Montreal Gazette

How a Liberal took a lone Calgary riding

- TYLER DAWSON

George Chahal, the only Liberal member of Parliament elected in Calgary, stormed to victory Monday night after an aggressive on-the-ground campaign that harnessed frustratio­n over the fourth wave of the pandemic.

As the election results came in Monday night, George Chahal was in a nail-biter of a race with Jag Sahota, the Conservati­ve incumbent who won the riding in the 2019 federal election when the Conservati­ves swept all but one of Alberta's 34 ridings.

In the end, Chahal defeated Sahota, who was practicall­y nonexisten­t on the campaign trail.

“I'm going to commit to working for you just like we did for the last four years in city hall,” Chahal said Monday night, speaking to supporters in a Calgary parking lot.

Chahal's new riding encompasse­s much of Calgary's Ward 5, which Chahal has represente­d on city council since 2017, after a career in finance, constructi­on and developmen­t.

Duane Bratt, a political scientist at Mount Royal University, said Calgary Skyview was always going to be the Liberals' best shot at winning a seat in the province.

“It was a combinatio­n of demographi­cs of the riding, the personal appeal of George Chahal and the unpopulari­ty of Jason Kenney — and those were all combined in Chahal's victory,” he said.

A Liberal source, who worked on the Alberta leg of the Liberal campaign, said a previously elected politician brings experience, name recognitio­n and a team of volunteers to the campaign trail.

“If you look at the 2015 Liberal formula to pick up four seats in Alberta, three of them were people who had held elected office very recently in the areas they ran,” the source, who was not authorized to speak publicly about the campaign, told the National Post.

Since the 2019 election, Alberta, which elected no Liberals, has had no representa­tion at the cabinet table, and Chahal's name has been bounced around as a potential for a cabinet position.

Chahal, who received an endorsemen­t from outgoing Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi, rode to a victory of a few thousand votes.

“They ran a really strong local campaign and they turned out Liberal voters,” the party source said. “Liberals win seats when we run really strong local campaigns.”

Bratt said Chahal had worked hard for his constituen­ts in the riding — and was rewarded for it with something approximat­ing a landslide. “In Alberta, non-conservati­ve terms,” Bratt said.

Chahal's campaign said he was not doing interviews, and was spending the next couple days with his family.

Calgary Skyview was one of the ridings the Liberals thought they had a chance in during this election, alongside Edmonton Centre, Calgary Centre and Edmonton Mill Woods.

As of Tuesday, they had taken only Skyview. Liberal Randy Boissonnau­lt was locked in a dead heat with Conservati­ve incumbent James Cumming in Edmonton Centre at press time.

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