26th Alberta Legislature Premier Ralph Klein December 14, 1992 – December 14, 2006Ed Stelmach December 14, 2006 – October 7, 2011Cabinets Klein cabinet Stelmach cabinet Leader of the Opposition Kevin Taft March 27, 2004 – December 14, 2008Government Progressive Conservative Association Opposition Liberal Party Recognized New Democratic Party Unrecognized Wildrose Party Speaker of the Assembly Ken Kowalski April 14, 1997 – May 23, 2012Government House Leader Dave Hancock May 26, 1999 – November 24, 2006Gene Zwozdesky April 6, 2006 – December 14, 2006Dave Hancock December 15, 2006 – December 5, 2013Members 83 MLA seats Monarch Elizabeth II February 6, 1952 – September 8, 2022Lieutenant Governor Hon. Lois Hole February 10, 2000 – January 6, 2005 Hon. Norman Kwong January 20, 2005 – May 11, 2010 1st session March 1, 2005 – December 1, 20052nd session February 22, 2006 – September 8, 20063rd session March 7, 2007 – December 7, 20074th session February 4, 2008 – February 4, 2008
The 26th Alberta Legislative Assembly was in session from March 1, 2005, to February 4, 2008, with the membership of the assembly determined by the results of the 2004 Alberta general election held on November 22, 2004. The Legislature officially resumed on March 1, 2005, and continued until the fourth session was prorogued and dissolved on February 4, 2008, prior to the 2008 Alberta general election on March 3, 2008.[ 1]
Alberta's twenty-sixth government was controlled by the majority Progressive Conservative Association of Alberta , led by Premier Ralph Klein until his resignation on December 24, 2006, after which he was succeeded by Ed Stelmach . The Official Opposition was led by Kevin Taft of the Liberal Party . The Speaker was Ken Kowalski . In the list below, cabinet members' names are bolded; leaders of official parties are italicized.
This legislature had the distinction of being addressed by Elizabeth II , Queen of Canada , to help celebrate Alberta's centennial .[ 2]
Party standings after 26th General Elections [ edit ]
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Member
Party
Constituency
Notes
Tony Abbott
Progressive Conservative
Drayton Valley-Calmar
Cindy Ady
Progressive Conservative
Calgary Shaw
Bharat Agnihotri
Liberal
Edmonton Ellerslie
Moe Amery
Progressive Conservative
Calgary East
Dan Backs
Independent
Edmonton Manning
Elected as a Liberal, expelled from caucus in November 2006
Laurie Blakeman
Liberal
Edmonton Centre
Bill Bonko
Liberal
Edmonton Decore
Guy Boutilier
Progressive Conservative
Fort McMurray-Wood Buffalo
Neil Brown
Progressive Conservative
Calgary-Nose Hill
Pearl Calahasen
Progressive Conservative
Lesser Slave Lake
Wayne Cao
Progressive Conservative
Calgary-Fort
Mike Cardinal
Progressive Conservative
Athabasca-Redwater
Harvey Cenaiko
Progressive Conservative
Calgary-Buffalo
Harry B. Chase
Liberal
Calgary-Varsity
Craig Cheffins
Liberal
Calgary-Elbow
Succeeded Ralph Klein in a by-election June 12, 2007.
David Coutts
Progressive Conservative
Livingstone-Macleod
Ray Danyluk
Progressive Conservative
Lac La Biche-St. Paul
Alana DeLong
Progressive Conservative
Calgary-Bow
Victor Doerksen
Progressive Conservative
Red Deer South
Denis Ducharme
Progressive Conservative
Bonnyville-Cold Lake
Clint Dunford
Progressive Conservative
Lethbridge-West
David Eggen
NDP
Edmonton-Calder
Mo Elsalhy
Liberal
Edmonton-McClung
Iris Evans
Progressive Conservative
Sherwood Park
Jack Flaherty
Liberal
St. Albert
Heather Forsyth
Progressive Conservative
Calgary-Fish Creek
Yvonne Fritz
Progressive Conservative
Calgary-Cross
Hector Goudreau
Progressive Conservative
Dunvegan
Gordon Graydon
Progressive Conservative
Grande Prairie Wapiti
Doug Griffiths
Progressive Conservative
Battle River-Wainwright
George Groeneveld
Progressive Conservative
Highwood
Carol Haley
Progressive Conservative
Airdrie-Chestermere
David Hancock
Progressive Conservative
Edmonton-Whitemud
Jack Hayden
Progressive Conservative
Drumheller-Stettler
Succeeded Shirley McClellan in a by-election June 12, 2007.
Denis Herard
Progressive Conservative
Calgary-Egmont
Paul Hinman
Alberta Alliance
Cardston-Taber-Warner
The Alberta Alliance Party was dissolved, and the Wildrose Alliance Party was formed in early 2008
Wildrose Alliance
Doug Horner
Progressive Conservative
Spruce Grove-Sturgeon-St. Albert
Mary Anne Jablonski
Progressive Conservative
Red Deer-North
LeRoy Johnson
Progressive Conservative
Wetaskiwin-Camrose
Arthur Johnston
Progressive Conservative
Calgary-Hays
Ralph Klein
Progressive Conservative
Calgary-Elbow
Resigned as Premier December 14, 2006 and from legislature January 15, 2007; succeeded by Craig Cheffins as MLA for Calgary-Elbow and by Ed Stelmach as Premier.
Mel Knight
Progressive Conservative
Grande Prairie-Smoky
Ken Kowalski †
Progressive Conservative
Barrhead-Morinville-Westlock
Ron Liepert
Progressive Conservative
Calgary-West
Fred Lindsay
Progressive Conservative
Stony Plain
Rob Lougheed
Progressive Conservative
Strathcona
Thomas Lukaszuk
Progressive Conservative
Edmonton-Castle Downs
Ty Lund
Progressive Conservative
Rocky Mountain House
Hugh MacDonald
Liberal
Edmonton-Gold Bar
Richard Magnus
Progressive Conservative
Calgary-North Hill
Gary Mar
Progressive Conservative
Calgary-Mackay
Resigned November 2007; seat left vacant until the 2008 election
Ray Martin
NDP
Edmonton-Beverly-Clareview
Richard Marz
Progressive Conservative
Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills
Brian Mason
NDP
Edmonton Highlands Norwood
Weslyn Mather
Liberal
Edmonton Mill Woods
Shirley McClellan
Progressive Conservative
Drumheller-Stettler
Resigned January 15, 2007, succeeded by Jack Hayden .
Barry McFarland
Progressive Conservative
Little Bow
Greg Melchin
Progressive Conservative
Calgary North West
Bruce Miller
Liberal
Edmonton-Glenora
Richard Miller
Liberal
Edmonton Rutherford
Leonard Mitzel
Progressive Conservative
Cypress-Medicine Hat
Ted Morton
Progressive Conservative
Foothills-Rocky View
Lyle Oberg
Progressive Conservative
Strathmore-Brooks
Suspended from P.C. caucus March 22, 2006; re-admitted July 25, 2006.
Frank Oberle
Progressive Conservative
Peace River
Luke Ouellette
Progressive Conservative
Innisfail-Sylvan Lake
Raj Pannu
NDP
Edmonton Strathcona
Bridget Pastoor
Liberal
Lethbridge East
Hung Pham
Progressive Conservative
Calgary Montrose
Ray Prins
Progressive Conservative
Lacombe-Ponoka
Rob Renner
Progressive Conservative
Medicine Hat
David Rodney
Progressive Conservative
Calgary Lougheed
George Rogers
Progressive Conservative
Leduc-Beaumont-Devon
Shiraz Shariff
Progressive Conservative
Calgary McCall
Lloyd Snelgrove
Progressive Conservative
Vermilion-Lloydminster
Ed Stelmach
Progressive Conservative
Fort Saskatchewan-Vegreville
Ron Stevens
Progressive Conservative
Calgary-Glenmore
Ivan Strang
Progressive Conservative
West Yellowhead
David Swann
Liberal
Calgary Mountain View
Kevin Taft
Liberal
Edmonton Riverview
Janis Tarchuk
Progressive Conservative
Banff-Cochrane
Dave Taylor
Liberal
Calgary Currie
Maurice Tougas
Liberal
Edmonton Meadowlark
George VanderBurg
Progressive Conservative
Whitecourt-Ste. Anne
Len Webber
Progressive Conservative
Calgary-Foothills
Gene Zwozdesky
Progressive Conservative
Edmonton Mill Creek
The Alberta Court of Appeal declared Thomas Lukaszuk the victor more than two months after the election. The election-night vote count had given Chris Kibermanis of the Liberals a five-vote win, but the judicial recount gave Lukaszuk a three-vote margin of victory.
A party requires four seats to have official party status in the legislature. Parties with fewer than four seats are not entitled to party funding although their members will usually be permitted to sit together in the chamber.
The province's centennial occurred during the 26th Legislature, on September 1, 2005. Earlier that year, on May 24, 2005, Elizabeth II made an official visit to the province in commemoration of the centennial.[ 3]
On March 1, 2006, premier Ralph Klein announced a series of controversial health care reforms which involved allowing greater levels of privatization in Alberta's public health care system. Later that day, the premier received significant media attention after throwing a book at a 17-year-old page.
On March 15, 2006, and throughout the year, the Legislative Assembly celebrated the centennial of the first sitting of the Legislature.
On April 6, 2006, Ted Morton introduced the controversial Bill 208, Protection of Fundamental Freedoms (Marriage) Statutes Amendment Act, 2006 . Critics maintained that the bill removed limitations on free speech where homosexual individuals were concerned, potentially removing recourse for verbal abuse and discrimination . The bill died on the order paper on May 18, 2006.
Standings changes during the 26th Assembly [ edit ]
February 2, 2005 Chris Kibermanis, Edmonton Castle Downs removed from office after a judicial recount.
February 2, 2005 Thomas Lukaszuk , Edmonton Castle Downs becomes the MLA by court order.
March 22, 2006 Lyle Oberg , Strathmore-Brooks suspended from the Progressive Conservative caucus
July 25, 2006 Lyle Oberg, Strathmore-Brooks rejoins the Progressive Conservatives
January 15, 2007 Ralph Klein , Calgary-Elbow resigns
January 15, 2007 Shirley McClellan , Drumheller-Stettler resigns
June 12, 2007 Craig Cheffins , Calgary-Elbow elected in by-election
June 12, 2007 Jack Hayden , Drumheller-Stettler elected in by-election
November 20, 2006 Dan Backs , Edmonton Manning was expelled from the Liberal caucus.
September 27, 2007 Gary Mar , Calgary Mackay resigns to accept a government appointment.
January 19, 2008 Paul Hinman , Cardston-Taber-Warner forms the Wildrose Alliance caucus.
^ Perry, Sandra E.; Footz, Valerie L. (2006). Massolin, Philip A. (ed.). A Higher Duty: Speakers of the Legislative Assemblies . Edmonton, AB: Legislative Assembly of Alberta. p. 504. ISBN 0-9689217-3-6 . Retrieved August 9, 2020 .
^ "Centenary of Alberta joining Confederation, Alberta Legislature, Canada, 24 May" . The British Monarchy. Retrieved July 28, 2012 .
^ Hansard for Tuesday, May 24, 2006, Afternoon . Retrieved on September 26, 2006.