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Nova Scotia Liberal Party

The Nova Scotia Liberal Party is a centrist provincial political party in Nova Scotia, Canada and the provincial section of the Liberal Party of Canada. The party currently forms the Official Opposition in Nova Scotia, under the leadership of Zach Churchill. The party was in power most recently from the 2013 election until the 2021 election.[1][2]

Nova Scotia Liberal Party
Active provincial party
LeaderZach Churchill
PresidentDr. Paul Doucette
SecretarySandy Schembri
Founded1883; 140 years ago (1883)
Headquarters5151 George Street
Suite 1400
Halifax, Nova Scotia
B3J 2T3
Youth wingNova Scotia Young Liberals
IdeologyLiberalism
Political positionCentre
National affiliationLiberal Party of Canada
ColoursRed
Seats in House of Assembly
17 / 55
Website
Official website

Origins

The party is descended from the pre-Confederation Reformers in Nova Scotia who coalesced around Joseph Howe demanding the institution of responsible government. The Liberals (Reformers) formed several governments in the colony between 1848 and 1867.

The party split during the debate on Confederation, with Howe and most other Liberals forming an Anti-Confederation Party, while supporters of confederation joined Tory Charles Tupper's Confederation Party. Howe, himself, initially opposed Confederation, but accepted it as a reality after initial attempts to scuttle it failed.

In 1868, Howe joined the pro-Confederation forces, serving for a time in the federal Cabinet of Sir John A. Macdonald.

The Anti-Confederation Party took most of Nova Scotia's seats in the House of Commons of Canada in 1867, as well as forming the government of the new province under William Annand. The new, post-1867 Liberal Party was organised by Annand and his anti-Confederate forces, while the Conservative Party was organised by Tupper and supporters of Sir John A. Macdonald's coalition in the province.

Prior to 1956, the Nova Scotia Liberal Party had ruled the province for 76 of its 89 years, most of that time with fewer than five opposition members. It had also ruled prior to confederation, and was responsible for bringing the first responsible government to North America. From 1882 to 1925, the Liberals held power for an unbroken 43 years, the second longest serving political dynasty in Canadian history, behind the Alberta PCs.[3]

The party in recent years

From 1956 the Tories gained significant ground with Robert Stanfield's reformation of the "Progressive Conservatives", and have successfully challenged the Liberals for control of the government. The Liberals faltered in the province at the beginning of the 21st century, and for a time were the third-largest party in the House of Assembly, behind the Tories and the Nova Scotia New Democratic Party. After the Nova Scotia Liberal Party's dismal performance in the 2006 election (and failing to win his own seat), leader Francis MacKenzie announced his resignation.[4] He was succeeded by Stephen McNeil. In the 2009 election, the Liberals moved out of third-party status and formed the official opposition once again. In the 2013 election, the Liberals won a majority government, their first since the 1993 election under John Savage, and took office for the first time in 14 years.[5] Under McNeil, a self-described fiscal conservative, the party pushed for balanced provincial budgets and took a firm stance against public sector unions.[6]

The Nova Scotia Liberals are the provincial section of the federal Liberal Party of Canada. The two parties have a shared membership, and Liberal Members of Parliament often become Liberal Members of the Legislative Assembly, and vice versa. Gerald Regan, for instance, became leader of the provincial party after serving as a Liberal MP. He joined the federal Liberal government after serving as premier of Nova Scotia. Angus L. Macdonald, the province's most storied Liberal premier, split his term into two by spending five years as a federal Liberal cabinet minister in the wartime government of William Lyon Mackenzie King.

In the 2009 election, Stephen McNeil led the Liberals to Official Opposition status, winning 11 seats.[7]

In the 2013 election, the McNeil Liberals won a majority government, defeating the NDP government of Darrell Dexter.[8]

In the 2017 election, the McNeil Liberals retained a reduced majority of 27 seats in the legislature.[9]

On August 6, 2020, McNeil announced he will step down as party leader and that he will continue to act as premier and as the party's leader until the a replacement is found.[10] On February 23, 2021, Rankin became the 29th Premier of Nova Scotia, replacing McNeil.[11] Rankin called a snap election for August 17, 2021, which his Liberal Party lost.[12] Rankin was personally re-elected in Timberlea-Prospect.[13]

Current elected member

Party leaders

Election results

Election Leader Votes % Seats +/– Position Government
1867 William Annand 58.6
36 / 38
  21   1st Majority
1871 52.2
24 / 38
  12   1st Majority
1874 Philip Carteret Hill 55.0
22 / 38
  2   1st Majority
1878 45.1
6 / 38
  16   2nd Opposition
1882 None 51.8
24 / 38
  18   1st Majority
1886 William Stevens Fielding 54.7
28 / 38
  4   1st Majority
1890 52.2
29 / 38
  1   1st Majority
1894 51.9
25 / 38
  4   1st Majority
1897 George Henry Murray 55.0
34 / 38
  9   1st Majority
1901 56.7
36 / 38
  2   1st Majority
1906 53.2
32 / 38
  4   1st Majority
1911 51.1
26 / 38
  10   1st Majority
1916 50.4
31 / 43
  5   1st Majority
1920 44.4
29 / 43
  2   1st Majority
1925 Ernest Howard Armstrong 36.3
3 / 43
  26   2nd Opposition
1928 William Chisholm 47.2
18 / 43
  15   2nd Opposition
1933 Angus Lewis Macdonald 52.6
22 / 30
  4   1st Majority
1937 51.0
25 / 30
  3   1st Majority
1941 Alexander Stirling MacMillan 52.6
22 / 30
  3   1st Majority
1945 Angus Lewis Macdonald 52.7
28 / 30
  6   1st Majority
1949 51.0
27 / 37
  1   1st Majority
1953 49.0
22 / 37
  5   1st Majority
1956 Henry Hicks 159,666 48.2
18 / 43
  4   2nd Opposition
1960 147,951 42.6
15 / 43
  3   2nd Opposition
1963 Earl Wallace Urquhart 134,873 39.7
4 / 43
  11   2nd Opposition
1967 Gerald Regan 142,945 41.8
6 / 46
  2   2nd Opposition
1970 174,943 46.1
23 / 46
  17   1st Minority
1974 206,648 47.9
31 / 46
  8   1st Majority
1978 175,218 39.4
17 / 52
  14   2nd Opposition
1981 Sandy Cameron 139,604 33.2
13 / 52
  4   2nd Opposition
1984 129,310 31.3
6 / 52
  7   2nd Opposition
1988 Vince MacLean 186,007 39.6
21 / 52
  15   2nd Opposition
1993 John Savage 243,298 49.7
40 / 52
  19   1st Majority
1998 Russell MacLellan 158,620 35.3
19 / 52
  21   1st Minority
1999 128,795 29.8
11 / 52
  8   3rd Third party
2003 Danny Graham 128,417 31.5
12 / 52
  1   3rd Third party
2006 Francis MacKenzie 94,872 23.4
9 / 52
  3   3rd Third party
2009 Stephen McNeil 112,160 27.2
11 / 52
  2   2nd Opposition
2013 190,112 45.7
33 / 51
  22   1st Majority
2017 157,541 39.5
27 / 51
  6   1st Majority
2021 Iain Rankin 155,026 36.67
17 / 55
  10   2nd Opposition

See also

References

  1. ^ "Liberal Leader Iain Rankin concedes election result | CBC.ca".
  2. ^ "Progressive Conservatives surge to surprise majority win in Nova Scotia election | CBC News".
  3. ^ "Alberta keeps Tories". The Chronicle Herald. April 24, 2012. Retrieved 2012-05-12.
  4. ^ "MacKenzie steps down as Liberal leader". CBC News. June 20, 2006. Retrieved 2013-10-09.
  5. ^ "Stephen McNeil leads Liberals to majority in Nova Scotia". CBC News. October 8, 2013. Retrieved 2013-10-09.
  6. ^ . The Chronicle Herald. The Canadian Press. Archived from the original on December 4, 2017.
  7. ^ "Liberals see gains, form Nova Scotia's Official Opposition". CBC News. June 9, 2009. Retrieved February 10, 2014.
  8. ^ "4 changes Stephen McNeil is promising for Nova Scotia". CBC News. October 9, 2013. Retrieved November 24, 2014.
  9. ^ Gorman, Michael. "Liberals score back-to-back majorities in Nova Scotia nail-biter". CBC News. Retrieved 30 June 2017.
  10. ^ Grant, Taryn. "Nova Scotia Premier Stephen McNeil to step down after 17 years in politics". CBC News. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  11. ^ Doucette, Keith (23 February 2021). "Premier Iain Rankin, new Nova Scotia cabinet sworn in by lieutenant-governor". Atlantic. Bell Media. Retrieved 3 March 2021.
  12. ^ "Bad campaign, leader who didn't connect with voters led to N.S. Liberal loss: Experts". 18 August 2021.
  13. ^ "Nova Scotia Liberal Leader Iain Rankin wins Timberlea-Prospect riding | The Star". The Toronto Star. 17 August 2021.
  14. ^ Rankin, Iain (2021-02-06). "Premier-designate Iain Rankin delivers his first speech as Leader of the Nova Scotia Liberal Party". Twitter.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  15. ^ Churchill, Zach [@zachchurchill] (9 July 2022). "Today is a new day for the Nova Scotia Liberal Party. Members from across our Province put their confidence in me to revive our Party and win back the trust of Nova Scotians. I'm excited to move forward, united, as one Party, with one goal: moving Nova Scotia forward. #nspoli" (Tweet). Retrieved 9 July 2022 – via Twitter.

External links

  • Liberal Party of Nova Scotia

nova, scotia, liberal, party, centrist, provincial, political, party, nova, scotia, canada, provincial, section, liberal, party, canada, party, currently, forms, official, opposition, nova, scotia, under, leadership, zach, churchill, party, power, most, recent. The Nova Scotia Liberal Party is a centrist provincial political party in Nova Scotia Canada and the provincial section of the Liberal Party of Canada The party currently forms the Official Opposition in Nova Scotia under the leadership of Zach Churchill The party was in power most recently from the 2013 election until the 2021 election 1 2 Nova Scotia Liberal PartyActive provincial partyLeaderZach ChurchillPresidentDr Paul DoucetteSecretarySandy SchembriFounded1883 140 years ago 1883 Headquarters5151 George Street Suite 1400Halifax Nova Scotia B3J 2T3Youth wingNova Scotia Young LiberalsIdeologyLiberalismPolitical positionCentreNational affiliationLiberal Party of CanadaColoursRedSeats in House of Assembly17 55WebsiteOfficial websitePolitics of Nova ScotiaPolitical partiesElections Contents 1 Origins 2 The party in recent years 3 Current elected member 4 Party leaders 5 Election results 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksOrigins EditThe party is descended from the pre Confederation Reformers in Nova Scotia who coalesced around Joseph Howe demanding the institution of responsible government The Liberals Reformers formed several governments in the colony between 1848 and 1867 The party split during the debate on Confederation with Howe and most other Liberals forming an Anti Confederation Party while supporters of confederation joined Tory Charles Tupper s Confederation Party Howe himself initially opposed Confederation but accepted it as a reality after initial attempts to scuttle it failed In 1868 Howe joined the pro Confederation forces serving for a time in the federal Cabinet of Sir John A Macdonald The Anti Confederation Party took most of Nova Scotia s seats in the House of Commons of Canada in 1867 as well as forming the government of the new province under William Annand The new post 1867 Liberal Party was organised by Annand and his anti Confederate forces while the Conservative Party was organised by Tupper and supporters of Sir John A Macdonald s coalition in the province Prior to 1956 the Nova Scotia Liberal Party had ruled the province for 76 of its 89 years most of that time with fewer than five opposition members It had also ruled prior to confederation and was responsible for bringing the first responsible government to North America From 1882 to 1925 the Liberals held power for an unbroken 43 years the second longest serving political dynasty in Canadian history behind the Alberta PCs 3 The party in recent years EditFrom 1956 the Tories gained significant ground with Robert Stanfield s reformation of the Progressive Conservatives and have successfully challenged the Liberals for control of the government The Liberals faltered in the province at the beginning of the 21st century and for a time were the third largest party in the House of Assembly behind the Tories and the Nova Scotia New Democratic Party After the Nova Scotia Liberal Party s dismal performance in the 2006 election and failing to win his own seat leader Francis MacKenzie announced his resignation 4 He was succeeded by Stephen McNeil In the 2009 election the Liberals moved out of third party status and formed the official opposition once again In the 2013 election the Liberals won a majority government their first since the 1993 election under John Savage and took office for the first time in 14 years 5 Under McNeil a self described fiscal conservative the party pushed for balanced provincial budgets and took a firm stance against public sector unions 6 The Nova Scotia Liberals are the provincial section of the federal Liberal Party of Canada The two parties have a shared membership and Liberal Members of Parliament often become Liberal Members of the Legislative Assembly and vice versa Gerald Regan for instance became leader of the provincial party after serving as a Liberal MP He joined the federal Liberal government after serving as premier of Nova Scotia Angus L Macdonald the province s most storied Liberal premier split his term into two by spending five years as a federal Liberal cabinet minister in the wartime government of William Lyon Mackenzie King In the 2009 election Stephen McNeil led the Liberals to Official Opposition status winning 11 seats 7 In the 2013 election the McNeil Liberals won a majority government defeating the NDP government of Darrell Dexter 8 In the 2017 election the McNeil Liberals retained a reduced majority of 27 seats in the legislature 9 On August 6 2020 McNeil announced he will step down as party leader and that he will continue to act as premier and as the party s leader until the a replacement is found 10 On February 23 2021 Rankin became the 29th Premier of Nova Scotia replacing McNeil 11 Rankin called a snap election for August 17 2021 which his Liberal Party lost 12 Rankin was personally re elected in Timberlea Prospect 13 Current elected member EditName Riding Year electedZach Churchill Yarmouth 2010Patricia Arab Fairview Clayton Park 2013Braedon Clark Bedford South 2021Rafah DiCostanzo Clayton Park West 2017Ali Duale Halifax Armdale 2021Tony Ince Cole Harbour 2013Keith Irving Kings South 2013Ben Jessome Hammonds Plains Lucasville 2013Carman Kerr Annapolis 2021Ronnie LeBlanc Clare 2021Brendan Maguire Halifax Atlantic 2013Derek Mombourquette Sydney Membertou 2015Lorelei Nicoll Cole Harbour Dartmouth 2021Iain Rankin Timberlea Prospect 2013Kelly Regan Bedford Basin 2009Angela Simmonds Preston 2021Fred Tilley Northside Westmount 2021Party leaders EditJames B Uniacke 1840 1854 William Young 1854 1860 Joseph Howe 1860 1864 Adams G Archibald 1864 1867 William Annand 1867 1875 Philip Carteret Hill 1875 1878 William F McCurdy 1878 1882 house leader William Thomas Pipes 1882 1884 William Stevens Fielding 1884 1896 George Henry Murray 1896 1923 Ernest Howard Armstrong 1923 1925 William Chisholm 1925 1930 Angus L Macdonald 1930 1940 A S MacMillan 1940 1945 Angus L Macdonald 1945 1954 Harold Connolly 1954 interim Henry Hicks 1954 1961 Earl W Urquhart 1961 1965 house leader 1961 1962 Gerald Regan 1965 1980 Benoit Comeau 1980 interim Sandy Cameron 1980 1985 Vince MacLean 1985 Bill Gillis 1985 1986 interim Vince MacLean 1986 1992 John Savage 1992 1997 Russell MacLellan 1997 2000 Wayne Gaudet 2000 2002 interim Danny Graham 2002 2004 Wayne Gaudet 2004 interim Francis MacKenzie 2004 2006 Michel Samson 2006 2007 interim Stephen McNeil 2007 2021 Iain Rankin 2021 2022 14 Zach Churchill 2022 Present 15 Election results EditElection Leader Votes Seats Position Government1867 William Annand 58 6 36 38 21 1st Majority1871 52 2 24 38 12 1st Majority1874 Philip Carteret Hill 55 0 22 38 2 1st Majority1878 45 1 6 38 16 2nd Opposition1882 None 51 8 24 38 18 1st Majority1886 William Stevens Fielding 54 7 28 38 4 1st Majority1890 52 2 29 38 1 1st Majority1894 51 9 25 38 4 1st Majority1897 George Henry Murray 55 0 34 38 9 1st Majority1901 56 7 36 38 2 1st Majority1906 53 2 32 38 4 1st Majority1911 51 1 26 38 10 1st Majority1916 50 4 31 43 5 1st Majority1920 44 4 29 43 2 1st Majority1925 Ernest Howard Armstrong 36 3 3 43 26 2nd Opposition1928 William Chisholm 47 2 18 43 15 2nd Opposition1933 Angus Lewis Macdonald 52 6 22 30 4 1st Majority1937 51 0 25 30 3 1st Majority1941 Alexander Stirling MacMillan 52 6 22 30 3 1st Majority1945 Angus Lewis Macdonald 52 7 28 30 6 1st Majority1949 51 0 27 37 1 1st Majority1953 49 0 22 37 5 1st Majority1956 Henry Hicks 159 666 48 2 18 43 4 2nd Opposition1960 147 951 42 6 15 43 3 2nd Opposition1963 Earl Wallace Urquhart 134 873 39 7 4 43 11 2nd Opposition1967 Gerald Regan 142 945 41 8 6 46 2 2nd Opposition1970 174 943 46 1 23 46 17 1st Minority1974 206 648 47 9 31 46 8 1st Majority1978 175 218 39 4 17 52 14 2nd Opposition1981 Sandy Cameron 139 604 33 2 13 52 4 2nd Opposition1984 129 310 31 3 6 52 7 2nd Opposition1988 Vince MacLean 186 007 39 6 21 52 15 2nd Opposition1993 John Savage 243 298 49 7 40 52 19 1st Majority1998 Russell MacLellan 158 620 35 3 19 52 21 1st Minority1999 128 795 29 8 11 52 8 3rd Third party2003 Danny Graham 128 417 31 5 12 52 1 3rd Third party2006 Francis MacKenzie 94 872 23 4 9 52 3 3rd Third party2009 Stephen McNeil 112 160 27 2 11 52 2 2nd Opposition2013 190 112 45 7 33 51 22 1st Majority2017 157 541 39 5 27 51 6 1st Majority2021 Iain Rankin 155 026 36 67 17 55 10 2nd OppositionSee also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Liberal Party of Nova Scotia List of Nova Scotia political parties List of Nova Scotia premiers 2021 Nova Scotia Liberal Party leadership election Nova Scotia Liberal Party leadership electionsReferences Edit Liberal Leader Iain Rankin concedes election result CBC ca Progressive Conservatives surge to surprise majority win in Nova Scotia election CBC News Alberta keeps Tories The Chronicle Herald April 24 2012 Retrieved 2012 05 12 MacKenzie steps down as Liberal leader CBC News June 20 2006 Retrieved 2013 10 09 Stephen McNeil leads Liberals to majority in Nova Scotia CBC News October 8 2013 Retrieved 2013 10 09 Liberal Premier Stephen McNeil Nova Scotia s soft spoken fiscal hawk The Chronicle Herald The Canadian Press Archived from the original on December 4 2017 Liberals see gains form Nova Scotia s Official Opposition CBC News June 9 2009 Retrieved February 10 2014 4 changes Stephen McNeil is promising for Nova Scotia CBC News October 9 2013 Retrieved November 24 2014 Gorman Michael Liberals score back to back majorities in Nova Scotia nail biter CBC News Retrieved 30 June 2017 Grant Taryn Nova Scotia Premier Stephen McNeil to step down after 17 years in politics CBC News Retrieved 20 August 2020 Doucette Keith 23 February 2021 Premier Iain Rankin new Nova Scotia cabinet sworn in by lieutenant governor Atlantic Bell Media Retrieved 3 March 2021 Bad campaign leader who didn t connect with voters led to N S Liberal loss Experts 18 August 2021 Nova Scotia Liberal Leader Iain Rankin wins Timberlea Prospect riding The Star The Toronto Star 17 August 2021 Rankin Iain 2021 02 06 Premier designate Iain Rankin delivers his first speech as Leader of the Nova Scotia Liberal Party Twitter a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Churchill Zach zachchurchill 9 July 2022 Today is a new day for the Nova Scotia Liberal Party Members from across our Province put their confidence in me to revive our Party and win back the trust of Nova Scotians I m excited to move forward united as one Party with one goal moving Nova Scotia forward nspoli Tweet Retrieved 9 July 2022 via Twitter External links EditLiberal Party of Nova Scotia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Nova Scotia Liberal Party amp oldid 1132744358, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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