Calgary-Glenmore — 2019 Alberta Provincial Election Results Map
Calgary-Glenmore — 2019 Election Results
Poll-by-poll results for Calgary-Glenmore in the 2019 Alberta election. The United Conservative candidate won this riding. Explore detailed voting data, candidate results, and turnout statistics at the poll level.
Riding information
Auto generated. Flag an issue.Calgary—Glenmore
Calgary—Glenmore covers the mid-southwest portion of Calgary, centred on the Glenmore Reservoir and including the neighbourhoods of Lakeview, Eagle Ridge, Kelvin Grove, Chinook Park, Bayview, Braeside, Cedarbrae, Oakridge, Palliser, Pump Hill, Woodbine, and Woodlands. These are largely established, well-to-do communities with household incomes above the city average and housing costs roughly a third higher than the Calgary norm. The riding had produced one of the closest results in the 2015 election: NDP candidate Anam Kazim defeated Progressive Conservative incumbent Linda Johnson by just six votes after a judicial recount, making it one of the most dramatic outcomes of the NDP's historic majority win.
Candidates
Whitney Issik (United Conservative) — Issik studied economics and political science at the University of Calgary and spent a decade working in government and politics, including a stint with the Legislative Assembly, followed by ten years in corporate Calgary in the energy and telecom sectors. She had previously co-chaired the federal Progressive Conservatives' national policy team and worked on Jason Kenney's UCP leadership campaign.
Jordan Stein (NDP) — Stein won the NDP nomination in Calgary—Glenmore after defeating sitting MLA Anam Kazim in a contested nomination race in February 2019, seeking to hold the riding the NDP had narrowly captured in 2015.
Scott Appleby (Alberta Party) — Appleby represented the Alberta Party in Calgary—Glenmore, running under leader Stephen Mandel's centrist banner in one of the city's traditionally competitive districts.
Local Issues
The Glenmore Reservoir and its surrounding parkland defined much of the riding's character, providing recreational opportunities and green space but also raising environmental stewardship questions. Water quality management and the long-term health of the reservoir were perennial concerns for communities whose homes bordered its shores, particularly in the aftermath of the 2013 floods that had caused widespread damage throughout southern Calgary's waterways.
As in much of southwest Calgary, the proposed Green Line LRT project was closely watched in Calgary—Glenmore. Residents in communities near the planned alignment debated the trade-offs between improved transit access and potential disruption to established neighbourhoods. The city's 2018 engagement sessions on station design, safety, and community aesthetics drew substantial input from residents concerned about how the project would affect their areas.
The riding's affluent demographics did not insulate it from the economic downturn. Many residents worked in energy-sector professional and corporate roles, and the prolonged slump that began in 2014 brought empty office towers, layoffs, and declining property values. The NDP government's carbon tax, which took effect in 2017 at $20 per tonne and rose to $30 per tonne the following year, was a source of frustration for many constituents, who questioned whether the levy placed an unfair burden on Alberta households during an already difficult period.





