
The Dawn of Competitive Party Politics in Alberta
Description
Alberta is an economic powerhouse but a misunderstood and overlooked political force. The Dawn of Competitive Party Politics in Alberta examines the province's distinctive party politics, reaching back to before the birth of the province and then focusing on a political evolution over the past two decades.
Spurred by populism and alienation, Albertans united behind a centre-right provincial party for much of the twentieth century, while excluding themselves from Liberal-dominated federal politics. In 2006, this dynamic began to shift as the provincial right faltered, fractured, and then re-formed, while the left gained and then lost power but remained united in opposition. The historic pattern of a dynastic conservative bloc surrounded by minor parties was interrupted.
The authors convincingly argue that the recent change in provincial party politics may signal the imminent arrival of real competition in both provincial and federal politics, ending Alberta's solitude and shaping the future of Canada.
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Persons
Anthony M. Sayers is a professor of political science and Director of Canadian Governance Policy in the School of Public Policy at the University of Calgary. Widely published, he is the author of Parties, Candidates, and Constituency Campaigns in Canadian Elections. Royce Koop is a professor of political science at the University of Manitoba. He is a co-author, with Heather Bastedo and Kelly Blidook, of Representation in Action: Canadian MPs in the Constituencies and the author of Grassroots Liberals: Organizing for Local and National Politics. David K. Stewart is a retired professor of political science at the University of Calgary. Before joining the university in 2005, he served as the dean of studies of St. John's College, acting head of the Department of Political Science, and associate dean in the Faculty of Arts at the University of Manitoba.