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Wetaskiwin (federal electoral district)

Former federal electoral district in Alberta, Canada


Former federal electoral district in Alberta, Canada

FieldValue
nameWetaskiwin
provinceAlberta
imageAlberta federal ridings (rural) - Wetaskiwin.svg
captionWetaskiwin in relation to the other Alberta federal electoral districts (2003 boundaries)
fed-statusdefunct
fed-district-number48026
fed-created1924
fed-abolished2013
fed-election-first1925
fed-election-last2011
demo-pop-ref
demo-area-ref
demo-census-date2011
demo-pop113780
demo-electors79862
demo-electors-date2011
demo-area14996.45
demo-cdDivision No. 8, Division No. 9, Division No. 11
demo-csdLeduc County, Clearwater County, Wetaskiwin, Lacombe, County of Wetaskiwin No. 10, Lacombe County, Ponoka County, Brazeau County, Rocky Mountain House, Ponoka

| fed-status = defunct | fed-district-number = 48026 | fed-created = 1924 | fed-abolished = 2013 | fed-election-first = 1925 | fed-election-last = 2011 | fed-rep = | fed-rep-link = | fed-rep-party = | fed-rep-party-link = | demo-pop-ref = | demo-area-ref = | demo-electors-ref = | demo-census-date = 2011 | demo-pop = 113780 | demo-electors = 79862 | demo-electors-date = 2011 | demo-area = 14996.45 | demo-cd = Division No. 8, Division No. 9, Division No. 11 | demo-csd = Leduc County, Clearwater County, Wetaskiwin, Lacombe, County of Wetaskiwin No. 10, Lacombe County, Ponoka County, Brazeau County, Rocky Mountain House, Ponoka

Wetaskiwin was a federal electoral district in Alberta, Canada, that was represented in the House of Commons of Canada from 1925 to 2015.

Geography

In its final configuration, the riding was located south of Edmonton and was legally described as commencing at the intersection of the westerly limit of the Town of Devon with the right bank of the North Saskatchewan River; thence generally southeasterly along the westerly limit of said town to the southwesterly corner of said town (at Highway 60); thence southerly along said highway to Township Road 494; thence easterly along said road to the westerly limit of the City of Leduc; thence easterly, southerly, easterly, northerly and easterly along the southerly limit of said city to Highway No. 623; thence easterly along said highway to the easterly limit of Leduc County; thence generally southwesterly along said limit to the northerly limit of the County of Wetaskiwin No. 10; thence easterly and generally southerly along the northerly and easterly limits of said county to the easterly limit of Ponoka County; thence generally southerly along said limit to the northerly limit of Lacombe County; thence generally southeasterly, generally southerly and generally westerly along the northerly, easterly and southerly limits of said county to the east boundary of R 4 W 5; thence south along the east boundary of R 4 W 5 to the south boundary of Tp 38; thence west along the south boundary of Tp 38 to the west boundary of R 8 W 5; thence north along the west boundary of R 8 W 5 to the north boundary of Tp 41; thence east along the north boundary of Tp 41 to the right bank of the North Saskatchewan River; thence generally northerly and generally easterly along said bank to the point of commencement.

This federal electoral riding represents the County of Wetaskiwin No. 10, Ponoka County, Lacombe County, Leduc County, part of Clearwater County and the cities of Wetaskiwin and Lacombe.

History

This riding was created in 1924 from Strathcona and Victoria ridings.

Like most federal ridings in Alberta, it elected a United Farmers of Alberta MP, former Calgary labour reformer William Irvine, in 1926 and 1930. Then, in 1935 and 1940, it elected Norman Jaques of the radical monetary reform party Social Credit.

Like most other ridings in rural Alberta, Wetaskiwin veered sharply to the right after World War II. It was represented by a centre-right MP without interruption from 1935 onward: Social Credit from 1935 to 1958, the Progressive Conservatives from 1958 to 1993, Reform from 1993 to 2000, the Canadian Alliance from 2000 to 2003, and the Conservatives after 2003. Individual centrist, centre-left or left-wing candidates were usually lucky to approach 20 percent of the vote; the last time a single candidate from a non-right-wing party cleared that hurdle was the 1968 federal election.

That aside, in this riding in every election from 1925 to 1957 (excepting 1935) and in 1962, the successful candidate did not win a majority of the riding's votes. More votes went to the unsuccessful candidates than went to the successful one.

In 2003, a portion of Red Deer riding was transferred to this electoral district. These boundaries took effect at the 2004 Canadian federal election.

The riding was abolished ahead of the 2015 election. The bulk of the riding, including Lacombe, was merged with the northern portion of Red Deer to form Red Deer—Lacombe. Much of the northern portion, including the city of Wetaskiwin, was merged with Edmonton—Mill Woods—Beaumont to form Edmonton—Wetaskiwin. Smaller portions were transferred to Yellowhead and Battle River—Crowfoot.

Members of Parliament

| Assembly# = 15 | RepTerms# = 1 | PartyTerms# = 1 | Assembly# = 16 | RepTerms# = 2 | PartyTerms# = 2 | Assembly# = 17 | Assembly# = 18 | RepTerms# = 3 | PartyTerms# = 6 | Assembly# = 19 | Assembly# = 20 | Assembly# = 21 | RepTerms# = 3 | Assembly# = 22 | Assembly# = 23 | Assembly# = 24 | RepTerms# = 1 | PartyTerms# = 11 | Assembly# = 25 | RepTerms# = 4 | Assembly# = 26 | Assembly# = 27 | Assembly# = 28 | Assembly# = 29 | RepTerms# = 5 | Assembly# = 30 | Assembly# = 31 | Assembly# = 32 | Assembly# = 33 | Assembly# = 34 | RepTerms# = 1 | Assembly# = 35 | RepTerms# = 6 | PartyTerms# = 2 | Assembly# = 36 | #ByElections = 1 | PartyTerms# = 2 | Assembly# = 37 | #ByElections = 1 | PartyTerms# = 5 | Assembly# = 38 | Assembly# = 39 | RepTerms# = 3 | Assembly# = 40 | Assembly# = 41

Last member of Parliament

Its most recent member of Parliament before it ceased to exist was Blaine Calkins, a member of the Conservative Party of Canada.

Election results

References

References

  1. [[#2011fed. Statistics Canada]]: 2011
  2. [[#2011fed. Statistics Canada]]: 2011
  3. E.G. Mardon, Who's Who in Federal Politics from Alberta, p. 48
  4. Ernest Mardon and Austin Mardon, Alberta Election Results, 1882–1992
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