Foothills-Rocky View

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Template:Short description Template:Use Canadian English Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox Canada electoral district Foothills-Rocky View was a provincial electoral district in Alberta, Canada, mandated to return a single member to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta from under the first-past-the-post voting system 2004 to 2012.

History

The Foothills-Rocky View electoral district was located on the western rural edge of Calgary in southern Alberta. It was created in the 2003 electoral boundary re-distribution from the eastern portion of the electoral district of Banff-Cochrane and the western portion of the old electoral district of Airdrie-Rocky View which comprises the northern portion of the riding.[1] The district is named after the Foothills of Southern Alberta and Rocky View County. The riding included part of the town of Cochrane, Bragg Creek, and the Springbank area.

The Foothills-Rocky View electoral district was dissolved in the 2010 electoral boundary re-distribution, and portions of the district would incorporate the Airdrie, Banff-Cochrane, and Chestermere-Rocky View electoral districts for the 2012 Alberta general election.[2]

The district and its antecedents have been favourable to electing Progressive Conservative candidates in recent decades.

Boundary history

Members of the Legislative Assembly for Foothills-Rocky View[4]
Assembly Years Member Party
See Banff-Cochrane 1979-2001 and Airdrie-Rocky View 1993-2001
26th 2004–2008 rowspan=2 Template:Canadian party colour| Ted Morton Progressive Conservative
27th 2008–2012
See Airdrie, Banff-Cochrane and Chestermere-Rocky View 2012-2019

Electoral history

The electoral district was created in the 2004 boundary redistribution. In the election held that year Progressive Conservative candidate Ted Morton who chose not to run for another term of senator-in-waiting in the 2004 Senate nominee election decided to run for seat to the legislature instead.

Morton defeated four other candidates with 60% of the vote to pick up the new district for the Progressive Conservatives. After the election Morton began his race to succeed Ralph Klein in the 2006 Progressive Conservative leadership race. Morton lost but was appointed to cabinet by new Premier Ed Stelmach in 2006.

Morton ran for a second term in the 2008 general election. He slightly increased his popular vote and returned to power with a big majority. In 2010 he was shuffled to the Minister of Finance portfolio.

Legislative election results

2004

Template:2004 Alberta general election/Foothills-Rocky View

2008

Template:2008 Alberta general election/Foothills-Rocky View

Senate nominee election results

2004

2004 Senate nominee election results: Foothills-Rocky View[5] Turnout 50.42%
Affiliation Candidate Votes % votes % ballots Rank

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Progressive Conservative Bert Brown 5,787 19.76% 61.15% 1

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Progressive Conservative Jim Silye 4,283 14.62% 45.26% 5

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Progressive Conservative Betty Unger 3,987 13.61% 42.13% 2

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Progressive Conservative David Usherwood 2,942 10.04% 31.09% 6

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Progressive Conservative Cliff Breitkreuz 2,882 9.84% 30.45% 3

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Independent Link Byfield 2,819 9.62% 29.79% 4

Template:CANelec Template:CANelec Template:Canadian party colour

Independent Tom Sindlinger 1,597 5.45% 16.88% 9

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Total votes 29,291 100%
Total ballots 9,464 3.10 votes per ballot
Rejected, spoiled and declined 1,839

Voters had the option of selecting four candidates on the ballot

2004 student vote results

Participating schools[6]
Millarville Community School
Springbank Community High School
Springbank Middle School
Strathcona-Tweedsmuir School
W G Murdoch School

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.

2004 Alberta student vote results[7]
Affiliation Candidate Votes %

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Progressive Conservative Ted Morton 571 42.42%

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Shelley Willson 377 28.01%

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Liberal Herb Coburn 219 16.27%

Template:CANelec Template:Canadian party colour

NDP Roland Schmidt 82 6.09%
Total 1,346 100%
Rejected, spoiled and declined 57

See also

References

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Further reading

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External links

Template:AB-former-ED Template:AlbertaElections Template:Authority control

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