1991 New Brunswick general election

1

The 1991 New Brunswick general election was held on September 23, 1991, to elect 58 members to the 52nd New Brunswick Legislative Assembly, the governing house of the province of New Brunswick, Canada. As expected, the Liberal Party won a large majority. Many were surprised that the Confederation of Regions Party formed the official opposition. Though they ran even with the PCs in popular vote, their concentration of support in rural anglophone ridings gave them considerably more seats. Weir's personal popularity and name recognition was not enough to give her party more seats as she, and the Tories, had votes relatively evenly spread around the province.

[Rendition of party representation in the 52nd New Brunswick Legislative Assembly decided by this election.

{{legend|#F08080|Liberals (46)}} {{legend|mediumseagreen|Confederation of Regions (8)}} {{legend|#6495ED|Progressive Conservatives (3)}} {{legend|sandybrown|New Democrats (1)|undefined | upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c4/Nb-seating-1991.png]

Background

Though Frank McKenna's Liberals were expected to win a second term after sweeping all 58 seats in 1987, any of the other three parties were considered contenders for official opposition. The New Democratic Party was led by Elizabeth Weir, who had been the strongest and most consistent voice of opposition to the Liberals since her election as party leader in 1988. In the ensuing three years, thanks to the lack of opposition members in the legislature (MLAs), her firebrand style had made her a well-known name in New Brunswick politics. The fledgling Confederation of Regions Party had been created out of the ashes of the Hatfield Tories when the latter went from majority government to zero seats in 1987. CoR was running numerous former Tory MLAs and candidates, and even some former Tory cabinet ministers. Its base of support was in English-speaking regions of New Brunswick, where many conservatives had become alienated by Hatfield's close relationship with Acadians. The Progressive Conservatives had been in power for the majority of years since confederation, and 17 straight years before 1987. Even so, the scandals of the final Hatfield years and the growing unpopularity of the federal Progressive Conservatives hindered their success. Additionally they had perceived internal problems having gone through four leaders since the last election: Hatfield, then two-year interim leader Malcolm MacLeod then Barbara Baird, and then Dennis Cochrane.

Opinion polls

Close results

A number of races were close 2 or 3 way contests with only a small fraction of votes separating the winner from the losers. The tables below highlight the seats that the three major parties missed by less than 10 percentage points (pp) and the margins between them and the winner.

Results

Results by party

!rowspan="2" colspan="2"|Party !rowspan="2"|Party leader !rowspan="2"|# of candidates !colspan="4"|Seats !colspan="3"|Popular vote

Results by region

Results by riding

Legend

North

Consisting of Victoria, Madawaska, Restigouche and Gloucester county ridings.

Central

Consisting of Carleton, York, Sunbury and Northumberland county ridings.

South West

Consisting of Queens, Kings, Saint John and Charlotte county ridings.

South East

Consisting of Kent, Westmorland and Albert county ridings.

This article is derived from Wikipedia and licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0. View the original article.

Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.
Bliptext is not affiliated with or endorsed by Wikipedia or the Wikimedia Foundation.

Edit article