New Brunswick General Election, 1995

The 1995 election in the Canadian province of New Brunswick marked the debut of Bernard Valcourt as a provincial politician, and as leader of a reinvigorated Progressive Conservative Party. Frank McKenna sought a third term for his Liberal government, while the Confederation of Regions (CoR) party struggled to survive after considerable internal strife. Elizabeth Weir tried to expand her New Democratic Party's foothold in the legislature. Valcourt, a popular politician from Edmundston, had served as an Member of Parliament from 1984 to 1993, and served in the cabinets of Prime Ministers Brian Mulroney and Kim Campbell. The New Brunswick Tories had been in shambles for the better part of a decade. They were shut out of the legislature in 1987, and won only 2 seats and third place in 1991. The internal meltdown of the CoR party had left them lots of room on the right, and polls showed that there would be a competitive race. The Liberals, however, were again victorious. McKenna's personal popularity combined with vote-splitting between the Conservatives and the remanents of CoR allowed the Liberals to maintain a large majority while the Tories managed only 6 seats. Also of note, there were 55 ridings in this election, as opposed to 58 in previous elections. It was the first time boundaries were redrawn in New Brunswick since 1974.

Results

olspan="5"|1995 New Brunswick Election Results
owspan="2"|Party rowspan="2"|Leader colspan="2"|Results
eats % of votes cast
a href="/encyclopedia/Liberal-Party-of-New-Brunswick" title="Liberal Party of New Brunswick">Liberal Frank McKenna align=center|48 align=center|51.63%
a href="/encyclopedia/Progressive-Conservative-Party-of-New-Brunswick" title="Progressive Conservative Party of New Brunswick">Progressive Conservative Bernard Valcourt align=center|6 align=center|30.87%
a href="/encyclopedia/New-Democratic-Party-of-New-Brunswick" title="New Democratic Party of New Brunswick">New Democratic Elizabeth Weir align=center|1 align=center|9.65%
a href="/encyclopedia/Confederation-of-Regions-Party" title="Confederation of Regions Party">Confederation of Regions Greg Hargrove align=center|0 align=center|7.11%
Independents and Others   align=center|0 align=center|0.75%
otal   align=center|55 align=center|100.0%

 

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