Danielle Smith made the suggestion on her radio show after being questioned about it by the organizer of a recall petition against Calgary Mayor Jyoti Gondek.

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Premier Danielle Smith says she is willing to consider changes to Alberta’s recall legislation, but not while an active petition campaign is underway.

The premier told that to Calgarian Landon Johnston, who spearheaded the petition to recall Mayor Jyoti Gondek, after he called into her weekly radio show on Saturday morning.

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Once on the air, Johnston expressed frustration with the legislation, stating he’s been “left out to dry” by the Alberta government since launching his petition nearly two months ago.

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He also claimed other groups including those both for and against the mayor have used his campaign for their own purposes.

“There are so many loopholes and gaps in this legislation,” he told Smith. “I’ve been left to fend for myself against so many different groups using this as an opportunity for their own gain. I’m talking people who say they’re with UCP, I’m talking NDP people, I’m talking about mayor’s supporters using this as an opportunity to collect signatures and then destroy them and then collect donations, all under my name.”

He said he’s tried to get a hold of Minister of Municipal Affairs Ric McIver for some direction on how to navigate the legislation but has yet to hear from the minister or anyone else in Smith’s government.

In response, Smith acknowledged the threshold to recall a politician is very high, pointing out that in order to legally oust a mayor in Alberta, a petitioner is required to collect signatures from 40 per cent of the municipality’s population.

She said she’d commit to talking to Johnston and other Albertans who have attempted to recall a politician once the current petition campaign is over.

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“We know we need to make some modifications, but what I’ve said is I can’t modify the legislation while there’s an active petition going on,” she said.

“But once that’s over, I really would look forward to getting some input from someone who has gone through the process about what we need to do to change the legislation.”

Landon Johnston
Calgarian and mayoral recall petition organizer Landon Johnston stands in front of city hall on Saturday, February 10, 2024. Brent Calver/Postmedia file

Current recall rules require physical signatures from 40% of electorate

Johnston, the owner of an HVAC business, has been collecting signatures since early February in an attempt to oust Gondek from office.

He’s abiding by Alberta’s Recall Act, which was introduced in 2021 under former premier Jason Kenney. When the legislation was tabled, Kenney said the bill would give voters a tool to effectively fire elected representatives who had lost the public’s confidence.

The requirements to oust a municipal politician particularly in a big city like Calgary are incredibly lofty, however, as a petitioner must collect valid, physical signatures from 40 per cent of an electoral district’s population within 60 days.

In Johnston’s case, the 40 per cent threshold equates to 514,284 eligible voters, using figures from Calgary’s 2019 census. That’s over 120,000 more than the 390,383 Calgarians who voted in the 2021 mayoral election.

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Despite an army of volunteer canvassers and promotional support from a third-party group of conservative political advocates called Project YYC, Johnston’s efforts appear to have fallen far short of the threshold. On social media on Saturday, he posted that he has counted a little over 51,000 signatures so far. The deadline to submit the signatures to the Elections Calgary office is April 4, before 4:30 p.m.

The city’s clerk’s office will have 45 days to count the signatures. If the unverified total falls short of the legislative requirement, no further action is needed.

If the total surpasses the 514,284 threshold, Elections Calgary staff will then verify the results using a randomized sample of 369 signatures, with a 95 per cent confidence level, to estimate the total number of valid signatures.

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