Whitehorse Riverdale

Whitehorse Riverdale was a territorial electoral district in the Canadian territory of Yukon, which was represented on the Yukon Territorial Council from 1974 to 1978. The district consisted primarily of the Riverdale area in the capital city of Whitehorse.[1]

It was one of four districts, alongside Ogilvie, Pelly River and Whitehorse Porter Creek, which existed only for the 1974 Yukon general election; the district was newly created in 1974 when the territorial council was expanded from seven to 12 members,[1] but was further split into the districts of Riverdale North and Riverdale South when the new Legislative Assembly of Yukon was established in 1978.[2]

The district elected Willard Phelps in the 1974 election,[3] but Don Branigan filed for a court injunction to overturn his election on the grounds that as the government was renting space in Phelps' commercial real estate holdings for some of its liquor stores, his serving on the council placed him in a conflict of interest.[4] Phelps was removed from office in 1975; Branigan ran in the resulting by-election, but lost to Walt Lengerke.[5]

Representatives

Name Took Office Left Office
Willard Phelps 1974 1975
Walt Lengerke 1975 1978
gollark: Or smarter political organization, but HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.
gollark: I agree. Existing problems probably require more people to think of clever ideas and such.
gollark: Of course, in case of catastrophic societal implosion, people will just flock to the copy of Wikipedia I etched into some unused mountains.
gollark: In case of catastrophic societal implosion and people somehow using it.
gollark: Nobody will pay attention to that kind of vague platitude. At most it would be used for calendrical functions probably.

References

  1. "Ridings Split 7-5". Whitehorse Star, June 5, 1974.
  2. "Yukon Election '78: The Biggest Race Yet". Whitehorse Star, November 7, 1978.
  3. "Yukon vote: Voters elect largest council ever". Ottawa Citizen, November 19, 1974.
  4. "Phelps' Seat Controverted". Whitehorse Star, December 30, 1974.
  5. "Swearing-In Nov. 25". Whitehorse Star, November 17, 1975.
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