- New Brunswick general election, 2010
-
New Brunswick general election, 2010 2006 ←
membersSeptember 27, 2010
members→ 38th 55 seats of the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick
28 seats were needed for a majorityFirst party Second party Leader David Alward Shawn Graham Party Progressive Conservative Liberal Leader since October 18, 2008 May 11, 2002 Leader's seat Woodstock Kent Last election 26 29 Seats won 42 13 Seat change +16 -16 Popular vote 181,776 128,113 Percentage 48.84% 34.42% Swing +1.34% -12.68%
Map of New Brunswick's ridings coloured in based on the winning parties and their popular vote
Premier before election
Elected Premier
The 37th New Brunswick general election was held on September 27, 2010, to elect 55 members to the 57th New Brunswick Legislative Assembly, the governing house of the province of New Brunswick, Canada. The incumbent Liberal government won 13 seats, while the opposition Progressive Conservatives won a landslide majority of 42 seats in the legislature. As leader of the PC party, David Alward became New Brunswick's 32nd premier.
The Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick – acting on the advice of the Premier – would have originally been able to call an election earlier or as late as 2011; however a bill in the 56th Legislature has fixed election dates to the fourth Monday of September every four years beginning with this election.[1] While an election could still have been called earlier in the event of a vote of no confidence, this did not take place.
Contents
Timeline
2006
- October 10, 2006 - Organizers for the Green Party of Canada in New Brunswick announce plans to form a provincial Green Party in time to field a full slate of candidates in this election.[2]
- November 5, 2006 - Allison Brewer resigns as leader of the New Democratic Party. She will be replaced on an interim basis by Pat Hanratty and permanently upon the election of a new leader in late 2007.
- December 12, 2006 - An opinion poll conducted November 10 to December 7 by Corporate Research Associates showed the Liberals enjoying an unprecedented lead in opinion polls, standing at 65% in contrast to 27% for the Progressive Conservatives, 6% for the New Democrats and 2% for the Greens.[3]
- December 13, 2006 - Bernard Lord resigns as leader of the Progressive Conservatives and announces he will resign his seat in the legislature on January 31, 2007.[4]
2007
- March 5, 2007 - Liberal Chris Collins wins Lord's former seat in Moncton East changing the standings in the legislature to 30 Liberals, 25 Progressive Conservatives.
- April 17, 2007 - Progressive Conservatives Joan MacAlpine-Stiles and Wally Stiles cross the floor and join the Liberals changing the standings in the legislature to Liberals 32, Progressive Conservatives 23.
- May 29, 2007 - Government House Leader Stuart Jamieson tables Bill 75 which would fix election dates to the fourth Monday of September every four years beginning on September 27 in 2010. [41]
- October 13, 2007 - The NDP elect Roger Duguay as their new leader.
2008
- May 17, 2008 - The Green Party of New Brunswick is formed. Mike Milligan is elected as the interim leader of the party until a convention can be held in the fall.
- November 3, 2008 - Progressive Conservative Jack Carr holds a seat previously held by fellow Progressive Conservative Keith Ashfield who was elected as Conservative MP for Fredericton restoring the standings in the legislature to 32 Liberals, 23 Progressive Conservatives.
2009
- March 9, 2009 - Liberal Burt Paulin wins a seat previously held by Progressive Conservative Percy Mockler changing the standings in the legislature to 33 Liberals, 22 Progressive Conservatives.
- December 25, 2009 - Premier Shawn Graham "says he's ready to fight the next election on his controversial plan to sell NB Power to Hydro-Québec." [5]
2010
- January 4, 2010 - Justice Minister Michael Murphy unexpectedly resigns his seat to "spend more time with his family and return to practising law".[6]
- February 5, 2010 - Cabinet Minister Stuart Jamieson is forced to leave his cabinet post for suggesting that the NB power deal be put to a referendum.
- March 24, 2010 - Premier Shawn Graham announces that the proposed sale of NB Power has been canceled.[7]
- May 10, 2010 - Premier Shawn Graham shuffles the New Brunswick cabinet. Bernard LeBlanc is reinstated as minister of justice, and also named the first minister responsible for public engagement. Brian Kenny is promoted to the tourism portfolio. Cheryl Lavoie enters cabinet as minister of state for seniors. Donald Arseneault gains title of deputy premier.[8]
- May 19, 2010 - Progressive Conservatives release Vision for Citizen Engagement and Responsible Government, a pre-campaign document that outlines the PC strategy to improve citizen engagement.[9]
- June 9, 2010 - People's Alliance officially forms the newest N.B. political party under the leadership of former Tory Kris Austin.[10]
- September 27, 2010 - David Alward is elected into office as Premier of New Brunswick.
Results
Summary of the 2010 Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick election results Party Party leader # of
candidatesSeats Popular vote 2006 Dissolution Elected % Change # % Change Progressive Conservative David Alward 55 26 21 42 +16 181,776 48.84% +1.34% Liberal Shawn Graham 55 29 32 13 -16 128,113 34.42% -12.68% New Democratic Roger Duguay 55 0 0 0 38,737 10.41% +5.26% Green Jack MacDougall 49 * 0 0 16,907 4.54% * People's Alliance Kris Austin 14 * 0 0 4,389 1.18% * Independent 7 0 0 0 2,286 0.61% +0.36% Vacant 2 Total 235 55 55 55 - 372,208 100% Source: http://www.gnb.ca/elections * Party did not run candidates in the last election
Results by region
Party Name Central North East North West South East South West Total Progressive
ConservativeSeats 9 7 7 8 11 42 Popular Vote 52.26% 43.93% 59.76% 45.24% 50.41% 48.84% Liberal Seats 0 6 0 6 1 13 Popular Vote 27.72% 40.52% 28.86% 37.78% 31.04% 34.42% New Democratic Seats 0 0 0 0 0 0 Popular Vote 10.48% 12.88% 4.45% 9.58% 12.07% 10.41% Green Seats 0 0 0 0 0 0 Popular Vote 6.46% 1.81% 2.56% 6.83% 4.50% 4.54% People's Alliance Seats 0 0 0 0 0 0 Popular Vote 2.97% 0.86% 0.41% 0.38% 1.65% 1.18% Independent Seats 0 0 0 0 0 0 Popular Vote 0.11% 0.00% 3.95% 0.19% 0.34% 0.61% Total seats 9 13 7 14 12 55 Results by place
Party Seats Second Third Fourth Progressive Conservative 42 13 0 0 Liberal 13 40 2 0 New Democratic 0 1 41 11 Green 0 0 8 34 People's Alliance 0 0 2 4 Independent 0 1 2 1 Target ridings
The following is a list of ridings which were narrowly lost by the indicated party. For instance, under the Liberal column are the 10 seats in which they came closest to winning from the Conservatives, while under the Conservative column are the 10 seats in which they came closest to winning from the Liberals. Listed is the name of the riding, and the margin, in terms of percentage of the vote, by which the party lost.
These ridings are likely to be targeted by the specified party because the party lost them by a very slim margin in the 2006 election.
Up to 10 are shown, with a maximum margin of victory of 15%. No party or independent candidate, other than the Liberals or Progressive Conservatives, came within 15% of winning any seats.
* Indicates incumbent not running again.
To clarify further; this is a list of provincial general election winners with their party in parentheses, and their margin as a percentage of the vote over the party whose list the seat is on (not the same as the margin of victory if the party potentially "targeting" the seat in that list did not finish second in the previous election). "Won" means that the targeting party won the seat from the incumbent party. "Held" means the incumbent party held the seat.
Liberal Progressive Conservative - Dieppe Centre-Lewisville 0.7%* (won)
- Rothesay 1.5% (held)
- York 2.4% (held)
- Charlotte-Campobello 4.4%* (held)
- Saint John Portland 4.6% (held)
- Moncton West 4.8%* (won by PCs)
- New Maryland-Sunbury West 9.0% (held)
- Tracadie-Sheila 10.1% (held)
- Moncton Crescent 12.9% (held)
- Woodstock 13.0% (held)
- Fredericton-Nashwaaksis 2.0% (won)
- Bathurst 2.8% (held)
- Grand Lake-Gagetown 3.0%* (won)
- Fundy-River Valley 3.3% (won)
- Moncton North 4.3%* (won by PCs)
- Fredericton-Silverwood 6.5% (won)
- Nepisiguit 6.9% (won)
- Kent 7.0% (held)
- Quispamsis 7.3% (won)
- Southwest Miramichi 7.6% (won)
The ridings of Moncton East, Moncton West, Restigouche-La-Vallée and Petitcodiac are also likely to be targeted by the Conservatives as all have switched to the Liberals since the 2006 election. Moncton East and Restigouche-La-Vallée were carried by the Liberals in by-elections while the MLAs for Moncton West and Petitcodiac crossed the floor from the PCs to the Liberals.
Opinion polls
Polling Firm Date of Polling Link Liberal Progressive Conservative New Democratic Green People's Alliance CBC News/L'Acadie Nouvelle September 20, 2010 HTML 37 47 9 5 0 Abacus Data September 19, 2010 PDF 38 42 11 6 2 Corporate Research Associates September 19, 2010 HTML 36 46 11 6 1 Corporate Research Associates September 18, 2010 HTML 38 45 10 6 1 Corporate Research Associates September 17, 2010 HTML 37 49 9 4 1 Corporate Research Associates September 16, 2010 HTML 38 48 9 5 1 Corporate Research Associates September 15, 2010 HTML 38 48 10 4 0 Corporate Research Associates September 14, 2010 HTML 37 50 9 4 0 Corporate Research Associates September 13, 2010 HTML 37 49 10 4 0 Corporate Research Associates September 12, 2010 HTML 38 49 9 4 0 Corporate Research Associates September 11, 2010 HTML 41 46 9 4 0 Corporate Research Associates September 9, 2010 HTML 41 45 9 4 0 Corporate Research Associates September 8, 2010 HTML 43 45 8 3 0 Corporate Research Associates September 7, 2010 HTML 43 43 11 3 0 Corporate Research Associates September 6, 2010 HTML 43 41 11 4 1 Corporate Research Associates September 5, 2010 HTML 43 41 11 4 1 Corporate Research Associates September 4, 2010 HTML 43 42 10 4 1 Corporate Research Associates September 1, 2010 HTML 42 43 10 3 2 Corporate Research Associates August 24, 2010 PDF 41 36 16 6 1 Corporate Research Associates May 31, 2010 PDF 37 42 16 5 — Corporate Research Associates March 9, 2010 PDF 36 42 18 4 — Corporate Research Associates December 2, 2009 PDF 36 46 14 4 — Léger Marketing November 22, 2009 PDF 33 45 19 — — Corporate Research Associates September, 2009 HTML 41 35 22 2 — Corporate Research Associates May, 2009 HTML 41 40 16 3 — Corporate Research Associates February, 2009 HTML 50 34 13 3 — Corporate Research Associates November, 2008 HTML 45 38 13 4 — Corporate Research Associates August, 2008 HTML 49 34 14 4 — Corporate Research Associates May, 2008 HTML 51 36 11 2 — Corporate Research Associates February, 2008 HTML 63 26 8 2 — Corporate Research Associates November, 2007 HTML 53 32 10 4 — Corporate Research Associates August, 2007 HTML 60 30 7 2 — Corporate Research Associates May, 2007 HTML 53 33 10 4 — Corporate Research Associates February, 2007 HTML 59 27 11 2 — Corporate Research Associates November, 2006 HTML 65 27 6 2 — Election 2006 September 18, 2006 HTML 47.1 47.5 5.1 — — Candidates
Retiring incumbents
The following sitting MLAs have announced that they will not seek re-election.
- Tony Huntjens, Progressive Conservative MLA for Charlotte-Campobello since 2006, and previously MLA for Western Charlotte from 1999 to 2006.[11]
- Roly MacIntyre, Liberal MLA for Saint John East since 2006, and previously MLA for Saint John Champlain from 1995 to 1999 and 2003 to 2006.[12]
- Jeannot Volpé, Progressive Conservative MLA for Madawaska-les-Lacs since 1995.[13]
- Joan MacAlpine-Stiles, Liberal MLA (Originally Progressive Conservative) for Moncton West since 1999[14]
- Stuart Jamieson, Liberal MLA for Saint John-Fundy, first elected from 1987 to 1999, and re-elected in 2003.[15]
- Eugene McGinley, Liberal MLA, first elected from 1972 to 1978 as MLA for Bathurst, and re-elected in 2003 as MLA for Grand Lake-Gagetown.[16]
- Cy LeBlanc, Progressive Conservative MLA elected in 1999 and re-elected in 2003 in the Dieppe-Memramcook riding. He was re-elected again in 2006 in the Dieppe Centre-Lewisville riding.[17]
- Mike Murphy, Liberal MLA, Moncton North. Serving, Minister of Justice, former Minister of Health.
Candidates by riding
Legend
- bold denotes cabinet minister or party leader
- italics denotes a potential candidate who has not received his/her party's nomination
- † denotes an incumbent who is not running for re-election
Northeast
Electoral District Candidates Incumbent Liberal PC NDP Green Other 1. Campbellton-Restigouche Centre Roy Boudreau
2,822 - (34.84 %)Greg Davis
4,471 - (55.20 %)Widler Jules[18][19][20][21]
604 - (7.46 %)Lynn Morrison Hemson
202 - (2.49 %)Roy Boudreau 2. Dalhousie-Restigouche East Donald Arseneault
3,361 - (46.53 %)Joseph Elias
2,593 - (33.23 %)Ray Godin[22]
1,413 - (18.11 %)Susan Smissaert
167 - (2.14 %)Donald Arseneault 3. Nigadoo-Chaleur Roland Haché
3,654 - (49.75 %)Fred Albert
2,800 - (38.13 %)Serge Beaubrun[23]
709 - (9.65 %)Mathieu LaPlante
181 - (2.46 %)Roland Haché 4. Bathurst Brian Kenny
2,899 - (44.93 %)Nancy McKay
2,824 - (43.77 %)Sebastien Duke[24][25]
622 - (9.64 %)Hazel Hachey
107 - (1.66 %)Brian Kenny 5. Nepisiguit Cheryl Lavoie
1,946 - (32.49 %)Ryan Riordon
2,456 - (41.01 %)Pierre Cyr[26][27][28]
1,476 - (24.65 %)Patrice Des Lauriers
111 - (1.85 %)Cheryl Lavoie 6. Caraquet Hédard Albert
3,663 - (50.07 %)Philip Chiasson[29]
3,041 - (41.57 %)Claudia Julien[30]
406 - (5.55 %)Mathieu Chayer
206 - (2.82 %)Hédard Albert 7. Lamèque-Shippagan-Miscou Alonzo Rail[31]
2,304 - (31.74 %)Paul Robichaud
4,272 - (58.84 %)Armel Chiasson[32]
684 - (9.42 %)Paul Robichaud 8. Centre-Péninsule-Saint-Sauveur Denis Landry
4,655 - (63.85 %)Anike Robichaud[33]
1,487 - (20.40 %)Francois Rousselle[34]
1,149 - (15.76 %)Denis Landry 9. Tracadie-Sheila Norma McGraw
1,480 - (18.96 %)Claude Landry
3,808 - (48.78 %)Roger Duguay[35]
2,518 - (32.26 %)Claude Landry 10. Miramichi Bay-Neguac Carmel Robichaud
2,546 - (37.36 %)Serge Robichaud
2,908 - (42.67 %)Marc-Alphonse Leclair[36]
1,132 - (16.61 %)Filip Vanicek
93 - (1.36 %)Thomas L'Huillier (PANB)
136 - (2.00 %)Carmel Robichaud 11. Miramichi-Bay du Vin Bill Fraser
3,290 - (49.62 %)Joan Cripps
2,615 - (39.44 %)Kelly Clancy-King[26][37]
510 - (7.69 %)Ronald Mazerolle
216 - (3.26 %)Bill Fraser 12. Miramichi Centre John Foran
2,552 - (38.56 %)Robert Trevors
3,187 - (48.16 %)Douglas Mullin[38]
379 - (5.73 %)Dylan Schneider
175 - (2.64 %)Frances Connell (PANB)
325 - (4.91 %)John Foran 13. Southwest Miramichi Rick Brewer
1,952 - (30.17 %)Jake Stewart
3,792 - (58.60 %)Jason Robar[39]
200 - (3.09 %)Jimmy Lawlor
204 - (3.15 %)Wes Gullison (PANB)
323 - (4.99 %)Rick Brewer Southeast
Electoral District Candidates Incumbent Liberal PC NDP Green Other 14. Rogersville-Kouchibouguac Bertrand LeBlanc
3,442 - (46.03 %)Jimmy Bourque
3,174 - (42.45 %)Alida Fagan[26][40]
861 - (11.52 %)vacant 15. Kent Shawn Graham
3,722 - (55.72 %)Bruce Hickey[41]
1,720 - (25.75 %)Susan Levi-Peters[42][43][44][45]
1,023 - (15.31 %)Garry Sanipass
215 - (3.22 %)Shawn Graham 16. Kent South Martin Goguen
2,447 - (29.20 %)Claude Williams
5,055 - (60.33 %)Oscar Doucet[46]
503 - (6.00 %)Luc LeBreton
374 - (4.46 %)Claude Williams 17. Shediac-Cap-Pelé Victor Boudreau
5,244 - (61.33 %)Janice Brun
2,121 - (24.81 %)Yves Leger[47]
669 - (7.82 %)Natalie Arsenault
409 - (4.78 %)Charles Vautour (Ind.)
107 - (1.25 %)Victor Boudreau 18. Tantramar Beth Barczyk
911 - (19.02 %)Mike Olscamp
2,712 - (56.62 %)Bill Evans[48][49][50]
513 - (10.71 %)Margaret Tusz-King
654 - (13.65 %)Mike Olscamp 19. Memramcook-Lakeville-Dieppe Bernard LeBlanc
3,426 - (50.82 %)Fortunat Duguay
2,174 - (32.25 %)Denis Brun[51]
707 - (10.49 %)Fanny Leblanc
435 - (6.45 %)Bernard LeBlanc 20. Dieppe Centre-Lewisville Roger Melanson
4,541 - (46.24 %)Dave Maltais
3,429 - (34.91 %)Agathe Lapointe[52]
1,174 - (11.95 %)Paul LeBreton
677 - (6.89 %)Cy LeBlanc† 21. Moncton East Chris Collins
2,694 - (41.54 %)Karen Nelson
2,528 - (38.98 %)Teresa Sullivan[53]
626 - (9.65 %)Roy MacMullin
637 - (9.82 %)Chris Collinsa 22. Moncton West Anne Marie Picone Ford[54]
1,995 - (32.50 %)Susan Stultz
2,983 - (48.59 %)Shawna Gagne[55]
580 - (9.45 %)Carrie Sullivan
503 - (8.19 %)Barry Renouf (Ind.)
78 - (1.27 %)Joan MacAlpine-Stiles†b 23. Moncton North Kevin Robart
1,912 - (36.54 %)Marie-Claude Blais
2,349 - (44.90 %)Jean Guimond[56]
512 - (9.79 %)Greta Doucet
367 - (7.01 %)Carl Bainbridge (PANB)
92 - (1.76 %)vacant 24. Moncton Crescent Russ Mallard
2,538 - (30.77 %)John Betts
4,171 - (50.57 %)Cyprien Okana[57][58]
809 - (9.81 %)Mike Milligan
730 - (8.85 %)John Betts 25. Petitcodiac Wally Stiles
1,769 - (23.84 %)Sherry Wilson
4,135 - (55.74 %)Leta Both[59][60]
666 - (8.98 %)Bethany Thorne-Dykstra[61]
849 - (11.44 %)Wally Stilesc 26. Riverview Lana Hansen
1,626 - (23.47 %)Bruce Fitch
4,357 - (62.89 %)Darryl Pitre[62][63]
457 - (6.60 %)Steven Steeves
488 - (7.04 %)Bruce Fitch 27. Albert Claude Curwin
1,252 - (19.54 %)Wayne Steeves
4,009 - (62.57 %)Anthony Crandall[64]
412 - (6.43 %)Vernon Woolsey
448 - (6.99 %)Lucy Rolfe (PANB)
286 - (4.46 %)Wayne Steeves ^a - Collins won the seat in a by-election on March 5, 2007. The seat was previously held by Progressive Conservative former premier Bernard Lord.
^b - MacAlpine-Stiles crossed the floor to the Liberals on April 17, 2007. She previously sat as a Progressive Conservative.
^c - Stiles crossed the floor to the Liberals on April 17, 2007. He previously sat as a Progressive Conservative.
Southwest
Electoral District Candidates Incumbent Liberal PC NDP Green Other 28. Kings East George Horton
1,418 - (21.14 %)Bruce Northrup
4,476 - (66.73 %)Robert Murray[65][66]
487 - (7.26 %)Jenna Milligan
327 - (4.87 %)Bruce Northrup 29. Hampton-Kings Kit Hickey[67]
1,668 - (22.28 %)Bev Harrison
4,302 - (57.47 %)Julie Drummond[68][69][70]
1,193 - (15.93 %)Pierre Roy
323 - (4.31 %)Bev Harrison 30. Quispamsis Mary Schryer
2,752 - (34.24 %)Blaine Higgs
4,075 - (50.70 %)Matt Doherty[71][72]
911 - (11.33 %)Mark Woolsey
300 - (3.73 %)Mary Schryer 31. Saint John-Fundy Gary Keating
1,736 - (30.98 %)Glen Savoie[73]
2,913 - (51.99 %)Lise Lennon[74]
594 - (10.60 %)Matthew Clark
187 - (3.34 %)Glenn McAllister (PANB)
173 - (3.09 %)Stuart Jamieson† 32. Rothesay Victoria Clarke
1,694 - (28.40 %)Margaret-Ann Blaney
3,374 - (56.57 %)Pamela Scichilone[75]
535 - (8.97 %)Sharon Murphy-Flatt
361 - (6.05 %)Margaret-Ann Blaney 33. Saint John East Kevin McCarville
1,867 - (33.06 %)Glen Tait[76]
2,137 - (37.84 %)Sandy Harding [77][78]
1,338 - (23.69 %)Ann McAllister
305 - (5.40 %)Roly MacIntyre† 34. Saint John Harbour Ed Doherty[79]
1,326 - (30.45 %)Carl Killen
1,333 - (30.66 %)Wayne Dryer[80]
1,203 - (27.63 %)Patty Higgins[81]
236 - (5.45 %)John Campbell (Ind.)
247 - (5.81 %)Ed Doherty 35. Saint John Portland Dan Joyce
2,062 - (35.31 %)Trevor Holder
2,926 - (50.10 %)Jeremy Higgins[82][83]
576 - (9.86 %)Stefan Warner
192 - (3.29 %)Lisa Cromwell (PANB)
84 - (1.44 %)Trevor Holder 36. Saint John Lancaster Abel LeBlanc
2,287 - (33.81 %)Dorothy Shephard
3,433 - (50.75 %)Habib Kilisli[84][85]
688 - (10.17 %)Mary Ellen Carpenter
247 - (3.65 %)Wendy Coughlin (PANB)
110 - (1.63 %)Abel LeBlanc 37. Fundy-River Valley Jack Keir
1,815 - (28.74 %)Jim Parrott
3,633 - (57.53 %)David Sullivan[86]
427 - (6.76 %)Stephanie Coburn
222 - (3.52 %)Edward Hoyt (PANB)
218 - (3.45 %)Jack Keir 38. Charlotte-The Isles Rick Doucet
3,176 - (51.27 %)Sharon Tucker
2,286 - (36.90 %)Sharon Greenlaw[87][88]
305 - (4.92 %)Burt Folkins
180 - (2.91 %)Theresa James (PANB)
248 - (4.00 %)Rick Doucet 39. Charlotte-Campobello Annabelle Juneau
1,516 - (24.46 %)Curtis Malloch
2,980 - (48.08 %)Lloyd Groom[89]
798 - (12.88 %)Janice Harvey[90]
500 - (8.07 %)John Craig (PANB)
404 - (6.52 %)Tony Huntjens† Central
Electoral District Candidates Incumbent Liberal PC NDP Green Other 40. Oromocto Georgina Jones
569 - (12.62 %)Jody Carr
3,662 - (81.23 %)Beau Davidson[91]
277 - (6.14 %)Jody Carr 41. Grand Lake-Gagetown Barry Armstrong
2,108 - (29.16 %)Ross Wetmore[92]
3,290 - (45.51 %)J.R. Magee[93]
237 - (3.28 %)Sandra Burtt
175 - (2.42 %)Kris Austin (PANB)
1,419 - (19.63 %)Eugene McGinley† 42. Fredericton-Nashwaaksis T.J. Burke
2,712 - (35.28 %)Troy Lifford
3,656 - (47.56 %)Dana Brown[94]
592 - (7.70 %)Jack MacDougall
727 - (9.46 %)T.J. Burke 43. Fredericton-Fort Nashwaak Kelly Lamrock
2,586 - (34.16 %)Pam Lynch[95]
3,571 - (47.17 %)Andy Scott[96]
861 - (11.37 %)Kathleen MacDougall
553 - (7.30 %)Kelly Lamrock 44. Fredericton-Lincoln Greg Byrne
2,178 - (35.31 %)Craig Leonard
2,437 - (39.51 %)Jason Purdy[97]
945 - (15.32 %)Tracey Waite
608 - (9.86 %)Greg Byrne 45. Fredericton-Silverwood Rick Miles
2,469 - (32.53 %)Brian Macdonald
2,931 - (38.62 %)Tony Myatt[98][99]
1,220 - (16.07 %)Jim Wolstenholme
903 - (11.90 %)Jim Andrews (Ind.)
67 - (0.88 %)Rick Miles 46. New Maryland-Sunbury West Larry DeLong
1,502 - (23.33 %)Jack Carr
4,097 - (63.65 %)Jesse Travis [100][101]
547 - (8.50 %)Ellen Comer
291 - (4.52 %)Jack Carrd 47. York Winston Gamblin
1,486 - (22.95 %)Carl Urquhart
3,614 - (55.82 %)Sharon Scott-Levesque[102][103]
1,012 - (15.63 %)Jean Louis Deveau
362 - (5.59 %)Carl Urquhart 48. York North Eugene Price[104]
1,232 - (17.39 %)Kirk MacDonald
4,486 - (63.33 %)Genevieve MacRae[105]
675 - (9.53 %)Jarrod Currie
305 - (4.31 %)Steven Hawkes[106] (PANB)
386 - (5.45 %)Kirk MacDonald - ^d - Carr won the seat in a by-election on November 3, 2008. The seat was previously held by fellow Progressive Conservative Keith Ashfield.
Northwest
Electoral District Candidates Incumbent Liberal PC NDP Green Other 49. Woodstock Jeff Bradbury
710 - (10.22 %)David Alward
4,673 - (67.27 %)Conrad Anderson[107]
280 - (4.03 %)Todd Antworth
103 - (1.48 %)Dale Allen (Ind.)
996 - (14.34 %)
David Kennedy (PANB)
185 - (2.66 %)David Alward 50. Carleton Peter Cook
1,711 - (27.17 %)Dale Graham
3,884 - (61.67 %)Jacob Elsinga[108]
319 - (5.07 %)Tegan Wong-Daugherty
384 - (6.10 %)Dale Graham 51. Victoria-Tobique Larry Kennedy
2,039 - (40.05 %)Wes McLean
2,684 - (52.72 %)David Burns[109]
109 - (2.14 %)Wayne Sabine
118 - (2.32 %)Carter Edgar (Ind.)
141 - (2.77 %)Larry Kennedy 52. Grand Falls-Drummond-Saint-André Ron Ouellette
2,715 - (43.60 %)Danny Soucy
3,058 - (49.11 %)Maureen Michaud[110]
292 - (4.69 %)Cécile Martel Robitaille
162 - (2.60 %)Ron Ouellette 53. Restigouche-La-Vallée Burt Paulin
2,492 - (35.72 %)Martine Coulombe
3,727 - (53.43 %)Alain Martel[111]
551 - (7.90 %)André Arpin
206 - (2.95 %)Burt Pauline 54. Edmundston-Saint-Basile Michelle Daigle
1,362 - (18.60 %)Madeleine Dubé
5,551 - (75.81 %)Michel Thebeau[112]
226 - (3.09 %)Michelle Simard
183 - (2.50 %)Madeleine Dubé 55. Madawaska-les-Lacs Jocelyn Lévesque
1,989 - (31.85 %)Yvon Bonenfant
3,380 - (54.13 %)Nicole Theriault[113]
230 - (3.68 %)Jean-Marc Nadeau (Ind.)
645 - (10.33 %)Jeannot Volpé† - ^e - Paulin won the seat in a by-election on March 9, 2009. The seat was previously held by Progressive Conservative Percy Mockler.
References
- ^ "''Bill 75 - An Act to Amend the Legislative Assembly Act''". http://www1.gnb.ca/legis/bill/editform-e.asp?ID=555&legi=56&num=1. Retrieved 2011-03-31.
- ^ "Green Party sees growth potential in N.B". Cbc.ca. 2006-10-10. http://www.cbc.ca/canada/new-brunswick/story/2006/10/10/nb-greens.html. Retrieved 2011-03-31.
- ^ Carl Davies, Grit popularity soars, New Brunswick Telegraph-Journal, page A1, December 12, 2006
- ^ http://ca.news.yahoo.com/s/capress/061213/national/nb_lord_resignation_3
- ^ The Canadian Press (2009-12-25). "Graham would go to polls over NB Power deal - New Brunswick - CBC News". Cbc.ca. http://www.cbc.ca/canada/new-brunswick/story/2009/12/25/nb-graham-power-election.html. Retrieved 2011-03-31.
- ^ "CBC News - New Brunswick - N.B. Justice Minister quits suddenly". Cbc.ca. 2010-01-04. http://www.cbc.ca/canada/new-brunswick/story/2010/01/04/nb-murphy-justice-future-904.html. Retrieved 2011-03-31.
- ^ "Quebec balked at NB Power sale costs - New Brunswick - CBC News". Cbc.ca. 2010-03-24. http://www.cbc.ca/canada/new-brunswick/story/2010/03/24/nb-nbpower-graham-1027.html. Retrieved 2011-03-31.
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External links
- Election New Brunswick 2010
- Election New Brunswick 2010, Unofficial Candidate List
- Election Almanac - New Brunswick Provincial Election 2010
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