Rob Anderson
MLA for Airdrie-Chestermere
In office
March 3, 2008  April 23, 2012
Preceded byCarol Haley
Succeeded byElectoral district abolished
MLA for Airdrie
In office
April 23, 2012  May 5, 2015
Preceded byElectoral district created
Succeeded byAngela Pitt
Personal details
Born (1977-06-13) June 13, 1977
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Political partyProgressive Conservative (2008–2010, 2014-2017)
Wildrose Party (2010–2014)
Residence(s)Airdrie, Alberta, Canada
Alma materBrigham Young University
University of Alberta
OccupationLawyer
Websitehttp://www.robanderson.ca

Robert Harmen "Rob" Anderson (born June 13, 1977) is a Canadian politician and a former Member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta; he represented the constituency of Airdrie. He was a Progressive Conservative until he crossed the floor on January 4, 2010 to join the Wildrose Party.[1] He was reelected in the 2012 Alberta general election, with 16 other Wildrose MLAs to form the Official Opposition.

On December 17, 2014, Anderson resigned from the Wildrose caucus to cross the floor and rejoin the governing Progressive Conservative Association of Alberta caucus, along with eight other Wildrose MLAs.[2]

He is currently acting as the Executive Director of the Office of the Premier, Danielle Smith.

Political career

Anderson was elected to his first term in Alberta's Legislative Assembly as the Member for Airdrie-Chestermere in the 2008 provincial election.

During his first term, Anderson was appointed as a member of the Provincial Treasury Board and served on the standing and cabinet policy committees on Public Safety and Services as well as the Private Bills committee. He also served as the parliamentary assistant to the Solicitor General and Minister of Public Security.[3]

As parliamentary assistant, Anderson oversaw stakeholder consultations toward developing Alberta's new law enforcement framework; conducted industry consultations for and sponsoring the Security Services and Investigators Act (2008); and sponsored the Alberta Gaming & Liquor Amendment Act (2009). He was also the writer and sponsor of a private members bill, the Election Finances and Contributions Disclosure (Third Party Advertising) Amendment Act (2009).[4]

Anderson left the Progressive Conservative Party in January 2010 to join the Wildrose Alliance, which later changed its name to the Wildrose Party. When future leader Danielle Smith made it known she was leaving the Tories for the Wildrose a year earlier, the Tory leadership was concerned enough to ask Anderson to try to talk her into staying. Smith was concerned that the Tories were "beyond redemption" and "out of control." When Anderson later joined the Wildrose Party, Smith named him deputy leader.[5]

On April 23, 2012, Anderson was re-elected with 57% of the votes in Airdrie, essentially a redrawn version of his old riding. The Wildrose won 17 seats in that election, making Anderson Deputy Leader of the Opposition. Shortly after the election, he was appointed as House Leader and Finance Critic for the Official Opposition. He was also appointed as chair of the Standing Committee on Public Accounts, an all-party committee consisting of 18 Members of the Legislative Assembly that reviews the annual report of the Auditor General of Alberta and the public accounts of the province. He also served on the standing committees for Resource Stewardship and the Alberta Heritage Savings Trust Fund.

Anderson's first motion after re-election was Motion 506, which urged the government to bring forward legislation that would limit spending increases to no more than population growth plus inflation. Motion 506 also sought to prohibit the introduction of a budget that proposed a cash deficit, allocate half of all cash surpluses to the Alberta Heritage Savings Trust Fund, and suspend the practice of spending the interest generated by the Fund until it reached an amount of at least $200 billion.

In response to the provincial government's 2013-2014 budget, Anderson and the Official Opposition authored and released the Wildrose Financial Recovery Plan, which claimed it would eliminate operating deficits restore a government surplus by 2014.[6] In February 2013, Anderson, Drew Barnes and Danielle Smith released the Wildrose 10-year Debt Free Capital Plan. The plan called for $4 billion in capital infrastructure projects in 2013 and $48 billion over 10 years.[7]

Anderson launched an online political commentary show called "Rob Anderson Unfiltered", though which he advocates for the assertion of Alberta's provincial rights within a united Canada, and other Alberta separatist beliefs.

In September 2021, Anderson worked with Barry Cooper and Derek From to produce the Free Alberta Strategy, a series of initiatives to make Alberta a sovereign jurisdiction. Anderson said the Free Alberta Strategy also calls for the end of any transferring of taxes from Alberta to Ottawa.[8]

Anderson supported Danielle Smith as Campaign Chair in her 2022 run for United Conservative Party (UCP) leadership before becoming the Chair of her Transition Team, and then Executive Director of the Office of the Premier following her induction as premier.[9]

Early life

Anderson was born in Edmonton, the oldest of seven children. The family lived in Sherwood Park for most of Anderson's early years before moving in 1990 to Airdrie.

Anderson spent much of his time playing sports—particularly hockey and football. He won the Edmonton City Championship as defensive captain for the Salisbury High School football team in Sherwood Park, and was named the starting goaltender for the Brigham Young University Cougar's hockey team.

Taiwan missionary service

When he was nineteen years old, Anderson spent two years living in Taiwan doing missionary service for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, where he learned to speak Mandarin Chinese fluently, worked as a caregiver for high-needs individuals, and taught English as a second language.[4]

Education and awards

In 2003, Anderson graduated magna cum laude from Brigham Young University with a Bachelor of Arts in Communications.

Three years later, Anderson obtained a Bachelor of Laws degree from the University of Alberta, graduating with distinction.

While at law school, Anderson earned the Merv Leitch QC Scholarship for superior academic standing in Constitutional Law and participation in related extra-curricular activities.

Anderson co-founded the organization Students for a Stronger Alberta.[3] This group advocated for democratic reform and more meaningful voter participation in the democratic process, printed a university newspaper (‘the Independent’) focused on debating relevant public policy and political issues of the day, and organized a speaker series on strengthening democracy that included Preston Manning, Ted Morton and David Kilgour.

Business experience

Prior to his election as a Member of the Legislative Assembly, Anderson practiced corporate litigation law at Borden Ladner Gervais LLP in Calgary

Rob Anderson is currently a partner at Warnock Kraft Anderson in Airdrie, Alberta, and head of the corporate litigation practice.

During his time at law school, Anderson founded an online family entertainment business, selling it shortly before entering politics.

Election results

2008 Alberta general election results ( Airdrie-Chestermere ) Turnout 40.2%
Affiliation Candidate Votes %
  Progressive Conservative Rob Anderson 9,372 63%
Wildrose AllianceJeff Willerton2,36016%
  Liberal John Burke 1,972 13%
GreenDavid Brandreth6604%
  NDP Bryan Young 614 4%
Total 14978 100%
2012 Alberta general election: Airdrie
Party Candidate Votes%±%
WildroseRob Anderson9,56858.16%
Progressive ConservativeKelly Hegg5,37632.68%
New DemocraticBryan Young6854.16%
LiberalJoel M. Steacy5253.19%
IndependentJeff Willerton2971.81%
Total 16,451
Rejected, spoiled and declined 79
Eligible electors / turnout 31,25852.88%
Wildrose pickup new district.
Source(s)
Sources: "Airdrie Official Results 2012 Alberta general election". officialresults.elections.ab.ca. Elections Alberta. Retrieved May 21, 2020.
The Report of the Chief Electoral Officer on the 2012 Provincial General Election for the Twenty-eighth Legislative Assembly (PDF). Elections Alberta. 27 Apr 2012. pp. 276–280.

References

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