Former Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi wins Alberta NDP leadership

Former three-term Calgary Mayor Naheed Nenshi won the Alberta NDP leadership in a landslide and in a single round of voting on Saturday.

He won with 62,746 votes in a single round of voting Saturday and now leads the largest opposition party in Alberta’s history.

Addressing party faithful, Nenshi, 52, says the party has to come together to co-create a vision for Alberta for the “home we need to build together.”

“That is our work,” Nenshi said.

He joined the NDP late, only getting his party membership in the early months of 2024 to compete in the race.

Nenshi’s family immigrated to Canada from Tanzania. He made international headlines when he became the first Muslim mayor of a major North American city in 2010, and his social-media savvy helped his brand pick up steam.

He was lauded for his handling of the city’s devastating flood in 2013.

Nenshi says Alberta has always been home, noting how he lived and grew up in the province as a youth, and once again shortly after he turned 30, because “Alberta has always been home.”

“It became a home for a poor immigrant family from Africa, as it has become a home for people who had been here for 1,000s of generations, as we continue to build a home for people who arrived here last week,” he said.

He also took a swing at Premier Danielle Smith and her United Conservative government. Nenshi accused Smith of seeing “Alberta as a fortress to be defended,” while his party says this province has always been a place with a “wide open welcome mat” for anyone who chooses to call it home.

“The stories I was hearing from our premier and our government, the place they were describing didn’t feel like our home. They were describing an Alberta that I didn’t recognize. They were describing an Alberta that is so very, very small. And in Alberta, we are many things but we’re not small,” Nenshi said.

“They were describing an Alberta where everyone is against us, an Alberta where we need to fight outsiders all the time. They were describing an Alberta where everyone is against us, an Alberta where we need to fight outsiders all the time. An Alberta where we should be scared of change instead of embracing and leading the future.

“That is not Alberta. Alberta is not small. Alberta is not small minded. Because as we all know, it is impossible to think small under a sky that big.

“But Danielle Smith and the UCP want us to be small. They want us to be small because they think small. They see Alberta as a fortress to be defended. But what Alberta has always been is a wide open door with a welcome mat. Inviting the best people and the best ideas from every corner of this broken earth to live a great Alberta life right here.”

While he says Smith claims she is the “most freedom-loving politician in Canada,” Nenshi argued she “hasn’t done a blessed thing to protect anybody’s freedoms,” instead saying she is the “most power-loving politician.”

He continued by saying the current government has taken freedoms away from teachers, doctors, nurses, landowners, researchers, citizens in choosing local representatives and also the “freedom to disagree with the premier on anything.”

“I think she misspoke. I think when she said She’s the most freedom-loving politician in Canada, she meant to say she’s the most power-loving politician in Canada,” Nenshi said.


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Nenshi was seen as the frontrunner for the leadership with membership sales spiking after he joined the race.

But speculation had been building since mid-January when Rachel Notley said she would be stepping down as leader of the Official Opposition after a decade at the party’s head.

Sporting an Edmonton Oilers jersey, she gave a farewell speech to party members Friday night in Calgary.

Along with the former mayor, four candidates ran for the leadership bid; former cabinet ministers Sarah Hoffman and Kathleen Ganley; and rookie legislature member Jodi Calahoo Stonehouse.

Nearly 73,000 NDP members voted in the leadership race, with Nenshi claiming close to 90 per cent of the vote.

Across the other candidates, Ganley received 5,899 votes, Hoffman received 3,063 votes, and Calahoo Stonehouse received 1,222 votes. 

Over 50 per cent of eligible ballots cast is needed for the ranked preferential ballot system the party is using.

Throughout the leadership race, the party’s membership has grown exponentially — last month, the party said its total membership had reached 85,144.

On Dec. 31, 2023, the party had 16,224 members.

“We are now over 85,000 members strong and we will continue building this movement,” said Nenshi in a statement released following the announcement.

“Together, we will work hard to show our friends and neighbours that they have a home in the Alberta NDP and, in 2027, we will deliver a smarter and more capable government that respects all Albertans.”


Watch: Rachel Notley delivers farewell speech in Calgary


Nenshi has come under fire by some in the party as an opportunistic johnny-come-lately with political leanings more Liberal red than NDP orange.

However, he has dismissed the criticism, saying his values are core Alberta ones.

He has also sparked debate on the future identity of the Alberta NDP, questioning whether it should retain membership ties with its federal counterpart.

In last year’s provincial election, Smith’s UCP leveraged support by painting Alberta New Democrats as either enthusiastic co-conspirators or impotent lackeys in the federal power-sharing deal between Liberal Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh.

An alliance with federal counterparts has forced the Alberta wing to walk a policy tightrope on energy and environmental policy in a province where jobs and billions of dollars in revenue are tied to non-renewable resources like the oilsands.

The federal and provincial parties openly butted heads in 2018 when Notley’s then-government celebrated Trudeau’s government spending billions to purchase the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion to ensure more Alberta oil would get to the B.C. coast. 

The move outraged environmental advocates, including those within the NDP. Federal NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh criticized the purchase as a bad deal for all involved.

With files from Nadia Moharib and The Canadian Press

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