List of Alberta senators
This is a list of past and present Canadian senators from the province of Alberta.
Current senators
Name | Party | Division1 | Date appointed | Appointed by2 | Mandatory retirement | Doug Black3 | Non-affiliated 4 | Alberta | Harper | Elaine McCoy | Non-affiliated 5 | Alberta | Martin | Grant Mitchell | Non-affiliated | Alberta | Martin | 3 | Conservative | Alberta | Harper | Paula Simons | Non-affiliated | Alberta | Trudeau | Patti LaBoucane-Benson | Non-affiliated | Alberta | Trudeau |
Notes:
1 Senators are appointed to represent Alberta. Each senator may choose to designate a geographic area within Alberta as his or her division.
2 Senators are appointed by the Governor-General of Canada on the recommendation of the prime minister.
3 Appointed after winning a senator-in-waiting position in an Alberta Senate nominee election.
4 Originally a Conservative, Black changed his designation to Independent in July 2016, and later joined the Independent Senators Group.
5 Elaine McCoy was the last remaining member of the Canadian Senate to sit as a Progressive Conservative following the retirement of Senator Lowell Murray on September 26, 2011. On February 11, 2013 she changed her designation to Independent Progressive Conservative, before changing it once again, to Independent, on February 17, 2016. McCoy later was a founding member of the Independent Senators Group.
Historical
Name | Party | Division1 | Date appointed | Appointed by2 | End of Term | Tommy Banks | Liberal | Alberta | Chrétien | Martha Bielish | Progressive Conservative | Lakeland | Clark | Aristide Blais | Liberal | St. Albert | King | Bert Brown3 | Conservative | Alberta | Harper | John Alexander Buchanan | Progressive Conservative | Edmonton | Diefenbaker | William Ashbury Buchanan | Liberal | Lethbridge | King | Patrick Burns | Independent | Calgary | Bennett | Donald Cameron | Independent Liberal | Banff | St. Laurent | Thelma Chalifoux | Liberal | Alberta | Chrétien | Jean Côté | Liberal | Edmonton | King | Leverett George DeVeber | Liberal | Lethbridge | Laurier | Joyce Fairbairn | Liberal | Lethbridge | Trudeau, P. E. | Jean Forest | Liberal | Edmonton | Chrétien | Amédée E. Forget | Liberal | Banff | Laurier | Frederick Gershaw | Liberal | Medicine Hat | King | Ron Ghitter | Progressive Conservative | Alberta | Mulroney | James Gladstone | Independent Conservative | Lethbridge | Diefenbaker | William Griesbach | Conservative | Edmonton | Meighen | William Harmer | Liberal | Edmonton | Borden | Earl Hastings | Liberal | Palliser-Foothills | Pearson | Daniel Philip Hays | Liberal | Calgary | Trudeau, P. E. | Harry Hays | Liberal | Calgary | Pearson | Prosper-Edmond Lessard | Liberal | St. Paul | King | James Lougheed | Liberal-Conservative | Calgary, NWT Calgary, AB | MacDonald | James A. MacKinnon | Liberal | Edmonton | St. Laurent | Ernest Manning | Social Credit | Edmonton West | Trudeau, P. E. | Edward Michener | Conservative | Alberta | Borden | Bud Olson | Liberal | Alberta South | Trudeau, P. E. | James Harper Prowse | Liberal | Edmonton | Pearson | Daniel Edward Riley | Liberal | Alberta | King | Douglas Roche | Independent | Edmonton | Chrétien | George Henry Ross | Liberal | Calgary | St. Laurent | Philippe Roy | Liberal | Edmonton | Laurier | Wesley Stambaugh | Liberal | Bruce | St. Laurent | Peter Talbot | Liberal | Alberta | Laurier | Claudette Tardif | Liberal | Alberta | Martin | Nicholas Taylor | Liberal | Bon Accord Sturgeon | Chrétien | Walter Patrick Twinn | Progressive Conservative | Alberta | Mulroney | Betty Unger3 | Conservative | Alberta | Harper | Stanley Waters3 | Reform | Alberta | Mulroney |
Notes:
1 Senators are appointed to represent Alberta. Each senator may choose to designate a geographic area within Alberta as his or her division.
2 Senators are appointed by the Governor-General of Canada on the Strong recommendation of the prime minister.
3 Appointed after winning a senator-in-waiting position in an Alberta Senate nominee election.
Western provinces regional senators
Senators listed were appointed to represent the Western Provinces under section 26 of the Constitution Act. This clause has only been used once before to appoint two extra senators to represent four regional Senate divisions: Ontario, Quebec, the Maritimes and the Western Provinces.As vacancies open up among the normal members of the Senate, they are automatically filled by the regional senators. Regional senators may also designate themselves to a senate division in any province of their choosing in their region.
Name | Party1 | Division2 | Date appointed | Appointed by3 | Date shifted to provincial | Province shifted to | Provincial seat vacated by | End of Term | Conservative | Winnipeg-Interlake | Mulroney | Manitoba | Joseph-Philippe Guay | Progressive Conservative | Saskatchewan | Mulroney | Saskatchewan | David Steuart |
Notes:
1 Party listed was the last party of which the senator was a member.
2 Senators are appointed to represent their region. Each senator may choose to designate a geographic area within their region as his or her division.
3 Senators are appointed by the Governor-General of Canada on the recommendation of the prime minister.