Distributed for University of British Columbia Press
The End of Solitude
Competitive Party Politics in Alberta
Alberta is an economic powerhouse but a misunderstood and overlooked political force. The End of Solitudeexamines the province’s distinctive party politics, reaching back to before the birth of the province and then focusing on a political evolution over the past two decades.
Spurred by populism and alienation, Albertans united behind a center-right provincial party for much of the twentieth century, while excluding themselves from Liberal-dominated federal politics. In 2006, this dynamic began to shift as the provincial right faltered, fractured, and then re-formed, while the left gained and then lost power but remained united in opposition. The historic pattern of a dynastic conservative bloc surrounded by minor parties was interrupted.
The authors convincingly argue that the recent change in provincial party politics may signal the imminent arrival of real competition in both provincial and federal politics, ending Alberta’s solitude and shaping the future of Canada.
254 pages | 36 charts, 15 tables | 6 x 9 | © 2026
Political Science: Political Behavior and Public Opinion, Political and Social Theory