1922 Edmonton municipal election

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The 1922 municipal election was held December 11, 1922 to elect a mayor and six aldermen to sit on Edmonton City Council and three trustees to sit on the public school board. R Crossland, P M Dunne, Joseph Gariépy, and J J Murray were acclaimed to two-year terms on the separate school board.

There were ten aldermen on city council, but four of the positions were already filled: Ambrose Bury, James East, Thomas Malone, and Charles Weaver were all elected to two-year terms in 1921 and were still in office. Bickerton Pratt had also been elected to a two-year term in 1921, but had resigned in order to run for mayor. Accordingly, Valentine Richards was elected to a one-year term.

There were seven trustees on the public school board, but four of the positions were already filled: Samuel Barnes, Ralph Bellamy, Frank Scott, and Frank Crang had all been elected to two-year terms in 1921 and were still in office. The same was true on the separate board, where F A French, Paul Jenvrin, Thomas Magee, and Joseph Henri Picard were continuing.

The six candidates for mayor were a record high to date.

For the aldermanic election, each voter could cast up to six votes (Block Voting.

The 1922 election saw the defeat of the first woman elected to city council. Izena Ross had been elected to a one-year term in 1921, and ran for re-election but finished eighth. She received more votes than she had in 1921 but this time was not elected. It would be 1933 before voters would elect another woman.

This would be the last election of aldermen that would be conducted under the at-large Block Voting system until 1928. Voters in this election voted to replace the system with Single transferable voting (STV, a form of Proportional representation, which had been used in Calgary city elections since 1917. The first Edmonton municipal election to use the new system was held the following year.

Voter turnout[edit]

Out of 20,403 eligible voters, 10,923 cast ballots, for a voter turnout of 53.5%. The number of eligible votes was recorded as much lower than the previous election. A census held in 1921 measured the precipitous population dip that had occurred in Edmonton during the war years and in the post-WWI recession.

Results[edit]

Mayor[edit]

Party Candidate Votes %
  Citizens' League David Duggan 4,937 45.49%
  Independent Joseph Clarke 3,583 33.02%
  Independent Alexander Livingstone 1,482 13.66%
  Independent Bickerton Pratt 498 4.59%
  Independent Samuel McCoppen 330 3.04%
  Independent Albert Stimmel 22 0.20%

Aldermen[edit]

Due to each voter being able to cast up to 6 votes, 53,000 votes were cast in this election by the 11,000 voters who voted. The Plurality block voting system meant that it was possible for the largest group (even if just a minority of the voters) to take all the seats, leaving none to the others.[1]

Party Candidate Votes
  Citizens' League Joseph Adair 5,347
  Labour Rice Sheppard
(South Side)
5,172
  Citizens' League Kenneth Alexander Blatchford 5,147
  Citizens' League Valentine Richards
(South Side)
4,882
  Citizens' League James Collisson 4,801
  Labour Daniel Knott 4,170
  Labour James Findlay 3,881
  Citizens' League Izena Ross* 3,845
  Labour E. E. Hyde 3,529
  Independent Archie Randall 3,525
  Labour H. Pallot 2,406
  Citizens' League S. W. Walker 1,735
  Independent L. T. Murray 1,419
  Independent E. G. Sutherland 1,198
  Independent Mrs. D. Lockman 1,077
  Independent M. F. Groat 915
  • Izena Ross was a sitting councillor, running for re-election. She was the first woman on the Edmonton city council.

Public school trustees[edit]

  • W H Alexander - 6146
  • E T Bishop - 5350
  • L T Barclay - 4794
  • C W Leonard - 3955

Separate (Catholic) school trustees[edit]

R Crossland, P M Dunne, Joseph Gariépy, and J J Murray (South Side) were acclaimed.

Single Transferable Vote Plebiscite[edit]

Shall the Council pass Bylaw No. 42 (1922), being a bylaw for providing for the taking of the votes of the Electors at all future Elections of Mayor and Aldermen of the City of Edmonton by the "Proportional Representation System" known as the "Single Transferable Vote"?

  • Yes - 5664
  • No - 3075

References[edit]

  1. ^ Hoag and Hallett, Proportional Representation (1926)