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1952 Alberta general election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

1952 Alberta general election

← 1948 August 5, 1952 (1952-08-05) 1955 →

61 seats in the Legislative Assembly of Alberta
31 seats were needed for a majority
  Majority party Minority party
 
LIB
Leader Ernest Manning James H. Prowse
Party Social Credit Liberal
Leader since May 31, 1943 June 25, 1947
Leader's seat Edmonton Edmonton
Last election 51 seats, 55.6% 2 seats, 17.9%
Seats before 49 2
Seats won 53 3
Seat change Increase4 Increase1
Popular vote 167,789 66,738
Percentage 56.2% 22.4%
Swing Increase0.6% Increase4.5%

  Third party Fourth party
 
CON
Leader Elmer E. Roper None
Party Co-operative Commonwealth Conservative
Leader since 1942
Leader's seat Edmonton
Last election 2 seats, 19.1% did not contest
Seats before 2 0
Seats won 2 2
Seat change ±0 Increase2
Popular vote 41,929 10,971
Percentage 14.1% 3.7%
Swing Decrease4.7%

Premier before election

Ernest Manning
Social Credit

Premier after election

Ernest Manning
Social Credit

The 1952 Alberta general election was held on August 5, 1952, to elect members of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta.

Ernest C. Manning in his third election as leader of the Social Credit Party, and its first election since the Social Credit Party paid off Alberta's first debt in 1949, led it to its fifth consecutive election victory, increasing its share of the popular vote, and winning fifty two of the sixty one seats in the legislature.

The Liberal Party formed the official opposition with only four seats. The Conservative Party returned to Alberta politics again, nominating candidates both under the "Conservative" banner, and under the "Progressive Conservative" banner recently adopted by its federal counterpart. The party won two seats, one under each banner. The Cooperative Commonwealth Federation won two seats, one that of leader Elmer Roper. The remaining seat was won by an Independent.

This provincial election, like the previous six, 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.

Voter turn-out was 59.4 percent in this election.[1]

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Transcription

Hi I’m John Green; this is Crash Course U.S. history and today we’re gonna talk about the Cold War. The Cold War is called “Cold” because it supposedly never heated up into actual armed conflict, which means, you know, that it wasn’t a war. Mr. Green, Mr. Green, but if the War on Christmas is a war and the War on Drugs is a war… You’re not going to hear me say this often in your life, Me from the Past, but that was a good point. At least the Cold War was not an attempt to make war on a noun, which almost never works, because nouns are so resilient. And to be fair, the Cold War did involve quite a lot of actual war, from Korea to Afghanistan, as the world’s two superpowers, the United States and the U.S.S.R., sought ideological and strategic influence throughout the world. So perhaps it’s best to think of the Cold War as an era, lasting roughly from 1945 to 1990. Discussions of the Cold War tend to center on international and political history and those are very important, which is why we’ve talked about them in the past. This, however, is United States history, so let us heroically gaze--as Americans so often do--at our own navel. (Libertage.) Stan, why did you turn the globe to the Green Parts of Not-America? I mean, I guess to be fair, we were a little bit obsessed with this guy. So, the Cold War gave us great spy novels, independence movements, an arms race, cool movies like Dr. Strangelove and War Games, one of the most evil mustaches in history. But it also gave us a growing awareness that the greatest existential threat to human beings is ourselves. It changed the way we imagine the world and humanity’s role in it. In his Nobel Prize Acceptance Speech, William Faulkner famously said, “Our tragedy today is a general and universal physical fear so long sustained by now that we can even bear it. There are no longer problems of the spirit. There is only the question: When will I be blown up?” So, today we’re gonna look at how that came to be the dominant question of human existence, and whether we can ever get past it. intro So after WWII the U.S. and the USSR were the only two nations with any power left. The United States was a lot stronger – we had atomic weapons, for starters, and also the Soviets had lost 20 million people in the war and they were led by a sociopathic mustachioed Joseph Stalin. But the U.S. still had worries: we needed a strong, free-market-oriented Europe (and to a lesser extent Asia) so that all the goods we were making could find happy homes. The Soviets, meanwhile, were concerned with something more immediate, a powerful Germany invading them. Again. Germany--and please do not take this personally, Germans--was very, very slow to learn the central lesson of world history: Do not invade Russia. Unless you’re the Mongols. (Mongoltage.) So at the end of World War II, the USSR “encouraged” the creation of pro-communist governments in Bulgaria, Romania, and Poland--which was a relatively easy thing to encourage, because those nations were occupied by Soviet troops. The idea for the Soviets was to create a communist buffer between them and Germany, but to the U.S. it looked like communism might just keep expanding, and that would be really bad for us, because who would buy all of our sweet, sweet industrial goods? So America responded with the policy of containment, as introduced in diplomat George F. Kennan’s famous Long Telegram. Communism could stay where it was, but it would not be allowed to spread. And ultimately this is why we fought very real wars in both Korea and Vietnam. As a government report from 1950 put it the goals of containment were: 1. Block further expansion of Soviet power 2. Expose the falsities of soviet pretensions 3. Induce a retraction of the Kremlin’s control and influence, and 4. In general, foster the seeds of destruction within the Soviet system. Harry Truman, who as you’ll recall, became President in 1945 after Franklin Delano Prez 4 Life Roosevelt died, was a big fan of containment, and the first real test of it came in Greece and Turkey in 1947. This was a very strategically valuable region because it was near the Middle East, and I don’t know if you’ve noticed this, but the United States has been just, like, a smidge interested in the Middle East the last several decades because of oil glorious oil. Right, so Truman announced the so-called Truman Doctrine, because you know why not name a doctrine after yourself, in which he pledged to support “freedom-loving peoples” against communist threats, which is all fine and good. But who will protect us against “peoples,” the pluralization of an already plural noun? Anyway, we eventually sent $400 million in aid to Greece and Turkey, and we were off to the Cold War races. The Truman Doctrine created the language through which Americans would view the world with America as free and communists as tyrannical. According to our old friend Eric Foner, “The speech set a precedent for American assistance to anticommunist regimes throughout the world, no matter how undemocratic, and for the creation of a set of global military alliances directed against the Soviet Union.”[1] It also led to the creation of a new security apparatus – the National Security Council, the Central Intelligence Agency, the Atomic Energy Commission, all of which were somewhat immune from government oversight and definitely not democratically elected. And the containment policy and the Truman Doctrine also laid the foundations for a military build-up – an arms race – which would become a key feature of the Cold War. But it wasn’t all about the military, at least at first. Like, the Marshall Plan was first introduced at Harvard’s Commencement address in June 1947 by, get this, George Marshall, in what turned out to be, like, the second most important commencement address in all of American history. Yes, yes, Stan, okay. It was a great speech, thank you for noticing. Alright, let’s go to the Thought Bubble. The Marshall Plan was a response to economic chaos in Europe brought on by a particularly harsh winter that strengthened support for communism in France and Italy. The plan sought to use US Aid to combat the economic instability that provided fertile fields for communism. As Marshall said “ our policy is not directed against any country or doctrine, but against hunger, poverty, desperation and chaos.” [2] Basically it was a New Deal for Europe, and it worked; Western Europe was rebuilt so that by 1950 production levels in industry had eclipsed pre-war levels and Europe was on its way to becoming a U.S. style-capitalist-mass-consumer society. Which it still is, kind of. Japan, although not technically part of the Marshall Plan, was also rebuilt. General Douglas MacArthur was basically the dictator there, forcing Japan to adopt a new constitution, giving women the vote, and pledging that Japan would foreswear war, in exchange for which the United States effectively became Japan’s defense force. This allowed Japan to spend its money on other things, like industry, which worked out really well for them. Meanwhile Germany was experiencing the first Berlin crisis. At the end of the war, Germany was divided into East and West, and even though the capital, Berlin, was entirely in the east, it was also divided into east and west. This meant that West Berlin was dependent on shipments of goods from West Germany through East Germany. And then, in 1948, Stalin cut off the roads to West Berlin. So, the Americans responded with an 11-month-long airlift of supplies that eventually led to Stalin lifting the blockade in 1948 and building the Berlin Wall, which stood until 1991, when Kool Aid Guy--no, wait, wait, wait, wait, that wasn’t when the Berlin Wall was built. That was in 1961. I just wanted to give Thought Bubble the opportunity to make that joke. Thanks, Thought Bubble. So right, the Wall wasn’t built until 1961, but 1949 did see Germany officially split into two nations, and also the Soviets detonated their first atomic bomb, and NATO was established, AND the Chinese Revolution ended in communist victory. So, by the end of 1950, the contours of the Cold War had been established, West versus East, Capitalist Freedom versus Communist totalitarianism. At least from where I’m sitting. Although now apparently I’m going to change where I’m sitting because it’s time for the Mystery Document. The rules here are simple. I guess the author of the Mystery Document and about 55% of the time I get shocked by the shock pen. “We must organize and enlist the energies and resources of the free world in a positive program for peace which will frustrate the Kremlin design for world domination by creating a situation in the free world to which the Kremlin will be compelled to adjust. Without such a cooperative effort, led by the United States, we will have to make gradual withdrawals under pressure until we discover one day that we have sacrificed positions of vital interest. It is imperative that this trend be reversed by a much more rapid and concerted build-up of the actual strength of both the United States and the other nations of the free world.” I mean all I can say about it is that it sounds American and, like, it was written in, like, 1951 and it seems kind of like a policy paper or something really boring so I...I mean... Yeah, I’m just going to have to take the shock. AH! National Security Council report NSC-68? Are you kidding me, Stan? Not-not 64? Or 81? 68? This is ridiculous! I call injustice. Anyway, as the apparently wildly famous NSC-68 shows, the U.S. government cast the Cold War as a rather epic struggle between freedom and tyranny, and that led to remarkable political consensus--both democrats and republicans supported most aspects of cold war policy, especially the military build-up part. Now, of course, there were some critics, like Walter Lippmann who worried that casting foreign policy in such stark ideological terms would result in the U.S. getting on the wrong side of many conflicts, especially as former colonies sought to remove the bonds of empire and become independent nations. But yeah, no, nothing like that ever happened. Yeah, I mean, it’s not like that happened in Iran or Nicaragua or Argentina or Brazil or Guatemala or Stan are you really going to make me list all of them? Fine. Or Haiti or Paraguay or the Philippines or Chile or Iraq or Indonesia or Zaire or, I’m sorry, THERE WERE A LOT OF THEM, OKAY? But these interventions were viewed as necessary to prevent the spread of communism, which was genuinely terrifying to people and it’s important to understand that. Like, national security agencies pushed Hollywood to produce anticommunist movies like “The Red Menace,” which scared people. And the CIA funded magazines, news broadcasts, concerts, art exhibitions, that gave examples of American freedom. It even supported painters like Jackson Pollack and the Museum of Modern Art in New York because American expressionism was the vanguard of artistic freedom and the exact opposite of Soviet socialist realism. I mean, have you seen Soviet paintings? Look at the hearty ankles on these socialist comrade peasants. Also because the Soviets were atheists, at least in theory, Congress in 1954 added the words “under God” to the pledge of allegiance as a sign of America’s resistance to communism. The Cold War also shaped domestic policy--anti-communist sentiment, for instance, prevented Truman from extending the social policies of the New Deal. The program that he dubbed the Fair Deal would have increased the minimum wage, extended national health insurance and increased public housing, Social Security and aid to education. But the American Medical Association lobbied against Truman’s plan for national health insurance by calling it “socialized” medicine, and Congress was in no mood to pay money for socialized anything. That problem goes away. But the government did make some domestic investments as a result of the Cold War--in the name of national security the government spent money on education, research in science, technology like computers, and transportation infrastructure. In fact we largely have the Cold War to thank for our marvelous interstate highway system, although part of the reason Congress approved it was to set up speedy evacuation routes in the event of nuclear war. And, speaking of nuclear war, it’s worth noting that a big part of the reason the Soviets were able to develop nuclear weapons so quickly was thanks to espionage, like for instance by physicist and spy Klaus Fuchs. I think I’m pronouncing that right. Fuchs worked on the Manhattan Project and leaked information to the Soviets and then later helped the Chinese to build their first bomb. Julius Rosenberg also gave atomic secrets to the Soviets, and was eventually executed--as was his less-clearly-guilty wife, Ethel. And it’s important to remember all that when thinking about the United States’s obsessive fear that there were communists in our midst. This began in 1947 with Truman’s Loyalty Review System, which required government employees to prove their patriotism when accused of disloyalty. How do you prove your loyalty? Rat out your co-workers as communists. No seriously though, that program never found any communists. This all culminated of course with the Red Scare and the rise of Wisconsin senator Joseph McCarthy, an inveterate liar who became enormously powerful after announcing in February 1950 that he had a list of 205 communists who worked in the state department In fact, he had no such thing, and McCarthy never identified a single disloyal American, but the fear of communism continued. In 1951’s Dennis v. United States, the Supreme Court upheld the notion that being a communist leader itself was a crime. In this climate of fear, any criticism of the government and its policies or the U.S. in general was seen as disloyalty. There was only one question--when will I be blown up--and it encouraged loyalty, because only the government could prevent the spread of communism and keep us from being blown up. We’ve talked a lot about different ways that Americans have imagined freedom this year, but this was a new definition of freedom--the government exists in part to keep us free from massive destruction. So, the Cold War changed America profoundly: The U.S. has remained a leader on the world stage and continued to build a large, powerful, and expensive national state. But it also changed the way we imagine what it means to be free, and what it means to be safe. Thanks for watching. I’ll see you next week. Crash Course is created by all of these nice people and it is possible because of you and your support through Subbable.com. Subbable is a crowdfunding website that allows you to support the stuff you love on a monthly basis. Our Subbable subscribers make this show possible. Thanks to them. If you value Crash Course, please check out our Subbable. There are great perks there. And thanks to all of you for watching. As we say in my hometown, don’t forget to be awesome...Wait, wait, wait Stan, is that music copyrighted? Alright. It’s not. Whew. That saved us a thousand dollars. ________________ [1] Foner. Give me Liberty ebook version p. 954 [2] ibid

Electoral redistribution

An Act was passed in 1950 that provided for the increase in the number of MLAs from 57 to 61, upon the next election.[2] Calgary now returned six MLAs and Edmonton seven (instead of the five each previously had), and the following other changes were made:

Abolished New
New districts
Renaming of districts
  1. ^ from part of St. Paul
  2. ^ also receiving part of Athabasca

Results

Elections to the 12th Alberta Legislative Assembly (1952)
Party Leader Candidates First-preference votes Seats
Votes ± % Fpv Change (pp) 1944 1948 ±
Social Credit Ernest C. Manning 61 167,789 3,786Increase 56.24 0.61 0.61
 
51
53 / 61
2Increase
Liberal James H. Prowse 55 66,738 14,083Increase 22.37 4.51 4.51
 
2
3 / 61
1Increase
Co-operative Commonwealth Elmer Roper 41 41,929 14,458Decrease 14.05 -5.08
 
2
2 / 61
Steady
Conservative 5 6,271 6,271Increase 2.10 2.10 2.1
 
1 / 61
1Increase
Progressive Conservative 7 4,700 4,700Increase 1.57 1.57 1.57
 
1 / 61
1Increase
Independent Social Credit 6 4,203 1,245Increase 1.41 0.41 0.41
 
1
1 / 61
Steady
  Independent Citizen's Association Did not campaign[a 1] -4.40
 
1
0 / 61
1Decrease
Independent Labour 1 2,927 2,071Decrease 0.98 0.68 0.68
 
Labor–Progressive 2 1,132 240Decrease 0.47 -3.67
 
Independent 1 705 705Decrease 0.24 0.24 0.24
 
Farmer 1 655 655Increase 0.22 0.22 0.22
 
Labour 1 527 3,052Decrease 0.18 -1.03
 
Independent Farmer 1 463 463Increase 0.16 0.16 0.16
 
People's candidate 1 296 296Increase 0.10 0.10 0.1
 
Total 183 298,335 100.00%
Rejected ballots 20,613 2,906Increase
Turnout 318,948 6,448Increase 59.4% 4.1Decrease
Registered voters 537,170 47,859Increase
  1. ^ John P. Page campaigned and won re-election as a Conservative.

MLAs elected

Synopsis of results

Results by riding – 1952 Alberta general election (all except Calgary, Edmonton and servicemember MLAs)[3]
Riding First-preference votes[a 1] Turnout
[a 2]
Final counts Winning party
Name SC CCF Lib I-SC Oth Total SC CCF Lib I-SC Farm 1948 1952
 
Acadia-Coronation Acclamation SC SC
Alexandra 2,412 1,071 3,483 58.2% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Athabasca 2,012 623 864 463 3,962 66.3% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Banff-Cochrane 1,845 1,035 491 3,371 56.8% Elected on 1st count I-SC SC
Bonnyville 2,497 1,290 3,787 67.4% Elected on 1st count New SC
Bow Valley-Empress 2,475 1,560 4,035 67.9% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Bruce 2,157 1,210 756 4,123 67.9% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Camrose 2,919 1,132 1,015 5,066 65.1% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Cardston 2,011 630 2,641 56.0% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Clover Bar 2,238 935 769 3,942 66.2% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Cypress 2,240 1,048 3,288 61.2% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Didsbury 2,870 1,253 4,123 62.0% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Drumheller 3,458 308 3,766 62.0% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Edson 2,480 1,965 4,445 60.8% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Gleichen 2,061 273 675 3,009 61.0% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Grande Prairie 2,967 902 935 4,804 65.4% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Grouard 2,234 951 2,358 5,543 65.5% 2,405 2,558 SC Lib
Hand Hills 2,806 1,145 3,951 69.0% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Lac La Biche 1,832 1,792 3,624 68.5% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Lac Ste. Anne 1,639 1,520 1,069 469 4,697 71.9% 2,034 1,878 SC SC
Lacombe 2,446 975 757 4,178 70.3% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Leduc 1,207 1,331 2,051 4,589 63.7% 1,422 2,406 SC I-SC
Lethbridge 4,975 1,901 6,876 53.7% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Little Bow 2,668 411 1,001 4,080 71.0% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Macleod 3,232 496 773 4,501 83.9% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Medicine Hat 4,724 1,601 6,325 58.8% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Okotoks-High River 3,077 1,291 4,368 64.8% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Olds 3,064 1,611 4,675 66.6% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Peace River 3,352 1,177 1,214 5,743 57.8% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Pembina 2,818 941 1,127 4,886 69.5% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Pincher Creek-Crowsnest 3,207 1,008 4,215 62.4% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Ponoka 2,377 800 1,214 4,391 70.7% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Red Deer 4,907 1,496 6,403 58.8% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Redwater 1,677 1,002 1,268 296 4,243 68.8% 1,833 1,644 SC SC
Rocky Mountain House 2,886 1,165 4,051 56.2% Elected on 1st count SC SC
St. Albert 2,218 1,292 1,496 5,006 70.6% 2,420 2,019 SC SC
St. Paul 2,581 2,235 4,816 71.1% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Sedgewick 2,714 634 813 4,161 68.7% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Spirit River 1,738 1,222 861 550 4,371 66.3% 2,041 1,418 SC SC
Stettler 2,275 752 1,225 442 4,694 69.6% 2,397 784 1,339 SC SC
Stony Plain 1,991 1,218 1,062 4,271 68.7% 2,177 1,530 SC SC
Taber 2,809 717 3,526 58.0% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Vegreville 1,981 1,434 1,182 4,597 75.4% 2,239 1,710 SC SC
Vermilion 1,955 869 835 655 4,014 66.3% 2,058 983 713 SC SC
Wainwright 2,578 1,105 705 4,388 62.0% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Warner 1,904 633 2,537 49.3% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Wetaskiwin 2,664 1,029 1,029 200 4,922 66.7% Elected on 1st count SC SC
Willingdon 1,716 1,760 660 4,136 75.1% 1,812 2,026 SC CCF
  1. ^ There were no Conservative or PC candidates outside Calgary and Edmonton.
  2. ^ including spoilt ballots
  = 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

  = Candidate was in previous Legislature
  = Candidate had previously been in the Legislature
  = First-time MLA

STV analysis

Exhausted votes

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

Exhausted votes (1952)
District Counts Exhausted
1st preference Final Votes % of 1st pref
Calgary 41,673 40,019 1,654 3.97 3.97
 
Edmonton 52,039 47,149 4,890 9.40 9.4
 
Grouard 5,543 4,963 580 10.46 10.46
 
Lac Ste. Anne 4,697 3,912 785 16.71 16.71
 
Leduc 4,589 3,828 761 16.58 16.58
 
Redwater 4,243 3,477 766 18.05 18.05
 
St. Albert 5,006 4,439 567 11.33 11.33
 
Spirit River 4,371 3,459 912 20.86 20.86
 
Stettler 4,694 4,520 177 3.77 3.77
 
Stony Plain 4,271 3,707 564 13.21 13.21
 
Vegreville 4,597 3,949 648 14.10 14.1
 
Vermilion 4,014 3,754 260 6.48 6.48
 
Willingdon 4,136 3,838 298 7.21 7.21
 

Calgary

All major parties other than the Progressive Conservatives fielded full slates.

Party Candidates MLAs elected
1952 1948 ± 1952 1948 ±
Social Credit 6 5 1Increase 4 2 2Increase
Progressive Conservative 5 5Increase 1 1Increase
Liberal 6 5 1Increase 1 1 Steady
Co-operative Commonwealth 6 5 1Increase 1 1Decrease
  Independent Citizen's Association 3 3Decrease 1 1Decrease
Labour 1 1 Steady
Independent Labour 1 1Increase
Independent Social Credit 2 2Decrease
Labor–Progressive 1 1Decrease
Total 25 22 3Increase 6 5 1Increase
Calgary (1952 Alberta general election) (six members elected, candidates ranked in order of 1st preference)[4][5]
Party Candidate FPv% Count
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22
Social Credit Rose Wilkinson 16.31% 6,796
Social Credit Howard B. Macdonald 10.11% 4,214 4,346 4,346 4,350 4,355 4,365 4,369 4,371 4,397 4,417 4,442 4,489 4,502 4,547 4,565 4,614 4,696 4,902 4,929 6,167
Social Credit Frederick C. Colborne 9.54% 3,974 4,252 4,252 4,254 4,258 4,268 4,276 4,298 4,318 4,401 4,420 4,438 4,449 4,470 4,492 4,563 4,607 6,292
Progressive Conservative Paul Brecken 7.50% 3,126 3,147 3,151 3,154 3,160 3,176 3,179 3,183 3,184 3,211 3,351 3,391 3,886 4,380 4,454 4,552 5,607 5,656 5,657 5,725 5,730 6,269
Independent Labour Donald Fraser McIntosh 7.02% 2,927 2,940 2,945 2,951 2,956 2,966 2,972 2,977 3,110 3,121 3,142 3,166 3,195 3,228 3,276 3,315 3,371 3,419 3,420 3,550 3,554
Social Credit Thomas Glen 6.77% 2,820 2,870 2,871 2,872 2,874 2,876 2,890 2,893 2,905 2,911 2,916 2,919 2,926 2,934 2,949 2,966 2,981 3,172 3,199
Liberal Hugh John MacDonald 6.51% 2,711 2,724 2,724 2,730 2,771 2,833 2,834 2,842 2,867 2,991 3,030 3,547 3,580 3,663 3,675 4,499 4,619 4,659 4,661 4,747 4,750 5,216
Social Credit Arthur J. Dixon 6.42% 2,677 2,759 2,762 2,763 2,766 2,776 2,776 2,779 2,790 2,816 2,829 2,837 2,840 2,846 2,858 2,874 2,981 3,312 3,586 4,954 5,149 5,966
Social Credit Clifford Norman Clarke 5.74% 2,390 2,587 2,589 2,592 2,595 2,603 2,607 2,610 2,620 2,681 2,688 2,693 2,710 2,721 2,741 2,758 2,777
Co-operative Commonwealth Aylmer Liesemer 4.78% 1,991 1,993 2,030 2,136 2,142 2,142 2,380 2,498 2,642 2,651 2,664 2,670 2,681 2,695 3,508 3,528 3,575 3,600 3,601 3,693 3,696 4,706
Progressive Conservative Philip P. C. Haigh 2.17% 905 908 908 908 924 925 935 937 939 957 1,083 1,098 1,176 1,508 1,523 1,551
Liberal Melvin E. Shannon 2.06% 857 860 861 865 889 936 937 949 986 1,072 1,100 1,226 1,241 1,266 1,275
Progressive Conservative John James Zubick 1.93% 806 811 812 814 814 823 825 829 834 839 887 894
Progressive Conservative W. R. Irwin 1.83% 764 764 764 767 776 779 780 780 782 793 984 996 1,117
Progressive Conservative Ronald M. Helmer 1.61% 670 672 675 676 685 688 689 693 693 698
Co-operative Commonwealth Robert T. Alderman 1.52% 633 637 715 735 735 741 798 1,040 1,084 1,097 1,103 1,107 1,140 1,147
Liberal Alberta Clark 1.35% 563 580 581 582 598 660 662 664 667
Liberal Collier Maberly 1.33% 555 557 558 563 676 699 699 699 722 850 853
Labour W. Longridge 1.26% 527 528 529 541 548 550 550 551
Co-operative Commonwealth George E. Ellinson 0.91% 378 378 396 409 410 410
Co-operative Commonwealth H. J. Ryan 0.80% 333 334 375 422 422 425 460
Liberal Richard Thomson 0.75% 313 315 315 317 325
Liberal J. A. Murray Green 0.69% 287 288 288 289
Co-operative Commonwealth Harold L. Livergant 0.58% 243 243 251
Co-operative Commonwealth Ronald W. Stirling 0.51% 213 213
Exhausted ballots 13 21 29 40 84 101 126 179 213 227 248 276 314 403 499 505 707 712 929 932 1,654
Electorate: 91,289   Valid: 41,673   Spoilt: 1,694   Quota: 5,954   Turnout: 43,367 (47.5%)  
Calgary (1952 Alberta general election)
(analysis of transferred votes, candidates ranked in order of 1st preference)
Party Candidate Maximum
round
Maximum
votes
Share in
maximum
round
Maximum votes
First round votesTransfer votes


Social Credit Rose Wilkinson 1 6,796 16.31%
Social Credit Howard B. Macdonald 20 6,167 15.14%
Social Credit Frederick C. Colborne 18 6,292 15.36%
PC Paul Brecken 22 6,269 15.67%
Independent Labour Donald Fraser McIntosh 21 3,554 8.72%
Social Credit Thomas Glen 19 3,199 7.81%
Liberal Hugh John MacDonald 22 5,216 13.03%
Social Credit Arthur J. Dixon 22 5,966 14.91%
Social Credit Clifford Norman Clarke 17 2,777 6.75%
CCF Aylmer Liesemer 22 4,706 11.76%
PC Philip P. C. Haigh 16 1,551 3.77%
Liberal Melvin E. Shannon 15 1,275 3.09%
PC John James Zubick 12 894 2.16%
PC W. R. Irwin 13 1,117 2.70%
PC Ronald M. Helmer 10 698 1.68%
CCF Robert T. Alderman 14 1,147 2.77%
Liberal Alberta Clark 9 667 1.61%
Liberal Collier Maberly 11 853 1.33%
Labour W. Longridge 8 551 1.33%
CCF George Ellinson 6 410 0.99%
CCF H. J. Ryan 7 460 1.11%
Liberal Richard Thomson 5 325 0.78%
Liberal J. A. Murray Green 4 289 0.69%
CCF Harold L. Livergant 3 251 0.60%
CCF Ronald W. Stirling 2 213 0.51%
Exhausted votes 1,654 3.97%

Edmonton

All major parties ran full slates. There were also two Labour candidates

Party Candidates MLAs elected
1952 1948 ± 1952 1948 ±
Social Credit 7 5 2Increase 3 3 Steady
Liberal 7 5 2Increase 2 1 1Increase
Co-operative Commonwealth 7 5 2Increase 1 1 Steady
Conservative 7 7Increase 1 1Increase
Labor–Progressive 1 1Increase
  Independent Citizen's Association 1 1Decrease
Total 29 16 13Increase 7 5 2Increase
Edmonton (1952 Alberta general election) (seven members elected, candidates ranked in order of 1st preference)[6]
Party Candidate FPv% Count
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26
Social Credit Ernest Manning 32.71% 22,014
Liberal James Harper Prowse 13.96% 7,264 7,264
Co-operative Commonwealth Elmer Roper 12.74% 6,632 6,632 6,632
Conservative John Percy Page 4.25% 2,212 2,761 2,810 2,817 2,851 2,898 2,996 3,006 3,016 3,289 3,410 3,421 3,443 3,466 3,564 3,576 3,787 3,830 3,856 4,804 4,948 5,017 5,188 5,267 5,291 5,504
Social Credit Joseph Donovan Ross 3.38% 1,757 4,967 4,977 4,977 4,981 4,988 4,995 4,997 5,003 5,028 5,044 5,058 5,069 5,085 5,126 5,139 5,189 5,499 5,516 5,711 5,766 6,205 6,328 7,126
Social Credit Ambrose Holowach 2.65% 1,381 2,659 2,660 2,661 2,662 2,664 2,667 2,670 2,671 2,677 2,681 2,686 2,691 2,716 2,730 2,734 2,748 3,252 3,278 3,363 3,695 4,005 4,110 4,540 4,745 4,809
Liberal Andre Milville Dechene 2.57% 1,340 1,389 1,471 1,471 1,471 1,472 1,479 1,481 1,482 1,487 1,521 1,526 1,749 1,751 1,860 1,866 2,252 2,257 2,268 2,305 2,587 2,839
Liberal Peter Lazarowich 2.18% 1,136 1,214 1,280 1,282 1,283 1,288 1,290 1,291 1,293 1,297 1,317 1,337 1,379 1,405 1,592 1,596 1,735 1,748 1,776 1,815
Social Credit Harry D. Carrigan 2.18% 1,135 1,814 1,818 1,819 1,821 1,826 1,832 1,834 1,838 1,841 1,850 1,852 1,935 1,936 1,949 1,956 1,986 2,152 2,158 2,211 2,230
Social Credit Stella M. Baker 2.16% 1,126 2,251 2,253 2,253 2,254 2,257 2,271 2,273 2,276 2,280 2,285 2,290 2,295 2,306 2,320 2,341 2,385 2,554 2,567 2,646 2,676 3,033 3,084
Conservative Marshall E. Manning 2.04% 1,060 1,194 1,202 1,203 1,212 1,227 1,269 1,269 1,272 1,358 1,628 1,636 1,644 1,654 1,673 1,677 1,727 1,754 1,770
Liberal Harold Tanner 1.68% 875 1,037 1,258 1,261 1,269 1,282 1,296 1,300 1,309 1,352 1,372 1,376 1,441 1,477 1,755 1,765 2,157 2,178 2,200 2,274 2,897 2,953 4,621 4,667 4,680 4,921
Social Credit Williston Haszard 1.60% 834 1,609 1,610 1,610 1,612 1,614 1,616 1,619 1,619 1,624 1,629 1,632 1,638 1,644 1,659 1,664 1,679
Labor–Progressive Bernard Swankey 1.58% 824 831 833 833 835 845 845 847 866 871 872 881 881
Liberal Cora Casselman 1.57% 819 964 1,091 1,092 1,093 1,097 1,123 1,126 1,131 1,165 1,180 1,185 1,318 1,333 1,467 1,484
Social Credit Edgar Gerhart 1.48% 769 2,601 2,603 2,603 2,603 2,606 2,610 2,626 2,632 2,638 2,648 2,655 2,664 2,670 2,692 2,701 2,736 3,090 3,103 3,201 3,225 3,834 3,895 5,416 5,791 5,895
Co-operative Commonwealth Robert Atkin 1.26% 658 683 685 705 705 708 714 771 819 822 824 927 927 1,044 1,054
Liberal Laurette C. Douglas 1.21% 632 664 709 709 711 713 719 723 727 732 748 749
Co-operative Commonwealth Roy Jamha 1.19% 619 641 643 656 656 656 658 833 902 905 908 1,055 1,057 1,192 1,209 1,688 1,698 1,705
Co-operative Commonwealth Arthur E. Thornton 1.18% 612 640 642 664 665 668 677 718 917 920 924 1,152 1,154 1,323 1,341 1,709 1,728 1,734 3,004 3,024 3,057 3,076 3,114 3,135 3,139
Liberal Duncan Innes 1.17% 608 727 837 837 838 841 842 846 848 868 883 893 1,007 1,014
Co-operative Commonwealth Floyd Albin Johnson 0.96% 500 522 524 538 538 539 542 590 648 648 649
Conservative Marcel Lambert 0.83% 432 480 484 484 490 508 586 587 587 609
Conservative Frederick John Mitchell 0.83% 430 531 537 538 543 553 574 575 576
Co-operative Commonwealth Norman Finnemore 0.79% 413 427 428 439 439 440 440
Co-operative Commonwealth Winnifred Scott 0.74% 383 410 414 444 446 448 453 496
Conservative Mrs. Arnold Taylor 0.52% 272 300 303 303 322 375
Conservative John A. L. Smith 0.36% 189 205 207 207 220
Conservative Edward Sturrock 0.20% 105 117 118 118
Exhausted ballots 0 0 0 4 11 30 46 92 113 151 213 232 508 533 628 717 771 1,028 1,170 1,443 1,562 2,184 2,373 2,373 4,890
Electorate: 108,424   Valid: 52,039   Spoilt: 5,217   Quota: 6,505   Turnout: 57,256 (52.8%)  
Edmonton (1952 Alberta general election)
(analysis of transferred votes, candidates ranked in order of 1st preference)
Party Candidate Maximum
round
Maximum
votes
Share in
maximum
round
Maximum votes
First round votesTransfer votes


Social Credit Ernest Manning 1 17,022 32.71%
Liberal James Harper Prowse 1 7,264 13.96%
CCF Elmer Roper 1 6,632 12.74%
Conservative John Percy Page 26 5,504 10.37%
Social Credit Joseph Donovan Ross 24 7,126 14.35%
Social Credit Ambrose Holowach 26 4,809 10.20%
Liberal Andre Milville Dechene 22 2,839 5.62%
Liberal Peter Lazarowich 20 1,815 3.57%
Social Credit Harry D. Carrigan 21 2,230 4.41%
Social Credit Stella M. Baker 23 3,084 6.19%
Conservative Marshall E. Manning 19 1,770 3.47%
Liberal Harold Tanner 26 4,921 10.44%
Social Credit Williston Haszard 17 1,679 3.27%
LPP Bernard Swankey 13 881 1.70%
Liberal Cora Casselman 16 1,484 2.89%
Social Credit Edgar Gerhart 26 5,895 12.50%
CCF Robert Atkin 15 1,054 2.05%
Liberal Laurette C. Douglas 12 749 1.45%
CCF Roy Jamha 18 1,705 3.33%
CCF Arthur Thornton 25 3,139 6.32%
Liberal Duncan Innes 14 1,014 1.97%
CCF Floyd Albin Johnson 11 649 1.25%
Conservative Marcel Lambert 10 609 1.17%
Conservative Frederick John Mitchell 9 576 1.11%
CCF Norman Finnemore 7 440 0.85%
CCF Winnifred Scott 8 496 0.95%
Conservative Mrs. Arnold Taylor 6 375 0.72%
Conservative John A. L. Smith 5 220 0.42%
Conservative Edward Sturrock 4 118 0.23%
Exhausted votes 4,890 9.40%

See also

References

  1. ^ A Report on Alberta Elections, p. 75
  2. ^ An Act to Amend The Legislative Assembly Act, S.A. 1950, c. 36
  3. ^ A Century of Democracy: Elections of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta, 1905-2005. Edmonton: Legislative Assembly of Alberta. pp. 180–193. ISBN 0-9689217-9-5.
  4. ^ "How The Surpluses Were Distributed". Calgary Albertan. August 7, 1952. p. 3.
  5. ^ "20 Hours Required To Tally All Votes". Calgary Albertan. August 7, 1952. pp. 1, 3.
  6. ^ "How Edmonton Chose M.L.A.s By Numerical Vote". Edmonton Journal. August 7, 1952. p. 2.
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