Saturday, March 7, 2026
ADVT 
National

Three more Alberta recall petitions issued against politicians, bringing total to 26

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Dec, 2025 11:34 AM
  • Three more Alberta recall petitions issued against politicians, bringing total to 26

Elections Alberta issued three more recall petitions Tuesday for members of the provincial legislature — two United Conservative backbenchers and one Opposition New Democrat.

It brings the current total of active petitions to 26. All but two are for UCP politicians, which means more than half of Premier Danielle Smith's 47-member caucus are now facing recall campaigns, including the premier.

The new members of Smith's caucus facing petitions, Ron Wiebe and Justin Wright, are both first-term legislature members.

MLA Peggy Wright, the second NDP member to face a petition, serves as labour critic.

The petitioners looking to oust Wiebe and Justin Wright say in statements that they're motivated in part because the politicians supported the government's legislation using the notwithstanding clause to force striking teachers back to work earlier this year. The government also imposed a contract that teachers had previously rejected.

"An MLA's duty is to defend the rights of the people they represent, not to strip them away," Wiebe's petitioner, Deborah Harris, said in a statement submitted with her petition application.

"Because his vote violates this core responsibility, this recall petition is being initiated."

Holly Turnbull, the petitioner asking to have Wright removed, said in her application that she was also motivated by the UCP member's lack of action on coal mining and health-care concerns.

Wright, in a statement to Elections Alberta, said he has advocated for health care by organizing meetings with ministers and raising issues through other channels. 

"I have consistently represented constituent interests through active legislative participation and community engagement," he said.

The petitioner seeking to remove Peggy Wright said it's because the NDP member isn't accessible to constituents and was critical of the government's move to ban books with sexually explicit content from school libraries.

"In the applicant's opinion, any lawmaker who distorts such matters or facilitates the exposure of children to sexualized material is unfit for public office and subject to immediate recall," James Boyd said in his application.

Wright, in her response statement, cited her past career as a teacher and said she knows what's needed to make the public education system better.

"I look forward to continuing to represent constituents on issues of affordability, health care, education and services that matter most to them," she said.

Petitioners have three months to collect signatures equal to 60 per cent of the total number of votes cast in their constituency in the 2023 provincial election.

If successful, a constituency-wide vote would be held on whether the politician keeps their seat. If the member loses, a byelection would be held.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Jeff McIntosh

MORE National ARTICLES

As support for immigration wanes, survey says optimism key to retaining immigrants

As support for immigration wanes, survey says optimism key to retaining immigrants
The Institute for Canadian Citizenship published a survey of roughly 5,000 immigrants today focused on how Canada can retain newcomers.

As support for immigration wanes, survey says optimism key to retaining immigrants

Former B.C. minister Katrina Chen 'furious' with Eby over foreign worker remarks

Former B.C. minister Katrina Chen 'furious' with Eby over foreign worker remarks
Chen said on social media platform X that Eby's comments last week were an example of how the government "points fingers at immigrants through flawed policies" after underfunding services.

Former B.C. minister Katrina Chen 'furious' with Eby over foreign worker remarks

Three charged with helping fugitive murderer Rabih Alkhalil escape B.C. jail

Three charged with helping fugitive murderer Rabih Alkhalil escape B.C. jail
B.C. RCMP said Monday that charges had been laid against Edward Ayoub and John Potvin, both of Ottawa, and Ryan Van Gool of Harrison Hot Springs, B.C., for their alleged role in helping Alkhalil escape the North Fraser Pretrial Centre in Port Coquitlam, B.C., in July 2022.

Three charged with helping fugitive murderer Rabih Alkhalil escape B.C. jail

Poilievre calls on Liberals to enact Conservative election pledges on housing

Poilievre calls on Liberals to enact Conservative election pledges on housing
Poilievre says the Liberals should eliminate the federal sales tax on all homes worth $1.3 million or less and incentivize municipalities to speed up permits and cut development charges.

Poilievre calls on Liberals to enact Conservative election pledges on housing

RED FM raises $2 million for flood victims in Punjab, India

RED FM raises $2 million for flood victims in Punjab, India
Donation pledges poured in through RED FM’s stations in Surrey (93.1 & 89.1 FM) and Calgary (106.7 FM) on Sept 4, 2025, and Toronto’s 88.9 RED FM on September 5, 2025.

RED FM raises $2 million for flood victims in Punjab, India

Missing Canadian soldier deployed to Latvia found dead

Missing Canadian soldier deployed to Latvia found dead
A news release from the Department of National Defence and Canadian Armed Forces says Warrant Officer George Hohl was deployed on Operation Reassurance as part of the Aviation Battalion under the NATO Multinational Brigade-Latvia.

Missing Canadian soldier deployed to Latvia found dead