Prasad Panda

{{Short description|Canadian politician}}

{{Use Canadian English|date=January 2023}}

{{Infobox officeholder

| honorific-prefix = The Honourable

| name = Prasad Panda

| honorific-suffix = {{post-nominals|country=CAN|ECA|size=100%}}

| image = PandaMLA.png

| alt =

| caption = Panda in 2015

| office1 = Minister of Transportation

| premier1 = Jason Kenney

| term_start1 = June 21, 2022

| term_end1 = October 24, 2022

| predecessor1 = Rajan Sawhney

| successor1 = Devin Dreeshen

| office2 = Minister of Infrastructure

| premier2 = Jason Kenney

| term_start2 = April 30, 2019

| term_end2 = June 21, 2022

| predecessor2 = Sandra Jansen

| successor2 = Nicholas Milliken

| office3 = Member of the Legislative Assembly of Alberta for Calgary-Edgemont (Calgary-Foothills; 2015–2019)

| term_start3 = September 3, 2015

| term_end3 = May 29, 2023

| predecessor3 = Jim Prentice

| successor3 = Julia Hayter

| birth_date = {{Birth based on age as of date|52|2015|9|3}}

| birth_place = Sangam Jagarlamudi, Andhra Pradesh, India

| residence = Calgary

| party = United Conservative

| otherparty = Wildrose (until 2017)

| occupation = Professional engineer

| alma_mater =

}}

Prasad Panda {{post-nominals|country=CAN|ECA}} is a Canadian politician who was elected to the Legislative Assembly of Alberta in a 2015 by-election, replacing former Alberta Premier Jim Prentice, and the 2019 Alberta general elections to represent the electoral district of Calgary-Foothills.[https://calgaryherald.com/news/politics/polling-stations-busy-but-not-too-busy-in-calgary-foothills-byelection "Wildrose's Panda defeats NDP in Calgary-Foothills byelection battle"]. Calgary Herald, September 4, 2015.

He is a member of the United Conservative Party. With his party forming majority government Panda joined the Executive Council of Alberta as the Minister of Infrastructure beginning on April 30, 2019.

Background

Prasad Panda was born in Sangam Jagarlamudi, Andhra Pradesh, India. Since coming to Canada, Panda has spent his entire life living in his constituency of Calgary-Edgemont. Panda holds a bachelor's degree in Mechanical Engineering and is a professional engineer by trade.{{Cite web |title=Member Information |url=https://www.assembly.ab.ca/members/members-of-the-legislative-assembly/member-information?mid=0904&legl=30&from=mla_home |access-date=2023-03-22 |website=www.assembly.ab.ca}} He worked in the energy sector for 28 years, during which time he held senior management positions with Reliance Industries Ltd. and Suncor Energy Inc. Panda was a key member of the project management teams that built world-scale projects worth over $100 billion, including petroleum, petrochemical, power, pipelines, marine infrastructure, and oil sands projects. He is a member of Association of Professional Engineers and Geoscientists of Alberta (APEGA).

Panda is the president of the Telugu Association of Calgary and as the first vice-president of the India-Canada Association of Calgary. Panda also organizes an annual food drive for Calgary Veterans.{{Cite web |last=ucpcaucus_mla |date=2019-10-02 |title=Prasad Panda |url=https://unitedconservativecaucus.ca/prasad-panda/ |access-date=2023-03-22 |website=United Conservative Caucus |language=en-US}}

Political career

Panda was a member of the Wildrose Party and defeated former Calgary city councillor and Alberta NDP MLA Bob Hawkesworth by 1598 votes, winning 38.3% of all votes cast."Report on 2015 Calgary-Foothills and 2016 Calgary-Greenway By-elections". Elections Alberta, November 15, 2016.[https://www.elections.ab.ca/uploads/Report-on-2015-Calgary-Foothills-and-2016-Calgary-Greenway-By-elections.pdf]Passifiume,Bryan:'Panda beats Hawkesworth as Wildrose wins Calgary provincial byelection' Calgary Sun, September 3, 2015.https://edmontonsun.com/2015/09/03/panda-beats-hawkesworth-as-wildrose-win-calgary-provincial-byelection

In 2017, Panda joined the United Conservative Party and became the party's energy critic. Panda introduced Motion 505, a resolution calling on the federal government to ban the import of oil from countries with a poor human rights or environmental record, and to facilitate pipelines within Canada to ensure better prices for Alberta oil.{{Cite web |title=Breakenridge: Governments should stand back and let energy economy take its course |url=https://calgaryherald.com/opinion/columnists/breakenridge-governments-should-stand-back-and-let-energy-economy-take-its-course |access-date=2023-03-22 |website=calgaryherald |language=en-CA}}

Panda ran in the 2019 Alberta general election and was elected to represent the electoral district of Calgary-Edgemont.{{Cite web |title=Wildrose's Panda defeats NDP in Calgary-Foothills byelection battle |url=https://calgaryherald.com/news/politics/polling-stations-busy-but-not-too-busy-in-calgary-foothills-byelection |access-date=2023-03-22 |website=calgaryherald |language=en-CA}} He is a member of the United Conservative Party. With his party forming a majority government, Panda joined the Executive Council of Alberta as the Minister of Infrastructure, beginning on April 30, 2019.

In October 2021, Panda sponsored and introduced Bill 73, the Infrastructure Accountability Act. The bill aims to increase transparency and accountability by setting a guiding framework for long-term, priority-based public infrastructure planning. It also legislates a governance framework to guide how capital projects are prioritized, as well as the development of a 20-Year Strategic Capital Plan, which will help guide the government's infrastructure decisions over the long-term.{{Cite web |title=Strengthening infrastructure planning |url=https://www.alberta.ca/strengthening-infrastructure-planning.aspx |access-date=2023-03-22 |website=www.alberta.ca |language=en-CA}} The bill passed on the 7th of December 2021, and it is the only bill sponsored by Panda while he was in the cabinet.

Panda ran for re-election in the 2023 Alberta general election to represent the electoral district of Calgary-Edgemont.{{Cite web |title=Alberta Election 2023 – daveberta.ca – Alberta Politics and Elections |url=https://daveberta.ca/alberta-election/ |access-date=2023-03-22 |language=en-US}} He lost his seat to Julia Hayter from the NDP, who received 34.03% of the vote in the 2019 Alberta general elections in the same riding.{{Cite web |title=Alberta election 2023 results: Calgary-Edgemont {{!}} Globalnews.ca |url=https://globalnews.ca/news/9625342/alberta-election-2023-results-calgary-edgemont/ |access-date=2023-05-30 |website=Global News |language=en-US}}

Electoral history

{{Alberta provincial election, 2023/Calgary-Edgemont}}

{{Alberta provincial election, 2019/Calgary-Edgemont}}

=Calgary-Foothills=

{{CANelec/top|AB|September 3, 2015|Calgary-Foothills|by=yes|percent=yes|change=yes|reason=Voiding of general election results due to Jim Prentice disclaiming his seat}}

{{CANelec|AB|Wildrose|Prasad Panda|4,877|38.35|+20.24}}

{{CANelec|AB|NDP|Bob Hawkesworth|3,270|25.71|-6.65}}

{{CANelec|AB|PC|Blair Houston|2,746|21.59|-18.74}}

{{CANelec|AB|Liberal|Ali Bin Zahid|791|6.22|-0.94}}

{{CANelec|AB|Alberta|Mark Taylor|610|4.80|+4.80}}

{{CANelec|AB|Green|Janet Keeping|377|2.96|+0.92}}

{{CANelec|AB|Independent|Antoni Grochowski|46|0.36|–}}

{{CANelec/total|Total valid votes| 12,717|}}

{{CANelec/total|Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots||}}

{{CANelec/total|Turnout||39.48}}

{{CANelec/total|Eligible voters|32,212}}

{{CANelec/gain|AB|Wildrose|PC| +19.49 }}

{{CANelec/source|}}

{{end}}

=Calgary-Northern Hills=

{{Alberta provincial election, 2015/Calgary-Northern Hills}}

{{Alberta provincial election, 2012/Calgary-Northern Hills}}

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{{Canadian cabinet member navigational box header |ministry=Jason_Kenney}}

{{ministry box cabinet posts

| post1preceded = Sandra Jansen

| post1 = Minister of Infrastructure

| post1years = April 30, 2019–

| post1note =

| post1followed = Incumbent

}}

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References