In order to be a declared candidate, the candidate had to have their nomination papers filled out and returned to the party by October 16, 2006. Eight candidates were declared. Of the nine initial candidates, six were former members of the
Alberta Cabinet. Three of the candidates were not current MLAs; however, Premier Klein announced he will resign as the MLA for
Calgary Elbow when he resigns as premier, thus the new leader will have a vacant seat to contest in a
by-election should he need one. In the order they filed their nomination papers, the candidates were:
Ed Stelmach Ed Stelmach, the former Intergovernmental Affairs minister, announced his resignation from cabinet in accordance with Klein's directive. He was the first declared candidate.
Website: :
Supporters in caucus: 13 Pearl Calahasen,
Ray Danyluk,
Iris Evans,
Hector Goudreau,
George Groeneveld,
LeRoy Johnson,
Phil Klein,
Mel Knight,
Fred Lindsay,
Luke Ouellette,
Lloyd Snelgrove,
Ed Stelmach,
Ivan Strang. :
Additional supporters in caucus after first ballot: 6 Guy Boutilier,
Carol Haley,
David Hancock,
Doug Horner,
Lyle Oberg,
Mark Norris.
Lyle Oberg Lyle Oberg, the former Transportation minister, had said he intended to resign from Cabinet by the June 1 deadline. However, as noted above Oberg was fired from Cabinet and suspended from Caucus on March 22, 2006. He pursued the leadership despite these events, and was re-admitted to caucus on July 25.
Website: http://www.lyleoberg.com :
Supporters in caucus: 3 Guy Boutilier,
Hung Pham,
Lyle Oberg.
Mark Norris Mark Norris, a former MLA who became celebrated within the party when he defeated former Tory leadership candidate-turned-Liberal leader
Nancy MacBeth in
Edmonton McClung in 2001. However, Norris lost his seat in the 2004 election to Liberal candidate
Mo Elsalhy.
Website: https://web.archive.org/web/20060613190856/http://marknorris.ca/ :
Supporters in caucus: 2 Carol Haley,
Doug Horner.
Ted Morton Ted Morton was first elected to the Alberta legislature in the
2004 Alberta general election. He had previously served as a professor in the
political science department of the
University of Calgary where he was considered to be member of the conservative
Calgary School of professors. Morton served a six-year term as a senator-in-waiting between 1998 and 2004 after he was elected by Albertans in the
1998 Alberta Senate nominee election and used this position to advocate for democratic reform. Although Ted Morton was a backbencher, he was considered a strong contender for the leadership because of his high profile in the former Reform Party and Canadian Alliance. Morton was considered to be on the right of the political spectrum, and supported allowing people to pay for non-emergency health care services such as hip and knee replacements. Ted Morton also presented a private members bill in the Alberta legislature which would have allowed marriage commissioners who objected to same-sex marriage to opt out of performing same-sex marriages. Morton became one of two senators-in-waiting chosen by Albertans in a 1998 election.
Website: https://web.archive.org/web/20050422165319/http://www.tedmorton.ca/ :
Supporters in caucus: 2 Ted Morton,
Hung Pham :
Supporters in Alberta Alliance caucus: 1 Paul Hinman :
Supporters in Federal Conservative caucus: 3 Rob Anders,
Myron Thompson,
Jason Kenney.
Dave Hancock David Hancock, former Advanced Education Minister, was one of three
Edmonton MLAs to retain their seats for the Tories in the
2004 general election. He was first elected in 1997 and has held the International, Intergovernmental and Aboriginal Affairs portfolio as well and Minister of Justice and Attorney General. Until his resignation from Cabinet to run for leader, Hancock was the Government House Leader and Minister of Advanced Education. At that time, Hancock was also the only MLA to sit on both Agenda and Priorities and the Treasury Board committees. He is the author of the Government of Alberta 20 Strategic Business Plan setting the long range framework for the future of the province. He resigned from Cabinet in April 2005 to pursue his leadership bid on a full-time basis.
Website: https://web.archive.org/web/20060615210425/http://www.davehancockcrew.ca/ :
Supporters in caucus: 1 David Hancock :
Supporters in Federal Conservative caucus: 1 Laurie Hawn.
Jim Dinning Jim Dinning, Alberta's former
treasurer, was not a current MLA but was (and remains) on the board of directors of each of a number of major corporations and some other organisations, mostly concerned with public policy research.
Website: https://web.archive.org/web/20060613192108/http://jimdinning.ca/ :
Supporters in caucus: 38 Cindy Ady,
Moe Amery,
Neil Brown,
Wayne Cao,
Mike Cardinal,
Harvey Cenaiko,
David Coutts,
Alana DeLong,
Clint Dunford,
Heather Forsyth,
Yvonne Fritz,
Gord Graydon,
Doug Griffiths,
Denis Herard,
Mary Anne Jablonski,
Art Johnston,
Ken Kowalski,
Ron Liepert,
Rob Lougheed,
Thomas Lukaszuk,
Ty Lund,
Richard Magnus,
Gary Mar,
Richard Marz,
Barry McFarland,
Greg Melchin,
Len Mitzel,
Frank Oberle,
Ray Prins,
Rob Renner,
Dave Rodney,
George Rogers,
Shiraz Shariff,
Ron Stevens,
Janis Tarchuk,
George VanderBurg,
Len Webber,
Gene Zwozdesky.
Victor Doerksen Victor Doerksen, the MLA for
Red Deer South and former Minister for Innovation and Science, announced his candidacy on August 17 after resigning from the Cabinet on August 15.
Website: https://web.archive.org/web/20061024030954/http://www.voteforvictor.ca/ :
Supporters in caucus: 1 Victor Doerksen.
Gary McPherson Gary McPherson, former chair of the Premier's Council on the Status of Persons with Disabilities, was a quadriplegic since a childhood bout with polio. He announced his candidacy on August 18.
Website: https://web.archive.org/web/20070929080918/http://www.teammcpherson.com/blog/ :
Supporters in caucus: 0 . ==First-round results==