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It is envisaged that Canada’s conservative leader Pierre Polyver will win decisive elections in Alberta province to secure a new place for parliament after losing its electoral area in the last general elections.
As the final ballots are still counting, Poiliev leads with 80.4% of the votes in the rural river-crowfoot, according to the preliminary results of the Election Commission in Canada.
“Meeting people in this region was the privilege of my life,” he told a delightful crowd on Monday.
His predicted victory comes four months after his party was defeated by Mark Carney’s liberals and he lost Ottawa’s place in the area, which he had kept for two decades by Liberal Bruce Fandjo.
In this choice of elections, Poilievre encounters a record 214 candidates, many of whom are related to a protest group seeking an election reform.
This is the second time the group has directed Poilievre in a campaign. Voters were asked to fill in a vote for writing due to the unusually large number of candidates.
Poiliev’s estimated victory will allow the 46-year-old to return to the House of Municipalities for the fall, a meeting after his April defeat.
The special elections were called in June after former parliamentary conservative member Damian Kurek stepped aside to release Pioevre to run.
Poyliev thanked Kurek for his “Blessed Victim” in his speech to win.
Alberta is a conservative fortress – Kurek, the former MP for the riding, won with 83% of the vote. In the past, riding was won by conservatives with at least 70% of the vote.
The conservative leader faced discounts from some locals, including an independent candidate Bonnie Cricley, who accused him of seeking to win the riding as “nothing more than a means of end.”
Polyver defended his campaign by telling the Calgary Herald newspaper that he had banished as if he were “one voice behind.”
“I believe in humility and gaining people’s trust,” he said.
Poiliev is now facing a mandatory review of leadership in January, where members of the Conservative Party will vote whether it should remain as the leader of their upcoming national convention.