Alberta Election 2012: Calgary, A Tory Stronghold, Targetted By Danielle Smith And Wildrose Party

Danielle Smith Wildrose

First Posted: 03/27/2012 6:02 pm Updated: 03/29/2012 2:57 pm

CALGARY - The two front-runners in Alberta's election campaign have already taken pains to make it clear that the province's oil capital is no more or less important than any other region.

Danielle Smith and her Wildrose party and Premier Alison Redford and her team of Progressive Conservatives wasted little time after the writ was dropped to race south to Calgary to begin figuratively thumping each other with campaign signs.

Redford's Tories had already launched radio attack ads on Smith that aired in the Calgary market weeks before the April 23 vote was called.

"I think every constituency in this election is going to matter and that's the perspective that we're taking," Redford, who is running in Calgary-Elbow, said Tuesday.

"The world changed, we called an election, and from that moment in time we're going to take seriously every vote that we would like to attract to support our party, whether that's in Calgary or Edmonton."

Smith, running in Highwood just south of Calgary, agreed.

"I think it's important for us to win a significant number of seats in every region of this province," she said. "We're aiming for 44-plus seats. We're not looking to win a couple of seats — we're looking to form government."

Nevertheless, Calgary, with its streams of oil money and its downtown head offices in buildings that scrape the sky, is the key cheque-signer and influence-maker of the campaign.

It has 25 of the 87 ridings — more than any other region.

Calgary traditionally sets the tone for Tory politics. The two most successful Tory premiers to date, Peter Lougheed and Ralph Klein, hailed from Cowtown, while the two comparative busts — Don Getty and Ed Stelmach — were from Edmonton and area.

Calgary has been the Tory Fortress of Solitude since the party first took power in 1971.

While Edmonton has, in recent decades, bounced around in its support for the Liberals, Tories and NDP, Calgary has been steady Conservative for 11 consecutive majorities.

But those crushing victories always came against forces from the left-centre.

The time around, there is a new suitor, one that is even further right than the Tories on the political spectrum. The Wildrose has made gains promising no new taxes, a balanced budget, cutting waste under the legislature dome in Edmonton, and, most importantly, no tinkering with oilsands royalties.

"Calgary is a complete tossup in terms of support right now. If anything the Wildrose is slightly ahead," said Peter McCormick, a political scientist from the University of Lethbridge.

"Calgary has always been the fortress that sent a solid block of MLAs to Edmonton, but this election, if it turns out to be a really close race, it will be Edmonton that saves this Conservative government and Calgary is the first thing to fall.

"It's an incredible flip in Alberta politics."

Recent history has shown that while Calgary can't necessarily win a party an election, it can go a long way to making sure it loses.

Stelmach learned that about four years ago when, early on as premier, he decided to tinker with and even increase oil royalties — the billions of dollars paid yearly to the province by oil companies for extraction rights.

The blowback hit the Tories like an express train. Jobs fled. Oil companies began drilling elsewhere. Stelmach's name was mud in Calgary and despite a series of make-good royalty changes, his goof was one of the underlying reasons why he was turfed out last year in a reported caucus putsch.

Smith is making sure history doesn't repeat itself. Asked Monday if Albertans are getting their fair share of oil royalties, she was unequivocal — yes.

Recent pre-election polls suggest while the Tories are No.1, the Wildrose is second and gaining quickly.

Both sides are sending a raft of new candidates into the fray in Calgary.

The Wildrose, coming off a merger just weeks before the 2008 campaign, ran 61 candidates provincewide the last time around but has a full slate ready to go now.

It had four members in the legislature at dissolution, three of them disaffected floor-crossers from the Tories

Heather Forsyth is running again in Calgary-Fish Creek, while Paul Hinman, the only elected Wildrose MLA, is trying to keep his seat in Calgary-Glenmore. Rob Anderson is aiming for re-election in Airdrie, on the city's northern outskirts.

Redford is running on a promise of change and her slate of Calgary candidates reflects that. There are new faces in half the ridings, including former journalist Sandra Jansen and Ken Hughes, one of Redford's inner circle and the former head of Alberta Health Services.

Raj Sherman, leader of the Opposition Liberals and a former Tory himself, said the battle for the right could split the vote and see a party with centrist alternatives come up the middle to win.

"Our internal polling shows us that we're going to contest in a lot of ridings that we previously didn't have a chance in, because the Wildrose is going to steal half of the Conservative vote," said Sherman.

"I think there's a very distinct possibility that there will be a minority government.

"The PCs are going to fall."

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CALGARY - The two front-runners in Alberta's election campaign have already taken pains to make it clear that the province's oil capital is no more or less important than any other region.Danielle Smi...
CALGARY - The two front-runners in Alberta's election campaign have already taken pains to make it clear that the province's oil capital is no more or less important than any other region.Danielle Smi...
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12:37 PM on 03/30/2012
I still love Alan Fotheringham's quote about Alberta : "The nicest one party state this side of the Soviet Union."
05:18 PM on 03/29/2012
The leftist posters here are going to be whining uncontrollably when the Wildrose wins a majority.

Red Redford is a closet Liberal and Albertans won't be fooled.
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Daniel Kilgallon
Calgary Heavy Oil
01:16 AM on 03/29/2012
Seems that most of you don't understand what Albertan's are voting for.

Right now the choice is between a left wing Redford. She supports bigger government social programs, centralized healthcare, and nanny state regulations such as fines and suspensions for blowing between .05 and .08 on a breathalyzer.

Or the right wing Smith who is about smaller government, decentralized health care with regional boards, low taxes, and saving resource revenues to increase the heritage fund to $200 billion. Her main advantage is the fact the PC's have been in power 40 years.
07:08 AM on 03/29/2012
seems you are in the same boat
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nathan Ottenson
The Christian Right are neither
12:51 AM on 03/29/2012
So whats the difference between these two parties? This is just about as exciting as a leadership convention
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MyTake
Release the Hydrogen Economy now!
11:44 PM on 03/28/2012
Well, both have large letter "C"s tattoos and it does not stand for the Calgary Flames logo.

Wherever the Oil Cartel sets up shop, they, and they alone, control the heads of the two leading political party's.

But the Cartel is getting tired of the Conservatives letting the "third" horse, in the leadership races, crossing the finish line first. Dinning was their man and then Mar was their man. So, now it is time to teach the Conservative party a lesson.

The Cartel straightened out Stelmach over royalty's and showed him the door.

Now, The Cartel will apply "The American" style to Alberta politics. They will engineer a 60/40 split, keep both parties hurling insults at one another while they steal BILLIONS out of the Provinces resources in the background.

There should only be one issue in this election.

The Alberta Heritage Fund and the Norwegian Oil Fund were started at the same time.

The Heritage Fund was capped by the Cartel at $15 Billion.

The Norwegian Oil Fund was set up OUTSIDE of their Government where corrupt politicians (or politicians corrupted by the Oil Cartel) couldn't get their hands on it.

The Norwegian Oil Fund now stands at $500 Billion in wealth which means that The Oil Cartel, running this 4 decades old Conservative government, has stolen upwards of $300 Billion from the Province over that period.

No wonder Ralph Klein drank and smoked himself into ill health having shielded this Cartel thievery for 13 years!
07:31 PM on 03/28/2012
My old job involved cold calling businesses regarding recycling programs. I phoned over 600 communities in 4 countries. I used to think that although places can have a lot of a certain type of people, there's no way every single person in a town can think exactly the same way, until I called Calgary. Although I'm sure there must be someone who lives in that town that doesn't come off as a white collar criminal over the phone, I didn't seem to find any. Every other town I called had a mix of folks with different opinions, not Calgary. The word recycling is viewed with contempt, the association with environmentalism being unforgivable in all forms. Business owners were afraid to comment, instantly careful with their confessions and brazen with their accusations. Basically every single person acted like a defensive teenager that just got caught red handed doing something wrong and started lashing out.
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MyTake
Release the Hydrogen Economy now!
11:00 PM on 03/28/2012
A perfect post.

Wherever the Oil Cartel sets up shop, their MO is to control the Law Firms, The Politicians, The Judges, The Profs and The Media. This MO was laid down by The Rockefeller Syndicate 100 years ago with their 95% monopoly on oil refining and this blueprint is applied wherever their is oil extraction.

The Law Firms tell their clients that if you want to do business in Calgary, you better have your Conservative membership card handy.
07:03 PM on 03/28/2012
Calgary is a cancer eating at the body of both Canada, and Alberta. Full of yanqui Big Oil carpetbaggers, and religious extremists, it is the most anti-Canadian city in the country.As with all cancers, it should be excised, and sent south immediately for the good of all.
09:04 PM on 03/28/2012
Yeah this would be great if western Canada left, we could then keep all our money and let you eastern whiners go. Man I dilike easterns as much as most of you easterns hate Americans.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Nathan Ottenson
The Christian Right are neither
01:24 AM on 03/29/2012
Seems Stevie agrees with you

http://www.cbc.ca/canadavotes2004/leadersparties/leaders/pdf/firewall.pdf
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
x27
Living is easy with eyes closed
06:44 PM on 03/28/2012
So Danielle Smith says that Allison Redford doesn't like Alberta,and that that is THE election issue?Sounds like the righties from the states who try to denigrate the President.You wont win with that argument Danielle,it is ridiculous
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dread
04:22 PM on 03/28/2012
I can't decide if that bus deal was a dumb mistake or the work of a real media savvy promoter. It got a virtually unknown international attention and now everyone has heard of Danielle Smith.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
All Seeing Guy
Center of the storm
04:01 PM on 03/28/2012
The tories will be reduced to calling Edmonton their base. A wonderfully safe place that's had no problem throwing them out in the past. Meet the new boss (party full of ex-tories), same as the old boss.
04:16 PM on 03/28/2012
I'm not so sure of that. At least four Edmonton seats will go NDP/Liberal, perhaps more. The Tories won in Edmonton last go around because of Stelmach.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
All Seeing Guy
Center of the storm
04:36 PM on 03/28/2012
Meadowlark, Glenora, Calder, and Rutherford I'm pretty sure will be opposition holds/gains, but I'll bet a few bucks the tories take Gold Bar and Riverview.
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laymancanuck
IGNORANCE has used up its quota of TOLERANCE
03:04 PM on 03/28/2012
Middle management talent has run the province for forty years. The other right wing party offers more of the same, the illusion of change. Its time for a change but a real change.
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emphatico
....is politically radioactive.
02:54 PM on 03/28/2012
The only thing good about Wildrose? They have a physically attractive leader. Their policies are hogwash and archaic.

Alison Redford is a pretty pragmatic premier -- not too right, not too left. She's just right, in my opinion. Yes, she made some rookie mistakes by appointing Mar and adding Liepert to her cabinet. However, I think she's likely to be more progressive (even though she already is) as soon as she receives a mandate from the people of Alberta, which I think she will.

Danielle Smith is also likely to lose in her riding anyway.
02:18 PM on 03/28/2012
way to go alberta ------

you are on the brink of a 1.2 TRILLION DOLLAR WINFFALL and the arguments are in favour of restraint

what are you going to do with all that money ------save it for a rainy day ????
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Paul Stacey
Kill guns, not children.
01:41 PM on 03/28/2012
Whilst I have no particular liking for polls and pollsters, how an article like this can be written without any figures to back it up is beyond me. Someone wants to make Smith's bunch feel good?
01:32 PM on 03/28/2012
If the Wildrose, a party financed by, and totally owned by Big Oil wins, I'm leaving. It's bad enough living with the Cons. And you can kiss any environmental stewardship goodbye.
What a province.