Alberta Senate nominee election, 1989
The
1st Alberta Senate nominee election was held on
October 16,
1989 in
Alberta,
canada. It was held in conjunction with Alberta municipal elections under the
Local Authorities Election Act., and resulted in the first, and only,
Canadian Senator appointed following a popular election.
In
1987,
Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and the
provincial premiers unanimously agreed on the
Meech Lake Accord, a
constitutional amendment proposal. The main objective of the proposal was to make changes that would accommodate
Quebec which had not agreed to the changes undertaken in the
repatriation of the constitution in 1982.
Western Canadian premiers made senate reform their key demand. Although no formal agreement could be made on substantive reform, a compromise was reached. The Accord would amend the constitution to require the federal government to appoint senators from lists provided by the provinces, and require the future negotiations for substantive reforms.
In response, the
Alberta government passed the
Senatorial Selection Act in late
1987 which led to this election being held. Despite the failure of Meech Lake, and the subsequent
Charlottetown Accord, Alberta continues to hold elections for Senate nominees as a protest.
The vote was held along municipal electoral boundaries, but conducted by
Elections Alberta. Candidates were registered with provincial parties.
Stan Waters, nominated by the
Reform Party, won the election, and was subsequently appointed to the Senate.
{| border="1" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" style="border-collapse: collapse"|-bgcolor=CCCCCC
| Candidate | Party | Votes #!Votes %
| Stan Waters | Reform | 259,292 | 41.7%
| Bill Code | Liberal | 139,809 | 22.5%
| Bert Brown | Progressive Conservative | 127,638 | 20.5%
| Gladys Taylor | Independent | 38,534 | 6.2%
| Ken Paproski | Independent | 30,849 | 5.0%
| Tom Sindlinger | Independent | 25,491 | 4.1% |