Andrew Knack: 'Edmonton chose independent leadership'
Andrew Knack is set to become Edmonton's 37th mayor, leading a council that will have many of the same people he served with previously, as well as a few members of the Better Edmonton party.
"Edmonton chose independent leadership with real solutions that will lead us to a stronger city together," Knack said in a victory speech on Oct. 21 from his campaign headquarters off Whyte Avenue. "I will always meet in good faith, and I will be clear about what Edmontonians need and how the city will lead. We won't agree on everything, and that's OK. What I will push for is how we work together, by listening to one another, by being open, by learning from one another, to do the work to build a stronger Edmonton."
While several polls remained uncounted even by the end of the day on Oct. 21, Knack had a big enough lead that his closest rival, Tim Cartmell, conceded by 2pm.
"Last night didn't turn out the way we hoped, but I can tell you this: I have never been more proud of the people standing beside me and the work we accomplished as a team over the last year," said Cartmell, who ran under the Better Edmonton banner with a full slate of candidates.
Knack, the three-term city councillor who bowed out of municipal politics last fall, only to re-emerge as a mayoral candidate, had an early lead over Cartmell that only grew as results trickled in.
Michael Walters finished third, followed by Omar Mohammad, Rahim Jaffer, and eight other candidates.
"While this isn't the result we were hoping for, I am very proud of the campaign we ran over the past three months," Walters said in a statement. "Andrew is a man of character who will work hard every day."
Of the nine incumbent councillors seeking re-election, only Jennifer Rice in Ward Ipiihkoohkanipiaohtsi was at risk of losing. She trailed independent Jon Morgan by 3.5 percentage points with 19 of 21 polls reporting. Find the most up-to-date vote counts on Taproot's results dashboard.
The three wards with no incumbent were leaning toward Better Edmonton candidates at press time, though the race in sipiwiyiniwak was exceptionally tight — only six votes separated Darrell Friesen and Thu Parmar with all polls reporting. A recount is expected. Reed Clark was ahead of Rajah Maggay by 3.5 percentage points in Nakota Isga with 20 of 22 polls reporting, and Michael Elliott led Jackie Liu in pihêsiwin by 9.7 percentage points with 16 of 20 polls reporting.
The rest of the returning councillors had comfortable leads and will serve another term: Aaron Paquette in Dene, Keren Tang in Karhiio, Ashley Salvador in Métis, Michael Janz in papastew, Karen Principe in tastawiyiniwak, Erin Rutherford in Anirniq, Anne Stevenson in O-day'min, and Jo-Anne Wright in Sspomitapi.