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1940 Alberta general election
The 1940 Alberta general election was held on March 21, 1940, to elect members of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta. Despite its failure to implement its key policy, providing prosperity certificates to all Albertans, the Social Credit Party of Premier William Aberhart won a second term in government. Nevertheless, it lost eleven seats that it had won in the 1935 landslide. This provincial election, like the previous three, 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.
Unity Movement
The Conservative and Liberal parties as well as the remains of the United Farmers, recognizing the widespread popularity of the Social Credit party, ran joint candidates as independents in what was called the "Independent Movement" or the "Unity Movement". Although independent candidates won almost as many votes as Social Credit, their support was dispersed across many areas so few of the movement's candidates took a majority of the votes (required under Instant-runoff voting to take the seat) so the movement's overall vote tally did not translate into its due share of seats overall. The Independent Movement lost a number of races by small margins. However, due to the Parliamentary system, which awards power solely on the basis of seats won, Social Credit was returned for a second term, albeit with a considerably reduced majority. The Liberals under leader Edward Gray chose only to support Independent candidates that they played a hand in nominating, and nominated other candidates under its own banner. Gray felt that candidates should not be machined into the field and left it up to the individual Liberal constituency associations to decide if they would support a candidate or not. This would be the most opposition that Social Credit would face until 1959.
Co-operative Commonwealth
The social democratic Cooperative Commonwealth Federation nominated candidates for the first time, but failed to win any seats in the legislature, despite winning over 10% of the popular vote under the leadership of former United Farmers of Alberta MLA Chester Ronning. Like Ronning, most of the CCF's candidates had run in the 1935 election for the UFA.
Reduction of electoral districts
An Act was passed in 1939 that provided for the reduction of the number of MLAs from 63 to 57, upon the next election. Calgary and Edmonton now returned five MLAs each instead of six, and the following other changes were made:
Results
MLAs elected
{{legend|#90EE90|Acadia-Coronation: Clarence Gerhart}} {{legend|#90EE90|Alexandra: Selmer Berg}} {{legend|#90EE90|Athabasca: Gordon Lee}} {{legend|#DCDCDC|Banff-Cochrane: Frank Laut}} {{legend|#90EE90|Beaver River: Lucien Maynard}} {{legend|#90EE90|Bow Valley-Empress: Wilson Cain}} {{legend|#90EE90|Bruce: James L. McPherson}} {{legend|#90EE90|Calgary: William Aberhart}} {{legend|#90EE90|Calgary: Fred Anderson}} {{legend|#DCDCDC|Calgary: John J. Bowlen}} {{legend|#DCDCDC|Calgary: Andrew Davison}} {{legend|#DCDCDC|Calgary: James Mahaffy}} {{legend|#90EE90|Camrose: David B. Mullen}} {{legend|#90EE90|Cardston: Nathan Eldon Tanner}} {{legend|#90EE90|Clover Bar: Floyd Baker}} {{legend|#DCDCDC|Cypress: Fay Jackson}} {{legend|#DCDCDC|Didsbury: Ernest M. Brown}} {{legend|#90EE90|Drumheller: Gordon Taylor}} {{legend|#DCDCDC|Edmonton: David Milwyn Duggan}} {{legend|#90EE90|Edmonton: Norman James}} {{legend|#DCDCDC|Edmonton: Hugh John Macdonald}} {{legend|#90EE90|Edmonton: Ernest Manning}} {{legend|#DCDCDC|Edmonton: John P. Page}} {{legend|#EEBBBB|Edson: Angus James Morrison}} {{legend|#DCDCDC|Gleichen: Donald McKinnon}} {{legend|#DCDCDC|Grande Prairie: Lewis O'Brien}} {{legend|#EA6D6A|Grouard: Joseph Tremblay}} {{legend|#90EE90|Hand Hills: Wallace Warren Cross}} {{legend|#90EE90|Lac Ste. Anne: Albert Bourcier}} {{legend|#90EE90|Lacombe: Duncan MacMillan}} {{legend|#90EE90|Leduc: Ronald Ansley}} {{legend|#DCDCDC|Lethbridge: Peter M. Campbell}} {{legend|#90EE90|Little Bow: Peter Dawson}} {{legend|#90EE90|Macleod: James Hartley}} {{legend|#90EE90|Medicine Hat: John Lyle Robinson}} {{legend|#DCDCDC|Okotoks-High River: John Broomfield}} {{legend|#90EE90|Olds: Norman E. Cook}} {{legend|#DCDCDC|Peace River: Eld J. Martin}} {{legend|#DCDCDC|Pembina: George MacLachlan}} {{legend|#90EE90|Pincher Creek-Crowsnest: Ernest Duke}} {{legend|#DCDCDC|Ponoka: Percy McKelvey}} {{legend|#DCDCDC|Red Deer: Alfred Speakman}} {{legend|#90EE90|Redwater: James Popil}} {{legend|#90EE90|Rocky Mountain House: Alfred Hooke}} {{legend|#DCDCDC|St. Albert: Lionel Tellier}} {{legend|#90EE90|St. Paul: Joseph Beaudry}} {{legend|#90EE90|Sedgewick: Albert Fee}} {{legend|#90EE90|Spirit River: Henry DeBolt}} {{legend|#90EE90|Stettler: Chester Reynolds}} {{legend|#90EE90|Stony Plain: Cornelia Wood}} {{legend|#90EE90|Taber: Roy S. Lee}} {{legend|#90EE90|Vegreville: George Woytkiw}} {{legend|#90EE90|Vermilion: William Fallow}} {{legend|#90EE90|Wainwright: William Masson}} {{legend|#DCDCDC|Warner: James H. Walker}} {{legend|#90EE90|Wetaskiwin: John Wingblade}} {{legend|#90EE90|Willingdon: William Tomyn}}
Synopsis of results
Multi-member districts
STV analysis
Exhausted votes
Twenty-eight districts went beyond first-preference counts in order to determine winning candidates:
Calgary
The Independent Movement (also called the "Citizens' Slate) fielded six candidates for the five seats. The other parties nominated fewer candidates than the maximum seats sought.
Edmonton
The Independent Movement presented seven candidates for the five seats being contested.
Party platforms
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