
helper: web search
No categories found.

Member of

expand_more
4
edit
add
helper: web search

Tags

expand_more
0
edit
add
helper: web search
No tags found.

Communities

expand_more
1
edit
add
helper: web search

Activity

expand_more
0
Community menu
Zenopy · about
terms of use · copyright · privacy
loaded in 0.10 secs
arrow_drop_down
photo_library