The electoral district of Medicine Hat has existed in two iterations. The Medicine Hat electoral district was one of the original 25 electoral districts contested in the
1905 Alberta general election after Alberta became a province in
September 1905. The district was carried over from the old
Medicine Hat electoral district which had returned a single member to the
Legislative Assembly of the Northwest Territories from 1888 to 1905. The former member for the Northwest Territories seat,
William Finlay was elected in the
1st Alberta general election. Upon the electoral district's formation, it covered a large portion of rural southeast Alberta. The district shrunk until it became an urban only riding containing the City of Medicine Hat. In 1921 Medicine Hat was given a second MLA. In 1921 The Medicine Hat MLAs were elected using
plurality block voting. In 1926 STV was used to elect Medicine Hat MLAs. From 1930 to 1956, the district used
instant-runoff voting to elect its MLA. The district was abolished in the 1971 electoral district re-distribution to become part of
Medicine Hat-Redcliff, which was abolished in 1979 and once again became the Medicine Hat electoral district. Under the 2004 Alberta electoral boundary re-distribution, the constituency covered the portion of the city north of the
South Saskatchewan River, the
Trans-Canada Highway and Carry Drive. The rest of the city and surrounding area was part of the
Cypress-Medicine Hat constituency. The
2010 electoral boundary re-distribution saw minor changes made to align the riding with new boundaries of Medicine Hat. The Medicine Hat electoral district was dissolved in the 2017 electoral boundary re-distribution, and portions of the district would incorporate the
Brooks-Medicine Hat to the North, and
Cypress-Medicine Hat to the South for the
2019 Alberta general election.
Boundary history Representation history The provincial electoral district of Medicine Hat has a long history that goes back to 1888 under the old
Medicine Hat,
North-West Territories electoral district. The district was carried over when the province of Alberta was created in 1905. The first election in 1905 saw former
North-West Territories Assembly member
William Finlay win the district in a hotly contested race. Finlay was re-elected in 1909 and resigned in 1910 so cabinet minister
Charles Mitchell could have a seat in the Legislature. Mitchell held the district for one term before being defeated by Conservative Nelson Spencer in the 1913 election. Spencer's win was considered an upset. Spencer was automatically re-elected under Chapter 38 of the Elections Act in 1917 for serving in the Canadian Army during
World War I. He retired from the Legislature in 1921 and moved to
British Columbia. The Liberal government passed a law in 1921 that turned Medicine Hat into a two-member district. The seats were won in the 1921 general election by
United Farmer of Alberta candidate
Perren Baker and Dominion Labour Party candidate William Johnston. Baker was confirmed to a cabinet post by acclamation in a ministerial by-election on December 9, 1921. Johnson died in 1925, vacating his seat. The subsequent by-election saw former Speaker of the Legislature
Charles Pingle win the district for the Liberal party, defeating a Liberal and a Conservative. The district also returned two members in 1926. This time they were elected through
Single transferable voting. Baker moved to the
Cypress electoral district. Pingle stood for re-election. Liberal Pingle and Conservative J.J. Hendricks were elected in this election. This was the first — and only — election held in this district using STV. Before the next general election the vote district was re-drawn smaller and only given one member and the method of election was changed to
Instant-runoff voting. From 1930 to 1956, the district used
instant-runoff voting to elect its MLA.
Bob Wanner was elected as a New Democratic Party (NDP) candidate in 2015. ==Legislature election results==