Избирательный округ был создан в ходе пограничного перераспределения 1993 года из южной части Эдмонтона-Медоуларка . Округ претерпел незначительные изменения в 1997 и 2004 годах и значительно изменился в ходе перераспределения границ 2010 года, когда части округа к югу и востоку от проезда Энтони Хендая были помещены в новый избирательный округ Эдмонтон-Юго-Запад .
Юридическое описание из Статутов Альберты 2003 г., Закона об избирательных округах.
Начиная с пересечения западной границы города Эдмонтон с Уайтмуд Драйв; затем 1. на восток по Уайтмуд Драйв к левому берегу реки Северный Саскачеван; 2. в целом на юго-запад вдоль левого берега реки Северный Саскачеван до южной границы города Эдмонтон; 3. на запад и север вдоль границы города Эдмонтон до начальной точки.
Юридическое описание из Статутов Альберты 2010 г., Закона об избирательных округах.
Примечание:
История выборов [ править ]
Члены Законодательного собрания Эдмонтон-Маккланг
сборка
Годы
Член
Вечеринка
See Edmonton-Meadowlark 1971-1993
23rd
1993–1997
Grant Mitchell
Liberal
24th
1997–1998
1998
Vacant
1998–2001
Nancy MacBeth
Liberal
25th
2001–2004
Mark Norris
Progressive Conservative
26th
2004–2008
Mo Elsalhy
Liberal
27th
2008–2012
David Xiao
Progressive Conservative
28th
2012–2015
29th
2015–2019
Lorne Dach
New Democratic
30th
2019–
Edmonton-McClung was created in 1993. The first election held in the constituency was won by Incumbent Liberal candidate Grant Mitchell. Mitchell had previously served as Edmonton-Meadowlark MLA from 1986 to 1993. He would become leader of the Liberals and of the official opposition after Laurence Decore stepped down in 1994. The 1997 election would see Mitchell re-elected with a smaller share of the vote and his provincial campaign dropped the Liberals seat count. He would resign as leader and later as an elected representative on May 11, 1998.
The 1998 by-election was held on June 17, 1998, very shortly after Mitchell vacated his seat. The constituency returned new Alberta Liberal leader Nancy MacBeth with over half the popular vote in the constituency. Macbeth had served in the legislature as a Progressive Conservative MLA in Edmonton-Glenora. She was defeated by Ralph Klein in the 1992 leadership vote for the Progressive Conservative party and quit the party completely after her term expired in 1993.
The 2001 election would see a bitter and personal provincial campaign launched by MacBeth against Klein. She would be defeated in McClung by Progressive Conservative candidate Mark Norris and her party would suffer significant losses in other districts in the province.
After the election Norris was rewarded for defeating MacBeth with an appointment to the provincial cabinet. He served from 2001 to 2004 as the Minister of Economic Development under Premier Ralph Klein. Norris would run for a second term in the 2004 election. He would be defeated as the constituency returned to the Liberal column electing candidate Mo Elsalhy in a tight race. Norris was the only cabinet minister to lose his seat in that election.
The 2008 election would see the riding change hands again electing its fifth representative. The riding returned Progressive Conservative candidate David Xiao in another closely fought election over incumbent Elsalhy. The two are re-offering for a rematch in the 2012 election.
Legislature results[edit]
1993 general election[edit]
1993 Alberta general election results[2]
Turnout 60.68%
Swing
Affiliation
Candidate
Votes
%
Party
Personal
Liberal
Grant Mitchell
8,931
63.64%
Progressive Conservative
Henry Mah
4,177
29.78%
New Democratic
Denis Gautier-Villon
799
5.69%
Natural Law
Pat Simpson
125
0.89%
Total
14,032
Rejected, spoiled and declined
36
Eligible electors / Turnout
23,184
%
Liberal pickup new district.
1997 general election[edit]
1997 Alberta general election results[3]
Turnout 59.21%
Swing
Affiliation
Candidate
Votes
%
Party
Personal
Liberal
Grant Mitchell
6,322
49.02%
-14.62%
Progressive Conservative
Michael Mooney
5,259
40.78%
11.00%
New Democratic
Richard Vanderberg
713
5.53%
-0.16%
Social Credit
Patrick Ellis
542
4.20%
#E6E6FA
Natural Law
Wade McKinley
61
0.47%
-0.42%
*
Total
12,897
Rejected, spoiled and declined
20
Eligible electors / Turnout
21,816
%
Liberal hold
Swing
-12.81%
1998 by-election[edit]
June 17, 1998 by-election results[4]
Turnout 40.77%
Swing
Affiliation
Candidate
Votes
%
Party
Personal
Liberal
Nancy MacBeth
5,040
53.58%
4.56%
Progressive Conservative
Michael Mooney
3,184
33.85%
-6.93%
Social Credit
Jon Dykstra
701
7.46%
3.26%
New Democratic
Carol Anne Dean
384
4.08%
-1.45%
Green
Karina Gregory
68
0.72%
*
#E6E6FA
Natural Law
Maury Shapka
29
0.31%
-0.11%
*
Total
9,406
Rejected, spoiled and declined
10
Eligible electors / Turnout
23,094
%
Liberal hold
Swing
+5.75%
The by-election was called after Grant Mitchell resigned his seat on May 11, 1998.
2001 general election[edit]
2001 Alberta general election results[5]
Turnout 56.01%
Affiliation
Candidate
Votes
%
Swing
Progressive Conservative
Mark Norris
6,976
50.43%
16.58%
Liberal
Nancy MacBeth
5,920
42.80%
-10.78%
New Democratic
Lorne Dach
804
5.81%
1.73%
Independent
Patrick Ellis
133
0.96%
Total
13,833
Rejected, spoiled and declined
18
Eligible electors / Turnout
24,723
%
Progressive Conservative gain from Liberal
Swing
+13.68%
2004 general election[edit]
2004 Alberta general election results[6]
Turnout 51.95%
Swing
Affiliation
Candidate
Votes
%
Party
Personal
Liberal
Mo Elsalhy
5,859
44.88%
2.08%
Progressive Conservative
Mark Norris
5,333
40.85%
-9.58%
New Democratic
Lorne Dach
1,358
10.40%
4.59%
Alberta Alliance
Reuben Bauer
401
3.07%
Social Credit
Patrick Conlin
105
0.80%
Total
13,056
Rejected, spoiled and declined
71
Eligible electors / Turnout
25,269
%
Liberal gain from Progressive Conservative
Swing
+5.83%
2008 general election[edit]
2008 Alberta general election results[7]
Turnout 36.74%
Swing
Affiliation
Candidate
Votes
%
Party
Personal
Progressive Conservative
David Xiao
7,173
48.94%
8.09%
Liberal
Mo Elsalhy
5,947
40.57%
-4.31%
New Democratic
Bridget Stirling
924
6.30%
-4.10%
Green
Bryan Wyrostok
342
2.33%
*
Wildrose Alliance
Kristine Jassman
272
1.86%
-1.21%
Total
14,658
Rejected, spoiled and declined
46
Eligible electors / Turnout
34,330
%
Progressive Conservative gain from Liberal
Swing
+6.20%
2012 general election[edit]
2012 Alberta general election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%
Progressive Conservative
David Xiao
7,179
46.65%
-2.29%
Liberal
Mo Elsalhy
3,800
24.69%
-15.88%
Wildrose
Peter Janisz
2,756
17.91%
+16.05%
New Democratic
Lorne Dach
1,134
7.37%
+1.07%
Alberta Party
John Hudson
418
2.72%
Evergreen
Nathan Forsyth
102
0.66%
-1.67%
Total
15,389
Progressive Conservative hold
Swing
-6.80%
2015 general election[edit]
v
t
e
2015 Alberta general election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%
New Democratic
Lorne Dach
9,406
55.36%
+47.99%
Progressive Conservative
David Xiao
4,404
25.92%
-20.73%
Wildrose
Steve Thompson
2,373
13.97%
-3.94%
Alberta Party
John Hudson
808
4.76%
+2.04%
Total
16,991
New Democratic gain from Progressive Conservative
Swing
+34.36%
2019 general election[edit]
v
t
e
2019 Alberta general election
Party
Candidate
Votes
%
±%
New Democratic
Lorne Dach
8,073
43.6%
-11.76%
United Conservative
Laurie Mozeson
6,640
35.9%
-3.99%
Alberta Party
Stephen Mandel
3,601
19.5%
+14.74%
Alberta Advantage
Gordon Perrot
188
1.0%
--
Total valid votes
18,502
Rejected, spoiled and declined
109
47
12
Registered electors
30,068
Turnout
61.9%
New Democratic hold
Swing
Source(s)
"2019 Provincial General Election Results". Elections Alberta. Archived from the original on 2019-05-05. Retrieved 2019-05-05.
Senate nominee results[edit]
2004 Senate nominee election district results[edit]
Voters had the option of selecting 4 Candidates on the Ballot
2012 Senate nominee election district results[edit]
Student Vote results[edit]
Participating Schools[9]
Archbishop Oscar Romero High School
Callingwood School
Centennial Elementary
Ormsby School
Rio Terrace School
S. Bruce Smith Junior High
Talmud Torah 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[10]
Affiliation
Candidate
Votes
%
Progressive Conservative
Mark Norris
347
36.07%
Liberal
Mo Elsalhy
335
34.82%
NDP
Lorne Dach
176
18.30%
Alberta Alliance
Reuben Bauer
69
7.17%
Social Credit
Patrick Conlin
35
3.64%
Total
962
100%
Rejected, Spoiled and Declined
80
2012 election[edit]
2012 Alberta Student Vote results
Affiliation
Candidate
Votes
%
Progressive Conservative
David Xiao
%
Wildrose
Peter Janisz
Liberal
Mo Elsalhy
%
Alberta Party
John Hudson
NDP
Lorne Dach
%
Total
100%
References[edit]
^"E‑4.1". Statutes of the Province of Alberta. Government of Alberta. 2003. p. 19.
^"Edmonton-McClung results 1993 Alberta general election". Alberta Heritage Community Foundation. Retrieved March 28, 2010.
^"1997 General Election". Elections Alberta. Archived from the original on February 14, 2012. Retrieved January 26, 2012.
^"Edmonton-McClung By-election". Elections Alberta. June 17, 1998. Archived from the original on January 18, 2012. Retrieved January 26, 2012.
^"Edmonton-McClung Official Results 2001 Alberta general election" (PDF). Elections Alberta. Retrieved March 27, 2010.
^"Edmonton-McClung Statement of Official Results 2004 Alberta general election" (PDF). Elections Alberta. Retrieved February 13, 2012.
^The Report on the March 3, 2008 Provincial General Election of the Twenty-seventh Legislative Assembly. Elections Alberta. July 28, 2008. pp. 312–315.
^"Senate Nominee Election 2004 Tabulation of Official Results" (PDF). Elections Alberta. Archived from the original (PDF) on July 4, 2009. Retrieved February 28, 2010.
^"School by School results". Student Vote Canada. Archived from the original on October 5, 2007. Retrieved 2008-04-18.
^"Riding by Riding Results - the Candidates". Student Vote Canada. Archived from the original on October 6, 2007. Retrieved 2008-04-19.