Edmonton voters wanted change, action on affordability, Conservative candidates say
Conservative candidates who won in Edmonton ridings on election night say voters were looking for change and were concerned about affordability and crime in Canada.
The party's candidates won seven of Edmonton's nine ridings, re-electing four incumbents, flipping Edmonton Griesbach, which was previously held by the NDP, and electing two newcomers, Billy Morin and Jagsharan Singh Mahal, in Edmonton Northwest and Edmonton Southeast.
The NDP's Heather McPherson decisively held her Edmonton Strathcona riding while Liberal candidate Eleanor Olszewski won Edmonton Centre in a tighter race against Conservative challenger Sayid Ahmed and the NDP's Trisha Estabrooks.
"From what we saw here in Edmonton Riverbend, it was things like crime and affordability, where life hasn't got better on those two files for the last 10 years, so people wanted to see that change," said Matt Jeneroux, who was re-elected as a Conservative MP.
WATCH | What's behind the Conservatives' success in Edmonton?
Edmonton votes blue with two first-time Conservative MPs
4 hours ago
Duration 2:33
Fellow Conservatives Ziad Aboultaif and Kerry Diotte, who won the Edmonton Manning and Edmonton Griesbach ridings, said their campaign teams worked hard to earn voters' support.
Aboultaif said his campaigners logged 12-14-hour days and Diotte, who represented the riding from 2015–2021 and served as an Edmonton city councillor for three years from 2010–2013, said he had never had so many volunteers.
Both candidates said affordability was important to the residents in their ridings.
"Edmontonians are worried about the future of this country," Aboultaif said at his watch party Monday night.
"They worry about the daily cost of living, the carbon tax, the high taxation."
Diotte said Monday he believed concerns about "meat and potatoes issues," like affordability, energy and reducing crime, tipped the race in his favour.
Chaldeans Mensah, a political science professor at MacEwan University, said local Conservative candidates consistently stuck to the party platform, emphasizing issues like affordability and crime.
He said while Conservatives have historically dominated in Alberta, the first-past-the-post electoral system doesn't reflect the diversity of opinions in a city like Edmonton, where there are many Liberal and NDP supporters as well.
"The opposition isn't organized around a single party," he said.
Vote-splitting may have helped Diotte win in Edmonton Griesbach, where the NDP and Liberals received more than half of the vote share, but it does not appear to have been as much of a factor in other ridings.
In Edmonton Southeast, had Liberal candidate Amarjeet Sohi also received all of the votes for the NDP's Harpreet Grewal, that still would not have been enough to beat Conservative Jagsharan Singh Mahal, who received more than half of all votes.
Mensah said he thinks Mahal benefited from Edmontonians' disgruntlement about crime in the city and local housing affordability.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Edmonton Journal
3 hours ago
- Edmonton Journal
Former Justin Trudeau cabinet minister Pablo Rodriquez wins Quebec Liberal leadership
Article content The Quebec Liberals have chosen longtime federal politician Pablo Rodriguez to lead the provincial party on Saturday and to carry it into the October 2026 provincial election. The ex-federal Liberal cabinet minister won the party's leadership contest Saturday after two rounds of voting, beating out Charles Milliard, former head of the Federation of Quebec Chambers of Commerce with just over 52 per cent of votes cast.


Vancouver Sun
3 hours ago
- Vancouver Sun
Former Justin Trudeau cabinet minister Pablo Rodriquez wins Quebec Liberal leadership
The Quebec Liberals have chosen longtime federal politician Pablo Rodriguez to lead the provincial party on Saturday and to carry it into the October 2026 provincial election. The ex-federal Liberal cabinet minister won the party's leadership contest Saturday after two rounds of voting, beating out Charles Milliard, former head of the Federation of Quebec Chambers of Commerce with just over 52 per cent of votes cast. The three other candidates vying for the top job — Karl Blackburn, former president of a Quebec employers group; Marc Belanger, an international trade lawyer; and Mario Roy, an economist and farmer — were eliminated after a first round after no one received 50 per cent. Start your day with a roundup of B.C.-focused news and opinion. By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc. A welcome email is on its way. If you don't see it, please check your junk folder. The next issue of Sunrise will soon be in your inbox. Please try again Interested in more newsletters? Browse here. Rodriguez, 57, told party faithful at a leadership convention in the provincial capital it was time to come together as Liberals and write a new chapter for the party. He preached unity, inviting all members of caucus on stage with him. 'No matter who you supported, we're all together today, united,' he said. He said those fellow leadership candidates would be key to the future and notably singled out Milliard, 46, who was among the favourites. Milliard and Blackburn have already committed to running in the next election, while Belanger intends to run in western Quebec. 'Starting today, the work begins,' he told reporters following his victory. 'I'm going to talk with the other candidates, it's extremely important to meet with the different teams because we're all part of the same party, the same team, with the same goal of forming a government in 2026.' Born in Argentina, Rodriguez arrived in Quebec at eight years old. He grew up in Sherbrooke and served as a federal Liberal MP for the Montreal riding of Honore-Mercier. He notably served as Minister of Canadian Heritage and Minister of Transport under Justin Trudeau. He brushed off the notion his opponents would try paint him as being an extension of the federal party. 'I'm my own man and I will be judged on my own decisions, my own team, my platform,' Rodriguez said. 'I don't control what they do, but what we're going to do is be ready.' Rodriguez, who does not have a seat in the national assembly, will have to rebuild the party in the next 16 months if it is to have a chance of forming government. The Liberals have been polling badly among francophone voters outside Montreal for years. I'm my own man and I will be judged on my own decisions, my own team, my platform Speaking to reporters after his victory, Rodriguez said he would be holding a caucus meeting in the coming days. He also said he wasn't in a hurry to gain entry to the provincial legislature and would continue touring the province as he has in the past nine months. 'What's important is to have a party — a strong one in every riding, in every region, with the necessary resources to win the next election,' Rodriguez said. The leadership campaign had to compete for the public's attention with a federal election and a trade war with the United States. Still, party president Rafael Primeau-Ferraro said he was pleased with the level of interest the leadership race has generated. 'If we go back two years ago, the party wasn't in the same position that we are today,' he said in an interview. 'We were able to attract quality candidates that are surrounded by very competent people in their teams. The membership of the party has doubled.' The Liberals lost more than half their seats when the right-leaning Coalition Avenir Quebec, led by Francois Legault, swept to power in 2018. In 2022, the party suffered its worst-ever defeat based on its share of the popular vote. It managed to hang onto Official Opposition status thanks to the concentration of Liberal voters in Montreal. Rodriguez replaces Dominique Anglade, who stepped down in the aftermath of that historic loss. But Legault's government has since declined in popularity, while the Parti Québécois has been leading in the polls for months. The Liberals are hoping to offer a credible alternative to the sovereigntist party, which has promised to hold a referendum on independence by 2030. Rodriguez ensured those themes were present in his speech to party members, presenting himself as an experienced candidate capable of defeating Legault and PQ Leader Paul St-Pierre Plamondon in 2026. 'Quebec needs you because we must get rid of this bad government and because we must avoid the threat of another referendum,' Rodriguez told members. A recent Leger poll found that with Rodriguez as leader, the Liberals would win 31 per cent of the vote in a provincial election, one point ahead of the Parti Québécois. — By Sidhartha Banerjee in Montreal with files from Maura Forrest in Montreal and Thomas Laberge in Quebec City. Our website is the place for the latest breaking news, exclusive scoops, longreads and provocative commentary. Please bookmark and sign up for our daily newsletter, Posted, here .


Ottawa Citizen
7 hours ago
- Ottawa Citizen
First Nations are mired in 'soft communism.' This leader has the fix
Article content Stephen Buffalo is a very constructive guy. He's a man who seeks solutions, and he's open to Prime Minister Mark Carney's ambitious nation-building campaign. He also wants Carney and all Canadians to understand, though: Indigenous consent to these projects has a price tag. Article content 'Give us a chance to make our own wealth,' says Stephen, long-time advocate for First Nations' economic development and member of the Samson Cree Nation from Maskwacis, Alta. Article content Article content Article content 'To be part of the mainstream and part of the economy and at the end of the day, everyone benefits: the proponent benefits, the government benefits, and we benefit, you know, First Nations that are participating.' Article content Article content The 'new' Liberal government has pledged — in the recently tabled 'One Canadian Economy Act' — to speed up approvals for major energy and infrastructure projects that strengthen Canada's autonomy, resilience and security, have undeniable national benefits, are likely to be successfully executed, drive Canada's clean grown potential and reflect priorities of Indigenous leaders. Article content Carney assured that fast-tracking major projects won't shortcut meaningful consultation with Indigenous peoples whose Charter or treaty rights may be affected. A Major Projects Office, created to assist project proponents through the assessment and consultation process, will lean on an Indigenous advisory council for advice. Article content Article content And in an effort to reinforce Indigenous voice in governance, Carney's cabinet includes three Indigenous ministers: Rebecca Chartrand, as minister of northern and Arctic affairs; Mandy Gull-Masty, as minister of Indigenous services; and Buckley Belanger, as secretary of state for rural development. Article content Article content I ask Stephen: Do Carney's announcements signal real change in the federal government's paternalistic relationship with Indigenous communities? After watching the undermining of Jody Wilson-Raybould's leadership by the previous Liberal administration, I'm wary. Article content This isn't the first time I've sat down with Stephen for a no-holds-barred conversation about how Indigenous leaders perceive what's going on in the world. As CEO of the Indian Resource Council, Stephen speaks on behalf of 130 First Nations across Canada that have oil and gas production on their land, or the potential for production. He also speaks forcefully — as a 53-year-old father who wants to see his kids have the opportunity to thrive in mainstream society.