The
Alberta general election of 1986 was the twenty-first general election for the Province of
Alberta,
Canada. It was held on May 8, 1986 to elect members of the
Legislative Assembly of Alberta.
Peter Lougheed, who had created the modern
Alberta Progressive Conservatives, led it to power in 1971, and served as premier of Alberta for fourteen years, retired from politics in 1985. The PC Party elected
Don Getty as its new leader.
Getty was not able to gain the confidence of Albertans as Lougheed had, and the party's popular vote fell by ten percentage points. The PCs were still, however, able to win a fifth term in government, with over half the votes in the province, and 61 of the 83 seats in the legislature.
The
New Democratic Party, now led by
Ray Martin, was able to make itself the focus of opposition to the PC government, winning almost 30% of the vote, and sixteen seats in the legislature (up from two in the
1982 election.)
The
Liberal Party of
Nicholas Taylor returned to the legislature for the first time since 1969 with four seats. Two seats were won by former
Social Credit members who had formed the
Representative Party of Alberta after winning re-election in 1982 as independents.
Western Canada Concept, a western separatist party that had won almost 12% of the vote in 1982, collapsed under the leadership of
Jack Ramsay, who later served as a
Reform Party of Canada Member of Parliament.
The
Social Credit Party of Alberta nominated no candidates. The party had governed...
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