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New Brunswick Liberal Association

The New Brunswick Liberal Association (French: Association libérale du Nouveau-Brunswick), more popularly known as the New Brunswick Liberal Party or Liberal Party of New Brunswick, is one of the two major provincial political parties in New Brunswick, Canada. The party descended from both the Confederation Party and the Anti-Confederation Party whose members split into left-wing and right-wing groups following the creation of Canada as a nation in 1867.

New Brunswick Liberal Association
Association libérale du Nouveau-Brunswick
Active provincial party
LeaderSusan Holt
PresidentBrian Murphy
Founded1883; 140 years ago (1883)
Headquarters715 Brunswick Street
Fredericton, New Brunswick
E3B 1H8
IdeologyLiberalism
Social liberalism
Political positionCentre
National affiliationLiberal Party of Canada
ColoursRed
Seats in Legislature
16 / 49
Website
Official website

The current political organization emerged in the 1880s to serve as an organization housing the supporters of Premier Andrew G. Blair and, later, federal Liberal Party of Canada leader Wilfrid Laurier.

Today, the New Brunswick Liberal Party follows the centre-left tradition. They compete with the Progressive Conservative Party of New Brunswick to form the government. The Green Party of New Brunswick is the only other party that has seats in the legislature. The NDP is not currently represented in the legislature.

Like its counterparts in the Atlantic Canada provinces of Newfoundland and Labrador, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island, the New Brunswick Liberal Association serves both as the provincial chapter of the federal Liberal Party of Canada and as the provincial party. While its leader acts only in the provincial capacity, the party executive organizes for both provincial and federal election campaigns.

History

Early years and Andrew Blair

Prior to Canadian confederation, advocates of responsible government ran under the labels "Reform" or "Liberal", while opponents of responsible government were known as "Conservatives". With the debates over confederation in the 1860s, the party lines which had emerged blurred as Reformers split along pro and anti-Confederation lines, resulting in Confederation and Anti-Confederation Parties.

Following 1867, supporters of Confederation generally became known as Liberal-Conservatives, or just Conservatives. Those who had been against confederation regrouped loosely as "Liberals", but did not become a coherent party until Andrew Blair, a supporter of Confederation, became Premier of New Brunswick and forged members of his parliamentary government and their supporters into the New Brunswick Liberal Association in 1883.

Blair led a very successful government and served as the Premier of New Brunswick for 13 years. He was New Brunswick's longest serving premier until his tenure was surpassed by Richard Hatfield nearly a century later.

Though Blair had not been a candidate in the 1896 federal election, he joined the federal cabinet of Sir Wilfrid Laurier shortly thereafter when Laurier approached a number of Liberal premiers to join his government and address its lack of experience. This move was not expected by the party and, although it remained in government for 12 more years, it went through a rapid succession of leaders.

Early 1900s

After Blair abruptly left the province to join Wilfrid Laurier's cabinet in 1896, the Liberals had a leadership vacuum. James Mitchell, who had been provincial secretary, served briefly as Premier, but Mitchell soon resigned the post due to ill health. Mitchell was replaced by Henry Emmerson, who showed some promise but lost the confidence of the house when he tried to introduce women's suffrage in 1900.

The party was saved electoral disaster when Lemuel J. Tweedie, a federal Conservative, replaced Emmerson, and won two large majorities at general elections. Though women's suffrage could not be introduced in the province, he admitted women into the practice of law in 1906, and began the first major hydroelectric project in New Brunswick at Grand Falls. Tweedie unexpectedly accepted the appointment of Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick in 1907, and the Liberals soon found themselves again in a leadership vacuum. William Pugsley became leader and premier, but left the post after a few months to join the Laurier's government in Ottawa. His replacement, Clifford W. Robinson was able but the electorate grew weary of the ever-changing face at head of their government, and the Conservatives swept to power in 1908. The Conservatives were an easy choice for many New Brunswickers in the 1908 provincial election as they had been led since 1899 by John Douglas Hazen, a man with whom they had become familiar. Haven served only briefly, leaving in 1911 to join the federal cabinet of Robert Borden, and was replaced by the charismatic and popular James Kidd Flemming. The Liberals were easily defeated by Flemming in the 1912 election, however, after Flemming was forced to resign in 1914 over a fundraising scandal, the Liberals seemed on track to return to government. This likelihood was reinforced by the lackluster administration of George Johnson Clarke who was in ill health throughout his term. The Liberals were victorious in the 1917 provincial election.

Dysart and McNair

In the midst of the depression, the Liberals made a resurgence in 1935 with Allison Dysart becoming premier. McNair was Dysart's right hand, serving as Attorney General until replacing him as premier in 1940. McNair served until 1952 when he was defeated by Hugh John Flemming.

Louis J. Robichaud

During the 1960s, the Liberals under Louis Joseph Robichaud were instrumental in bringing Acadians into the mainstream of life in New Brunswick, declaring the province to be officially bilingual. The English and French languages were given equal status. Robichaud's government modernized the province's hospitals and public schools and introduced a wide range of social reforms. The Liberals also passed an act in 1969 making New Brunswick officially bilingual. "Language rights," he said when he introduced the legislation, "are more than legal rights. They are precious cultural rights, going deep into the revered past and touching the historic traditions of all our people."[1]

Robichaud also restructured the municipal tax regime, ending the ability of business to play one municipality against another in order to extract the lowest tax rates. He introduced in 1963 the Municipal Capital Borrowing Act and Board,[2] which is designed to act as a brake for spendthrift municipalities.[3] He also expanded the government and sought to ensure that the quality of health care, education and social services was the same across the province—a programme he called Equal Opportunity, which is still a political buzz phrase in New Brunswick. "When I first realized that there was absolutely no equal opportunity, no equality, in New Brunswick," he recalled in the 1980s, "well, I had to come to the conclusion that something had to be done immediately."

Opposition in the Hatfield years

Following defeat in the 1970 election, the Liberals were largely in disarray. The party's prospects in the 1978 election were good, but it changed leaders on the eve of the election, and, under Joseph Daigle was defeated narrowly by the Progressive Conservatives. The PCs won 30 seats in the Legislative Assembly to the Liberals' 28. The party was reduced to 18 seats in 1982 under new leader Doug Young.

Frank McKenna

In 1985, the party chose Frank McKenna as leader. McKenna, a young lawyer representing Chatham in the legislature in his first term, ran as the underdog candidate in a leadership campaign against party stalwart Ray Frenette. Frenette had served as interim leader from the disastrous 1982 election until the eve of the 1985 leadership race. McKenna won by significant margin.

McKenna immediately set out to prepare the party for returning to government after 15 years in opposition. The momentum was on the side of the Liberals and it seemed inevitable that McKenna would be premier as soon as an election was held. Few expected, though, that the Liberals would sweep the province, winning every seat—the second time this had happened in Canadian history (the first time was in the Prince Edward Island provincial election of 1935).

McKenna was regarded as a fiscal conservative and was called by some the "Best Tory Premier New Brunswick never had". Despite this, McKenna was a progressive on many issues. He made considerable cuts to social programs because of the province's dire fiscal situation and cuts to federal equalization payments and other transfers. He also instituted new programs. Notably, McKenna instituted a publicly funded kindergarten program—something that had been promised by the Hatfield-led Progressive Conservatives in the previous four elections. McKenna also launched a home care program called "Extramural Nursing" which has been hailed as the best in Canada. In the 2002 Romanow report on the Future of Healthcare in Canada, New Brunswick's system was specifically cited as a model for homecare in Canada.

Despite riding high in the polls, McKenna resigned on October 13, 1997, ten years (to the day) since his first election as premier, fulfilling a promise to serve for only ten years.

McKenna was replaced by Frenette, who had served as his right-hand in the legislature throughout his term. Frenette served as premier for the following seven months while the party chose a new leader. Frenette was replaced by Camille Thériault who served as premier until the 1999 election.

In the 1999 election, the Liberals suffered their worst ever defeat, winning only 10 seats despite having begun the campaign with a double-digit lead in opinion polls. The by-election losses were a further blow to Camille Thériault's leadership, and he resigned from the party leadership and the legislature on March 21, 2001. Bernard Richard, who had finished third in the leadership contest against Thériault in 1998, became interim leader.

In 2000, Liberal Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA) Bernard Thériault resigned to make an unsuccessful bid for the House of Commons of Canada in Acadie-Bathurst, and Edmond Blanchard resigned to accept an appointment to the Federal Court of Canada. The Progressive Conservatives won both of these seats in by-elections in early 2001, reducing the Liberals to eight seats in the legislature.

Shawn Graham

In the following leadership contest, many candidates appeared briefly but withdrew. Early candidates included former cabinet minister Paul Duffie, former McKenna adviser Francis McGuire, and Moncton lawyer Mike Murphy. McGuire, after briefly considering a bid, declined. Murphy began the formative stages of a campaign, but abruptly withdrew, surprising many of his supporters. This left Duffie largely unchallenged. The only other candidate was former party organizer Jack MacDougall who had abruptly left the party in the midst of the 1999 campaign.

Many in the party felt that Duffie, who was close to Thériault, was the wrong choice. Bernard Richard was urged to abandon the interim leadership and contest the race, and began a formative campaign before announcing he would continue as interim leader instead. After the campaign had already begun in earnest, Shawn Graham, a rookie MLA in his early 30s, announced his candidacy in January 2002. Graham took a convincing lead in delegate selection meetings. Duffie withdrew, leaving Graham to face only MacDougall whom he defeated by a 3-to-1 margin.

The party chose Shawn Graham as leader on May 12, 2002. Graham nearly won the 2003 election taking 26 of 55 seats in the New Brunswick legislature. Richard, who was re-elected in 2003, accepted a provincial appointment on November 26, 2003. This was viewed as a serious blow to Graham's leadership.

Graham led the Liberals to a narrow victory in the 2006 provincial election winning 29 of 55 seats and losing the popular vote 47.2% to 47.5% for the Progressive Conservatives. The Liberals took power on October 3, 2006. They subsequently added three extra seats. Chris Collins captured the seat in the riding of Moncton East on March 5, 2007, which was vacated when former Premier Bernard Lord stepped down as leader of the Progressive Conservatives. Wally Stiles and his wife Joan MacAlpine Stiles, elected as Progressive Conservatives, crossed the floor to join the Liberals the following month, April 17.

On September 27, 2010, Shawn Graham lost his bid to be re-elected as Premier (13 to 42) to provincial PC leader David Alward, but remained MLA for Kent riding. He stepped down as leader of the party on November 9, 2010, and Victor Boudreau was selected as the party's interim leader the following day.[4] The Shawn Graham Government was the first one of the province to not get re-elected for a second term.[5]

Brian Gallant

After a term in Opposition, the Liberals returned to power under Brian Gallant, winning a majority in the 2014 provincial election with Gallant being sworn in as Premier on October 7, 2014. Gallant's first cabinet, of 13 members, was smaller than the outgoing cabinet.[6]

During his government's mandate the province's economy and exports grew each year;[7] the unemployment rate which was hovering around 10% was reduced to just over 7%;[8] in 2016 KPMG found that three of the four most cost competitive cities in which to do business in Canada and the United States were in New Brunswick;[9] the province's population grew to a record high surpassing 770,000 people for the first time;[10] one of the most vibrant cybersecurity clusters in North America was developed in New Brunswick's capital city; and the province saw its first budget surplus in a decade.[11]

The Gallant government increased the budget for education and early childhood development by 15% over its mandate in order to invest in literacy initiatives, introduce coding in more schools, and reintroduce trades in high schools.

The Gallant government created programs to help the middle class with the cost of childcare and to provide free childcare to families which need the most support.[12] The Gallant government also created programs to help the middle class with the cost of tuition and to provide free tuition for those who need the most support.[13]

The Gallant government eliminated the unconstitutional two doctor rule that was hindering a women's right to choose for decades in New Brunswick.[14] In 2016, New Brunswick welcomed the most Syrian refugees displaced by the humanitarian crisis per capita of all the provinces in the country.[15]

The Gallant government also advanced women's equality by moving pay equity forward to the point of New Brunswick having the second lowest gender wage gap of all the Canadian provinces in 2017;[16] by having over 50% of government appointments to agencies, boards, and commissions go to women;[17] and by providing the first gender parity on New Brunswick's provincial court.[18]

Gallant has repeatedly stated that climate change is the greatest challenge facing humanity. With this in mind, the Gallant government took concrete action to protect the environment including by creating the “Transitioning to a Low Carbon Economy” plan which commits to historic measures to fight climate change.[19] The Gallant government also placed a moratorium on hydraulic fracturing and a ban on the disposal of fracked wastewater in municipal systems.[20]

In addition to premier, Gallant has served New Brunswick as the Attorney General, the Minister responsible for innovation, the Minister responsible for women's equality, and the Leader of Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition.

The 2018 provincial election resulted in Gallant's Liberals winning only 21 seats compared to Blaine Higgs and the Progressive Conservative Party of New Brunswick who won 22. Gallant vowed to attempt to remain in power with a minority government and hoped to retain the confidence of the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick either on a vote-by-vote basis or with the agreement of the smaller parties, the Green Party of New Brunswick and the People's Alliance of New Brunswick, each of which won 3 seats in the election.[21][22]

In Opposition (2018–present)

On November 2, 2018 Gallant's Liberal minority government was defeated by a confidence vote on its throne speech by a margin of 25 to 23 with the opposition Progressive Conservatives and People's Alliance voting against the government and the Greens voting with the government.[23] Gallant resigned as premier on November 2, 2018 and was replaced by Higgs, leading a Progressive Conservative minority government with support from the People's Alliance.

Kevin Vickers was acclaimed as the new Liberal leader in April 2019. He ran in Miramichi in 2020 and lost to incumbent MLA Michelle Conroy.(who later crossed the floor to join the PCNB). He resigned as party leader the same day. In September 2020, Roger Melanson was named interim leader until Susan Holt was elected as party leader on August 6, 2022.

Electoral results

Election Leader Votes % Seats +/– Position Government
1935 Allison Dysart 59.6
43 / 48
  43   1st Majority
1939 54.8
29 / 48
  14   1st Majority
1944 John McNair 48.3
36 / 48
  7   1st Majority
1948 57.8
47 / 52
  11   1st Majority
1952 49.2
16 / 52
  31   2nd Opposition
1956 Austin Taylor 46.1
15 / 52
  1   2nd Opposition
1960 Louis Robichaud 53.4
31 / 52
  16   1st Majority
1963 51.8
32 / 52
  1   1st Majority
1967 52.8
32 / 58
  0   1st Majority
1970 48.6
26 / 58
  6   2nd Opposition
1974 Robert Higgins 147,372 47.5
25 / 58
  1   2nd Opposition
1978 Joseph Daigle 44.4
28 / 58
  3   2nd Opposition
1982 Doug Young 41.3
18 / 58
  10   2nd Opposition
1987 Frank McKenna 246,702 60.4
58 / 58
  40   1st Majority
1991 193,890 47.1
46 / 58
  12   1st Majority
1995 201,150 51.6
48 / 55
  2   1st Majority
1999 Camille Thériault 146,934 37.3
10 / 55
  38   2nd Opposition
2003 Shawn Graham 170,028 44.4
26 / 55
  16   2nd Opposition
2006 176,410 47.1
29 / 55
  3   1st Majority
2010 128,078 34.5
13 / 55
  16   2nd Opposition
2014 Brian Gallant 158,848 42.7
27 / 49
  14   1st Majority
2018 143,791 37.8
21 / 49
  6   2nd Opposition
2020 Kevin Vickers 129,022 34.3
17 / 49
  3   2nd Opposition

Current members of the legislature

Party leaders since 1867

Presidents since 1932

See also

References

  1. ^ "Louis J. Robichaud, 79". The Globe and Mail. January 6, 2005. Retrieved 22 April 2019.
  2. ^ laws.gnb.ca: "Municipal Capital Borrowing Act"
  3. ^ 1963 (2nd Sess.), c.8, s.1
  4. ^ "N.B. Liberals name ex-minister as interim leader" November 13, 2010, at the Wayback Machine. CTV News, November 20, 2010.
  5. ^ Desserud, Donald; Hyson, Stewart (2012). "New Brunswick's Legislative Assembly" (PDF). Canadian Parliamentary Review.
  6. ^ cbc.ca: "Brian Gallant's smaller cabinet faces long list of demands", 7 Oct 2014
  7. ^ https://www2.gnb.ca/content/dam/gnb/Departments/fin/pdf/Budget/2018-2019/FactSheet.pdf , 30 Jan 2018
  8. ^ "Labour force characteristics by province, monthly, seasonally adjusted". 6 August 2021.
  9. ^ "Canada second among 10 countries for cost competitiveness, says KPMG - The Star". thestar.com. 30 March 2016.
  10. ^ Leeder, Jessica (28 December 2018). "New Brunswick birth levels fall to historic low in 2018". The Globe and Mail.
  11. ^ https://www.agnb-vgnb.ca/content/dam/agnb-vgnb/pdf/Reports-Rapports/2018V3/Agrepe.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  12. ^ Government of New Brunswick, Canada (11 January 2018). "Free daycare for low-income families". www2.gnb.ca.
  13. ^ Government of New Brunswick, Canada (6 December 2017). "Minister: Free Tuition Program a success in its first year". www2.gnb.ca.
  14. ^ Government of New Brunswick, Canada (26 November 2014). "Provincial government removes barriers to a woman's right to choose". www2.gnb.ca.
  15. ^ "Syrian refugee resettlement by province and age in Canada - CTV News". www.ctvnews.ca. 12 October 2016.
  16. ^ "Gender Wage Gap - Society Provincial Rankings - How Canada Performs". www.conferenceboard.ca.
  17. ^ "Equality: More than just numbers for New Brunswick Women's Council - New Brunswick - Globalnews.ca". globalnews.ca. 19 May 2017.
  18. ^ Government of New Brunswick, Canada (25 April 2017). "Gender parity, first female chief judge at provincial court". www2.gnb.ca.
  19. ^ https://www2.gnb.ca/content/dam/gnb/Departments/env/pdf/Climate-Climatiques/TransitioningToALowCarbonEconomy.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  20. ^ Government of New Brunswick, Canada (18 December 2014). "Government introduces moratorium on hydraulic fracturing in New Brunswick". www2.gnb.ca.
  21. ^ Leeder, Jessica (26 September 2018). "Alliances start to form in wake of N.B. election". The Globe and Mail.
  22. ^ "PCs win most seats in N.B. election, Liberals vow to maintain power".
  23. ^ Jacques Poitras. "Brian Gallant's minority New Brunswick government defeated after losing confidence vote - CBC News". CBC.
  24. ^ . CTV News. Canadian Press. 10 November 2010. Archived from the original on 13 November 2010.
  25. ^ "Kevin Vickers set to be acclaimed as New Brunswick Liberal leader as only opponent bows out | CBC News".
  26. ^ "Kevin Vickers declared Liberal leader, effective April 24 | CBC News".
  27. ^ "New Brunswick Liberals choose Roger Melanson as interim leader of Opposition". Global News. Retrieved 2020-09-28.

External links

  • New Brunswick Liberal Association / Association libérale du Nouveau-Brunswick

brunswick, liberal, association, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, j. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources New Brunswick Liberal Association news newspapers books scholar JSTOR October 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message The New Brunswick Liberal Association French Association liberale du Nouveau Brunswick more popularly known as the New Brunswick Liberal Party or Liberal Party of New Brunswick is one of the two major provincial political parties in New Brunswick Canada The party descended from both the Confederation Party and the Anti Confederation Party whose members split into left wing and right wing groups following the creation of Canada as a nation in 1867 New Brunswick Liberal AssociationAssociation liberale du Nouveau BrunswickActive provincial partyLeaderSusan HoltPresidentBrian MurphyFounded1883 140 years ago 1883 Headquarters715 Brunswick StreetFredericton New Brunswick E3B 1H8IdeologyLiberalismSocial liberalismPolitical positionCentreNational affiliationLiberal Party of CanadaColoursRedSeats in Legislature16 49WebsiteOfficial websitePolitics of New BrunswickPolitical partiesElectionsThe current political organization emerged in the 1880s to serve as an organization housing the supporters of Premier Andrew G Blair and later federal Liberal Party of Canada leader Wilfrid Laurier Today the New Brunswick Liberal Party follows the centre left tradition They compete with the Progressive Conservative Party of New Brunswick to form the government The Green Party of New Brunswick is the only other party that has seats in the legislature The NDP is not currently represented in the legislature Like its counterparts in the Atlantic Canada provinces of Newfoundland and Labrador Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island the New Brunswick Liberal Association serves both as the provincial chapter of the federal Liberal Party of Canada and as the provincial party While its leader acts only in the provincial capacity the party executive organizes for both provincial and federal election campaigns Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years and Andrew Blair 1 2 Early 1900s 1 3 Dysart and McNair 1 4 Louis J Robichaud 1 5 Opposition in the Hatfield years 1 6 Frank McKenna 1 7 Shawn Graham 1 8 Brian Gallant 1 9 In Opposition 2018 present 2 Electoral results 3 Current members of the legislature 4 Party leaders since 1867 5 Presidents since 1932 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory EditEarly years and Andrew Blair Edit A G Blair Prior to Canadian confederation advocates of responsible government ran under the labels Reform or Liberal while opponents of responsible government were known as Conservatives With the debates over confederation in the 1860s the party lines which had emerged blurred as Reformers split along pro and anti Confederation lines resulting in Confederation and Anti Confederation Parties Following 1867 supporters of Confederation generally became known as Liberal Conservatives or just Conservatives Those who had been against confederation regrouped loosely as Liberals but did not become a coherent party until Andrew Blair a supporter of Confederation became Premier of New Brunswick and forged members of his parliamentary government and their supporters into the New Brunswick Liberal Association in 1883 Blair led a very successful government and served as the Premier of New Brunswick for 13 years He was New Brunswick s longest serving premier until his tenure was surpassed by Richard Hatfield nearly a century later Though Blair had not been a candidate in the 1896 federal election he joined the federal cabinet of Sir Wilfrid Laurier shortly thereafter when Laurier approached a number of Liberal premiers to join his government and address its lack of experience This move was not expected by the party and although it remained in government for 12 more years it went through a rapid succession of leaders Early 1900s Edit After Blair abruptly left the province to join Wilfrid Laurier s cabinet in 1896 the Liberals had a leadership vacuum James Mitchell who had been provincial secretary served briefly as Premier but Mitchell soon resigned the post due to ill health Mitchell was replaced by Henry Emmerson who showed some promise but lost the confidence of the house when he tried to introduce women s suffrage in 1900 The party was saved electoral disaster when Lemuel J Tweedie a federal Conservative replaced Emmerson and won two large majorities at general elections Though women s suffrage could not be introduced in the province he admitted women into the practice of law in 1906 and began the first major hydroelectric project in New Brunswick at Grand Falls Tweedie unexpectedly accepted the appointment of Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick in 1907 and the Liberals soon found themselves again in a leadership vacuum William Pugsley became leader and premier but left the post after a few months to join the Laurier s government in Ottawa His replacement Clifford W Robinson was able but the electorate grew weary of the ever changing face at head of their government and the Conservatives swept to power in 1908 The Conservatives were an easy choice for many New Brunswickers in the 1908 provincial election as they had been led since 1899 by John Douglas Hazen a man with whom they had become familiar Haven served only briefly leaving in 1911 to join the federal cabinet of Robert Borden and was replaced by the charismatic and popular James Kidd Flemming The Liberals were easily defeated by Flemming in the 1912 election however after Flemming was forced to resign in 1914 over a fundraising scandal the Liberals seemed on track to return to government This likelihood was reinforced by the lackluster administration of George Johnson Clarke who was in ill health throughout his term The Liberals were victorious in the 1917 provincial election Dysart and McNair Edit In the midst of the depression the Liberals made a resurgence in 1935 with Allison Dysart becoming premier McNair was Dysart s right hand serving as Attorney General until replacing him as premier in 1940 McNair served until 1952 when he was defeated by Hugh John Flemming This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2008 Louis J Robichaud Edit During the 1960s the Liberals under Louis Joseph Robichaud were instrumental in bringing Acadians into the mainstream of life in New Brunswick declaring the province to be officially bilingual The English and French languages were given equal status Robichaud s government modernized the province s hospitals and public schools and introduced a wide range of social reforms The Liberals also passed an act in 1969 making New Brunswick officially bilingual Language rights he said when he introduced the legislation are more than legal rights They are precious cultural rights going deep into the revered past and touching the historic traditions of all our people 1 Robichaud also restructured the municipal tax regime ending the ability of business to play one municipality against another in order to extract the lowest tax rates He introduced in 1963 the Municipal Capital Borrowing Act and Board 2 which is designed to act as a brake for spendthrift municipalities 3 He also expanded the government and sought to ensure that the quality of health care education and social services was the same across the province a programme he called Equal Opportunity which is still a political buzz phrase in New Brunswick When I first realized that there was absolutely no equal opportunity no equality in New Brunswick he recalled in the 1980s well I had to come to the conclusion that something had to be done immediately Opposition in the Hatfield years Edit Following defeat in the 1970 election the Liberals were largely in disarray The party s prospects in the 1978 election were good but it changed leaders on the eve of the election and under Joseph Daigle was defeated narrowly by the Progressive Conservatives The PCs won 30 seats in the Legislative Assembly to the Liberals 28 The party was reduced to 18 seats in 1982 under new leader Doug Young This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it June 2008 Frank McKenna Edit In 1985 the party chose Frank McKenna as leader McKenna a young lawyer representing Chatham in the legislature in his first term ran as the underdog candidate in a leadership campaign against party stalwart Ray Frenette Frenette had served as interim leader from the disastrous 1982 election until the eve of the 1985 leadership race McKenna won by significant margin McKenna immediately set out to prepare the party for returning to government after 15 years in opposition The momentum was on the side of the Liberals and it seemed inevitable that McKenna would be premier as soon as an election was held Few expected though that the Liberals would sweep the province winning every seat the second time this had happened in Canadian history the first time was in the Prince Edward Island provincial election of 1935 McKenna was regarded as a fiscal conservative and was called by some the Best Tory Premier New Brunswick never had Despite this McKenna was a progressive on many issues He made considerable cuts to social programs because of the province s dire fiscal situation and cuts to federal equalization payments and other transfers He also instituted new programs Notably McKenna instituted a publicly funded kindergarten program something that had been promised by the Hatfield led Progressive Conservatives in the previous four elections McKenna also launched a home care program called Extramural Nursing which has been hailed as the best in Canada In the 2002 Romanow report on the Future of Healthcare in Canada New Brunswick s system was specifically cited as a model for homecare in Canada Despite riding high in the polls McKenna resigned on October 13 1997 ten years to the day since his first election as premier fulfilling a promise to serve for only ten years McKenna was replaced by Frenette who had served as his right hand in the legislature throughout his term Frenette served as premier for the following seven months while the party chose a new leader Frenette was replaced by Camille Theriault who served as premier until the 1999 election In the 1999 election the Liberals suffered their worst ever defeat winning only 10 seats despite having begun the campaign with a double digit lead in opinion polls The by election losses were a further blow to Camille Theriault s leadership and he resigned from the party leadership and the legislature on March 21 2001 Bernard Richard who had finished third in the leadership contest against Theriault in 1998 became interim leader In 2000 Liberal Member of the Legislative Assembly MLA Bernard Theriault resigned to make an unsuccessful bid for the House of Commons of Canada in Acadie Bathurst and Edmond Blanchard resigned to accept an appointment to the Federal Court of Canada The Progressive Conservatives won both of these seats in by elections in early 2001 reducing the Liberals to eight seats in the legislature Shawn Graham Edit In the following leadership contest many candidates appeared briefly but withdrew Early candidates included former cabinet minister Paul Duffie former McKenna adviser Francis McGuire and Moncton lawyer Mike Murphy McGuire after briefly considering a bid declined Murphy began the formative stages of a campaign but abruptly withdrew surprising many of his supporters This left Duffie largely unchallenged The only other candidate was former party organizer Jack MacDougall who had abruptly left the party in the midst of the 1999 campaign Many in the party felt that Duffie who was close to Theriault was the wrong choice Bernard Richard was urged to abandon the interim leadership and contest the race and began a formative campaign before announcing he would continue as interim leader instead After the campaign had already begun in earnest Shawn Graham a rookie MLA in his early 30s announced his candidacy in January 2002 Graham took a convincing lead in delegate selection meetings Duffie withdrew leaving Graham to face only MacDougall whom he defeated by a 3 to 1 margin The party chose Shawn Graham as leader on May 12 2002 Graham nearly won the 2003 election taking 26 of 55 seats in the New Brunswick legislature Richard who was re elected in 2003 accepted a provincial appointment on November 26 2003 This was viewed as a serious blow to Graham s leadership Graham led the Liberals to a narrow victory in the 2006 provincial election winning 29 of 55 seats and losing the popular vote 47 2 to 47 5 for the Progressive Conservatives The Liberals took power on October 3 2006 They subsequently added three extra seats Chris Collins captured the seat in the riding of Moncton East on March 5 2007 which was vacated when former Premier Bernard Lord stepped down as leader of the Progressive Conservatives Wally Stiles and his wife Joan MacAlpine Stiles elected as Progressive Conservatives crossed the floor to join the Liberals the following month April 17 On September 27 2010 Shawn Graham lost his bid to be re elected as Premier 13 to 42 to provincial PC leader David Alward but remained MLA for Kent riding He stepped down as leader of the party on November 9 2010 and Victor Boudreau was selected as the party s interim leader the following day 4 The Shawn Graham Government was the first one of the province to not get re elected for a second term 5 Brian Gallant Edit After a term in Opposition the Liberals returned to power under Brian Gallant winning a majority in the 2014 provincial election with Gallant being sworn in as Premier on October 7 2014 Gallant s first cabinet of 13 members was smaller than the outgoing cabinet 6 During his government s mandate the province s economy and exports grew each year 7 the unemployment rate which was hovering around 10 was reduced to just over 7 8 in 2016 KPMG found that three of the four most cost competitive cities in which to do business in Canada and the United States were in New Brunswick 9 the province s population grew to a record high surpassing 770 000 people for the first time 10 one of the most vibrant cybersecurity clusters in North America was developed in New Brunswick s capital city and the province saw its first budget surplus in a decade 11 The Gallant government increased the budget for education and early childhood development by 15 over its mandate in order to invest in literacy initiatives introduce coding in more schools and reintroduce trades in high schools The Gallant government created programs to help the middle class with the cost of childcare and to provide free childcare to families which need the most support 12 The Gallant government also created programs to help the middle class with the cost of tuition and to provide free tuition for those who need the most support 13 The Gallant government eliminated the unconstitutional two doctor rule that was hindering a women s right to choose for decades in New Brunswick 14 In 2016 New Brunswick welcomed the most Syrian refugees displaced by the humanitarian crisis per capita of all the provinces in the country 15 The Gallant government also advanced women s equality by moving pay equity forward to the point of New Brunswick having the second lowest gender wage gap of all the Canadian provinces in 2017 16 by having over 50 of government appointments to agencies boards and commissions go to women 17 and by providing the first gender parity on New Brunswick s provincial court 18 Gallant has repeatedly stated that climate change is the greatest challenge facing humanity With this in mind the Gallant government took concrete action to protect the environment including by creating the Transitioning to a Low Carbon Economy plan which commits to historic measures to fight climate change 19 The Gallant government also placed a moratorium on hydraulic fracturing and a ban on the disposal of fracked wastewater in municipal systems 20 In addition to premier Gallant has served New Brunswick as the Attorney General the Minister responsible for innovation the Minister responsible for women s equality and the Leader of Her Majesty s Loyal Opposition The 2018 provincial election resulted in Gallant s Liberals winning only 21 seats compared to Blaine Higgs and the Progressive Conservative Party of New Brunswick who won 22 Gallant vowed to attempt to remain in power with a minority government and hoped to retain the confidence of the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick either on a vote by vote basis or with the agreement of the smaller parties the Green Party of New Brunswick and the People s Alliance of New Brunswick each of which won 3 seats in the election 21 22 In Opposition 2018 present Edit On November 2 2018 Gallant s Liberal minority government was defeated by a confidence vote on its throne speech by a margin of 25 to 23 with the opposition Progressive Conservatives and People s Alliance voting against the government and the Greens voting with the government 23 Gallant resigned as premier on November 2 2018 and was replaced by Higgs leading a Progressive Conservative minority government with support from the People s Alliance Kevin Vickers was acclaimed as the new Liberal leader in April 2019 He ran in Miramichi in 2020 and lost to incumbent MLA Michelle Conroy who later crossed the floor to join the PCNB He resigned as party leader the same day In September 2020 Roger Melanson was named interim leader until Susan Holt was elected as party leader on August 6 2022 Electoral results EditElection Leader Votes Seats Position Government1935 Allison Dysart 59 6 43 48 43 1st Majority1939 54 8 29 48 14 1st Majority1944 John McNair 48 3 36 48 7 1st Majority1948 57 8 47 52 11 1st Majority1952 49 2 16 52 31 2nd Opposition1956 Austin Taylor 46 1 15 52 1 2nd Opposition1960 Louis Robichaud 53 4 31 52 16 1st Majority1963 51 8 32 52 1 1st Majority1967 52 8 32 58 0 1st Majority1970 48 6 26 58 6 2nd Opposition1974 Robert Higgins 147 372 47 5 25 58 1 2nd Opposition1978 Joseph Daigle 44 4 28 58 3 2nd Opposition1982 Doug Young 41 3 18 58 10 2nd Opposition1987 Frank McKenna 246 702 60 4 58 58 40 1st Majority1991 193 890 47 1 46 58 12 1st Majority1995 201 150 51 6 48 55 2 1st Majority1999 Camille Theriault 146 934 37 3 10 55 38 2nd Opposition2003 Shawn Graham 170 028 44 4 26 55 16 2nd Opposition2006 176 410 47 1 29 55 3 1st Majority2010 128 078 34 5 13 55 16 2nd Opposition2014 Brian Gallant 158 848 42 7 27 49 14 1st Majority2018 143 791 37 8 21 49 6 2nd Opposition2020 Kevin Vickers 129 022 34 3 17 49 3 2nd OppositionCurrent members of the legislature EditName Riding First ElectedGuy Arseneault Campbellton Dalhousie 2018Benoit Bourque Kent South 2014Chuck Chiasson Victoria La Vallee 2014Keith Chiasson Tracadie Sheila 2018Jean Claude D Amours Edmundston Madawaska Centre 2018Robert Gauvin Shediac Bay Dieppe 2020Daniel Guitard Restigouche Chaleur 2014Rene Legacy Bathurst West Beresford 2020Denis Landry Bathurst East Nepisiguit Saint Isidore 1995Francine Landry Madawaska Les Lacs Edmundston 2014Jacques LeBlanc Shediac Beaubassin Cap Pele 2018Gilles LePage Restigouche West 2014Eric Mallet Shippagan Lameque Miscou 2020Rob McKee Moncton Centre 2018Roger Melanson Dieppe 2010Isabelle Theriault Caraquet 2018Party leaders since 1867 EditAndrew George Blair 1879 1896 James Mitchell 1896 1897 Henry Emmerson 1897 1900 Lemuel John Tweedie 1900 1907 William Pugsley 1907 Clifford W Robinson 1907 1912 Arthur Bliss Copp 1912 interim Louis Auguste Dugal 1912 1916 Walter E Foster 1916 1923 Peter Veniot 1923 1926 Allison Dysart 1926 1930 Wendell P Jones 1930 1932 Allison Dysart 1932 1940 John B McNair 1940 1954 Austin Claude Taylor 1954 1957 Joseph E Connolly 1957 1958 interim Louis Robichaud 1958 1971 Robert J Higgins 1971 1978 Joseph Daigle 1978 1981 Doug Young 1981 1983 Ray Frenette 1983 1985 interim Shirley Dysart 1985 interim Frank McKenna 1985 1997 Ray Frenette 1997 1998 interim Camille Theriault 1998 2001 Bernard Richard 2001 2002 interim Shawn Graham 2002 2010 Victor Boudreau 2010 2012 interim 24 Brian Gallant 2012 2019 Denis Landry 2019 interim Kevin Vickers 2019 2020 25 26 Roger Melanson 2020 2022 interim 27 Susan Holt 2022 presentPresidents since 1932 EditJohn B McNair 1932 1940 G Percival Burchill 1941 1953 Harry A Corey 1953 1959 Wesley Stuart 1960 1963 Daniel A Riley 1963 1964 Acting Hugh Tait 1964 1966 Donald A McLean 1966 1971 Norbert Theriault 1971 1977 Peter Seheult 1977 1979 Jack Stevens 1979 1983 Sumner Fraser 1983 1986 Aldea Landry 1986 1988 Mike Murphy 1988 1992 Reginald Leger 1992 2000 Maurice Richard 2000 2002 Jim Mockler 2002 2003 Acting Greg Byrne 2003 2006 Marcelle Mersereau 2006 2007 Acting J E Britt Dysart 2007 2015 Joel Reed 2015 present See also EditList of New Brunswick premiers List of political parties in Canada 2002 New Brunswick Liberal Association leadership election 2012 New Brunswick Liberal Association leadership election 2019 New Brunswick Liberal Association leadership election New Brunswick Liberal Association leadership electionsReferences Edit Louis J Robichaud 79 The Globe and Mail January 6 2005 Retrieved 22 April 2019 laws gnb ca Municipal Capital Borrowing Act 1963 2nd Sess c 8 s 1 N B Liberals name ex minister as interim leader Archived November 13 2010 at the Wayback Machine CTV News November 20 2010 Desserud Donald Hyson Stewart 2012 New Brunswick s Legislative Assembly PDF Canadian Parliamentary Review cbc ca Brian Gallant s smaller cabinet faces long list of demands 7 Oct 2014 https www2 gnb ca content dam gnb Departments fin pdf Budget 2018 2019 FactSheet pdf 30 Jan 2018 Labour force characteristics by province monthly seasonally adjusted 6 August 2021 Canada second among 10 countries for cost competitiveness says KPMG The Star thestar com 30 March 2016 Leeder Jessica 28 December 2018 New Brunswick birth levels fall to historic low in 2018 The Globe and Mail https www agnb vgnb ca content dam agnb vgnb pdf Reports Rapports 2018V3 Agrepe pdf bare URL PDF Government of New Brunswick Canada 11 January 2018 Free daycare for low income families www2 gnb ca Government of New Brunswick Canada 6 December 2017 Minister Free Tuition Program a success in its first year www2 gnb ca Government of New Brunswick Canada 26 November 2014 Provincial government removes barriers to a woman s right to choose www2 gnb ca Syrian refugee resettlement by province and age in Canada CTV News www ctvnews ca 12 October 2016 Gender Wage Gap Society Provincial Rankings How Canada Performs www conferenceboard ca Equality More than just numbers for New Brunswick Women s Council New Brunswick Globalnews ca globalnews ca 19 May 2017 Government of New Brunswick Canada 25 April 2017 Gender parity first female chief judge at provincial court www2 gnb ca https www2 gnb ca content dam gnb Departments env pdf Climate Climatiques TransitioningToALowCarbonEconomy pdf bare URL PDF Government of New Brunswick Canada 18 December 2014 Government introduces moratorium on hydraulic fracturing in New Brunswick www2 gnb ca Leeder Jessica 26 September 2018 Alliances start to form in wake of N B election The Globe and Mail PCs win most seats in N B election Liberals vow to maintain power Jacques Poitras Brian Gallant s minority New Brunswick government defeated after losing confidence vote CBC News CBC N B Liberals name ex minister as interim leader CTV News Canadian Press 10 November 2010 Archived from the original on 13 November 2010 Kevin Vickers set to be acclaimed as New Brunswick Liberal leader as only opponent bows out CBC News Kevin Vickers declared Liberal leader effective April 24 CBC News New Brunswick Liberals choose Roger Melanson as interim leader of Opposition Global News Retrieved 2020 09 28 External links EditNew Brunswick Liberal Association Association liberale du Nouveau Brunswick Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title New Brunswick Liberal Association amp oldid 1114102082, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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