Alberta electoral district | |||
---|---|---|---|
2010 boundaries
|
|||
Provincial electoral district | |||
Legislature | Legislative Assembly of Alberta | ||
MLA |
Liberal |
||
District created | 1971 | ||
First contested | 1971 | ||
Last contested | 2015 |
Calgary-Mountain View is a provincial electoral district in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. The district was created in 1971 and returns a single member to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta.
The electoral district was created in the 1971 boundary redistribution from parts of Calgary North and Calgary East. The 2010 boundary redistribution only made one minor change, all land west of Shaganappi Trail was redistricted into Calgary-Varsity.
The electoral district was created in the 1971 boundary redistribution out of Calgary East and Calgary North. The predecessor riding's that comprised Mountain View had returned Social Credit candidates since they were created. The first election held that year returned former Calgary East Social Credit MLA Albert Ludwig back to the Assembly with over half of the popular vote.
Mountain View would see its first change of hands in the 1975 election as Progressive Conservative candidate John Kushner defeated Ludwig. He retired at dissolution of the Assembly in 1979 as he got the federal Progressive Conservative nomination for Calgary East to run in the 1979 federal election.
The provincial election that year would return another Kushner to represent Mountain View. This time it was Stan Kushner, son of John Kushner. He held the district for the Progressive Conservatives winning a majority of 55% of the vote. In 1981 he was charged with drunk driving. Kushner did not run for a second term. The 1982 election returned Progressive Conservative candidate Bohdan Zip who also only served a single term in office.
In the 1986 general election voters would return NDP candidate Bob Hawkesworth over future Premier of Alberta Jim Prentice in a hotly contested race. He was re-elected in 1989 with a solid majority.
Hawkesworth would be defeated after two terms in the 1993 election by Progressive Conservative candidate Mark Hlady. He would win two more terms with increasing percentage of the vote in 1997 and 2001. In 2004 he was defeated by Liberal candidate David Swann.