Calgary’s municipal election has delivered a dramatic change in leadership. Former city councillor Jeromy Farkas has been unofficially declared the new mayor, defeating incumbent Jyoti Gondek and challenger Sonya Sharp in one of the city’s closest races in decades. Farkas’s lead over Sharp is estimated at less than 600 votes — a razor-thin margin that could still trigger a recount before results are certified.
Farkas’s win signals a clear pivot from Gondek’s tenure. Early in her term, Gondek famously declared a “climate emergency”, prioritizing diversification and clean-tech investment while striking a cautious tone toward Calgary’s oil and gas sector. Her administration directed significant municipal spending toward climate programs and pushed to reduce the city’s dependence on fossil fuels.
Farkas campaigned on fiscal discipline, affordability, and a pro-business agenda — with a central promise to “support the entire energy sector.” His approach suggests a friendlier stance toward oil and gas, potentially rolling back or scrutinizing climate-related spending and easing regulatory burdens on industry. That shift could encourage new investment and job growth in Calgary’s dominant sector, while leaving room to promote new energy sources as well.
If the results hold after any recount, Farkas’s leadership is expected to usher in a more energy-friendly era at City Hall. The transition could strengthen Calgary’s appeal as a hub for traditional oil and gas while still leaving space for emerging technologies — a notable contrast from the climate-focused tone of the past four years.