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Wetaskiwin-Camrose

Wetaskiwin-Camrose
Alberta electoral district
WetaskiwinCamrose in Alberta.jpg
2004 boundaries
Provincial electoral district
Legislature Legislative Assembly of Alberta
MLA
 
 
 
Bruce Hinkley
New Democratic
District created 1993
First contested 1993
Last contested 2015

Wetaskiwin-Camrose is a provincial electoral district in Alberta, Canada. It is one of 87 current district in the province mandated to return a single member to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta using the first past the post method of voting.

The district was created in the 1993 boundary redistribution from the Wetaskiwin-Leduc and Camrose districts. It is located in rural central eastern Alberta. It includes its namesakes Wetaskiwin and Camrose as well as the town of Millet and the Samson 137 and Montana 139 Indian reserves.

The district and its antecedents had been favourable to electing Progressive Conservative candidates for the past few decades, however, this changed in the most recent election. The current representative is New Democratic Bruce Hinkley who won his first term in the 2015 election.

The electoral district was created in the 1993 boundary redistribution from the old electoral districts of Camrose and Wetaskiwin-Leduc. The 2010 boundary redistribution saw a portion of land lying east of the city of Camrose transferred in the Battle River-Wainwright electoral district.

The electoral district was created in the 1993 boundary redistribution. The election held that year saw incumbent Camrose MLA Ken Rostad run in the new electoral district. He picked up the new seat for the Progressive Conservative party facing a strong challenge from Liberal candidate Bob Prestage.

Rostad retired at dissolution of the assembly in 1997. His replacement in the legislature was Progressive Conservative candidate LeRoy Johnson. He won the district with a landslide to hold it for his party. He was re-elected to a second term in the 2001 general election with a bigger majority. He won a third term in office in 2004 and retired at the end of his third term in 2008. Progressive Conservative Verlyn Olson who was elected to his first term in the 2008 general election and second term in 2012, before losing to New Democratic Bruce Hinkley in the 2015 election.


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