Republican Party of Alberta

Provincial political party in Canada From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Republican Party of Alberta is a provincial political party in Alberta, Canada. It was founded in 2022 as the Buffalo Party of Alberta and adopted its current name in February 2025.[3] The party supports a binding referendum on Alberta independence and a subsequent non-binding referendum on joining the United States.

AbbreviationRPA[1]
LeaderCameron Davies
PresidentSarah Negussie
RegisteredJanuary 20, 2022 (2022-01-20) (as Buffalo Party of Alberta)
Quick facts Abbreviation, Leader ...
Republican Party of Alberta
AbbreviationRPA[1]
LeaderCameron Davies
PresidentSarah Negussie
RegisteredJanuary 20, 2022 (2022-01-20) (as Buffalo Party of Alberta)
Preceded byBuffalo Party of Alberta
HeadquartersRed Deer, Alberta
Membership (June 2025)Increase 24,000
Ideology
Political positionRight-wing[2]
Colours  Red
Seats in Legislature
0 / 87
Website
albertarepublicans.com
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History

The Buffalo Party of Alberta

The Buffalo Party of Alberta was registered as a political party with Elections Alberta on January 20, 2022.[4] The first leader of the party was John Molberg.[5] The party held a launch event in Calgary on May 12, 2022.[6] The party ran one candidate, Andrew Jacobson, in the 2023 Alberta provincial election in the district Edmonton-Strathcona[7], in which they received 106 votes (0.60%). In March 2024, Andrew Jacobson was listed by Elections Alberta as the new interim leader of the party.[8][9]

Republican Party of Alberta

On February 10, 2025, the party changed its name to the Republican Party of Alberta.[8] On April 11, 2025, Cameron Davies was acclaimed as the new leader.[10] The party made the announcement of his leadership on April 29.[11][12] In May 2025, the Republican Party and the Independence Party of Alberta signed a memorandum of understanding, which sought to advance and unify the independence movement in Alberta. The parties worked together to select candidates who ran under the Republican banner in the 2025 Alberta provincial by-elections.[13]

On May 14, 2025, the party announced its first candidate since their rebranding: Fred Munn would run in the Edmonton-Ellerslie by-election.[14] On May 20, leader Cameron Davies was announced as the candidate for the Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills by-election.[15] On May 27, Ravina Chand was named the candidate in the Edmonton-Strathcona by-election.[16] The party did not win any of the elections, which were held on June 23, 2025.

On April 30, 2026, the Republican Party of Alberta along with the Centurion Project were implicated in a large privacy breach for distributing the private information of millions of Albertans. Originally, the list was given legally to the Republican Party of Alberta but ended up being hosted by the Centurion Project on a public facing website.[17] Elections Alberta when to court and was granted an injunction that database be taken down.[18] The Alberta RCMP has launched an investigation and is collaborating with other law enforcement partners in the province to determine if any other laws were broken.[18]

Ideology

As the Buffalo Party, the party did not call for Alberta independence but rather more autonomy from the federal government.[19][20] After becoming the Republican Party, it shifted towards a separatist stance, describing itself as being "at the forefront advocating for Alberta independence".[21] It proposes holding a binding referendum on Alberta independence and a subsequent non-binding referendum on Alberta joining the United States as a state or territory.[22]

Aside from the independence movement, the Republican Party also supports firearm ownership and abolishing the restrictive federal regulations.[23] It supports stricter immigration laws and the restriction of temporary foreign worker permits.[24] The party is fiscally conservative, supporting lower taxes, responsible spending, and lean government focused mainly on core services.[23] The party supports freedom of speech and the free market. The party advocates a melting pot society after leaving Canada.[25]

Membership

The Republicans announced that 48 hours after the 2025 Canadian federal election, the party grew by 11,394 members.[26] In mid-May 2025, the party said it had given out 20,000 free memberships.[27] As of June 2025, the party claims to have reached 24,000 members.[28]

Leaders

More information Leader, Term in office ...
Leader Term in office Notes
John Molberg January 20, 2022 March 2024 Founder[29]
Andrew Jacobson March 2024 April 11, 2025 Interim
Cameron Davies April 11, 2025 Incumbent
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Election results

More information Election, Banner ...
Legislative Assembly of Alberta
Election Banner Leader Candidates Votes % Seats +/- Position Status
2023 Buffalo John Molberg
1 / 87
106 0.01
0 / 87
New party 13th No seats
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By-elections

More information By-election, Date ...
By-election Date Candidate Votes % Position Status
Edmonton-Strathcona June 23, 2025 Ravina Chand
65
0.67
Decrease 5th[n 1]
No seats
Edmonton-Ellerslie June 23, 2025 Fred Munn
291
3.42
4th
No seats
Olds-Didsbury-Three Hills June 23, 2025 Cameron Davies
2,705
17.66
3rd
No seats
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See also

References

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