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Calgary municipal election, 2007

Calgary municipal election, 2007
Calgary
← 2004 October 15, 2007 2010 →

Mayor and 12 of 14 aldermen to Calgary City Council
Leader Dave Bronconnier Alnoor Kassam
Popular vote 128,112 35,442
Percentage 61.08% 16.90%

Mayor before election

Dave Bronconnier

Elected Mayor

Dave Bronconnier


Dave Bronconnier

Dave Bronconnier

The 2007 Calgary municipal election was held Monday, October 15, 2007. The citizens of Calgary elected one mayor, 12 of their 14 aldermen (one from each of 14 wards) to the city council, five of the seven Calgary School District trustees (each representing 2 of 14 wards), and three of the seven Calgary Catholic School District trustees (each representing 2 of 14 wards). All but one of the incumbent councillors ran again in this election (Barry Erskine, of Ward 11), and two incumbents were returned by acclamation. Five of the incumbent public school trustees ran again, two were acclaimed, and four separate school incumbent trustees ran, three were acclaimed, while Ward 13/14 had only one new candidate. Since 1968, provincial legislation has required every municipality to hold triennial elections.

The percent of eligible voters who voted was 33% — putting turnout at a higher level than the previous election in 2004.

Bold indicates elected, italics indicates incumbent.

Some of the prominent issues receiving public attention include the following (listed in alphabetical order):

Recent high-profile violent crimes in Calgary had generated public concern for safety in the city.

Calgary has the highest per capita ecological footprint amongst Canada's larger cities. The City has concentrated past efforts on increasing community water conservation and reducing its corporate GHG emissions. Community goals to reduce the community’s ecological footprint were identified through the Imagine Calgary process. These were intended to form the basis for comprehensive community-based initiatives to reduce the per capita ecological footprint.

There was an ongoing shortage of housing in the city. That, combined with what was among the highest rates of growth in housing costs in Canada, had made housing a significant issue for the public.


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