New Democrats will form the next Official Opposition in Nova Scotia, as the Liberal vote collapsed across the province in Tuesday’s provincial election and the Progressive Conservatives cemented another majority government.
The NDP appeared set to keep most or all of the seats it held at dissolution and to pick up a handful more in the Halifax area, although a hoped-for breakthrough in rural Nova Scotia looked less likely to materialize.
The party will take over as Official Opposition from the Liberals. NDP Leader Claudia Chender, who was re-elected in her riding of Dartmouth South, will become the first elected woman leader of the Official Opposition in Nova Scotia.
“I’m here to tell you the Nova Scotia NDP is on the rise,” Chender told a cheering crowd at the party’s election celebration in Dartmouth.
The Liberals were heading to one of their worst showings in history, and even Liberal Leader Zach Churchill faced a difficult battle to hold on to his own riding of Yarmouth.
The party, which went into the election with 14 seats after two of its MLAs crossed the floor to the PCs, were leading or elected in just three ridings around 11:15 p.m. AT.
In a speech to supporters in Yarmouth, Churchill thanked candidates for their tenacity and care for their communities.
“I know a lot of people will have a lot of theories on why this happened, but at the end of the day, this was my responsibility and this loss belongs to me and me alone,” he said.
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The NDP went into the election holding six seats. Its candidates were elected in seven and leading in another three at about 11:15 p.m.; however, the party’s share of the popular vote is similar to that in 2021.
Chender spoke about the NDP campaign of “positivity and possibility for all of us,” but told supporters that PC Premier Tim Houston would find the party a tougher opposition than the Liberals.
“My friends, while today marks the end of this election, it marks the beginning of the next one,” she said.
“And after three years, we know what we are getting from the Conservatives: broken promises and backroom deals, and not a lot for the rest of us. And Tim Houston got away with it when the Liberals were in opposition. But that ends today.”
Houston repeatedly tried to tie the provincial Liberal Party to the federal Liberals, accusing Churchill of being “beholden” to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
In southwest Nova Scotia that may have payed dividends, given anger over what many see as a lack of federal government response to illegal lobster fishing in the area.
David Sollows, who has been Churchill’s official agent since 2013, said “there’s no question” the PCs were gunning for his seat, and noted Houston visited the riding a number of times during the election.
“I think Zach has held the premier to account as rigorously as he could have, and there’s no doubt in my mind the premier certainly wanted Zach out of that seat,” Sollows said.
Elizabeth Smith-McCrossin made history by being re-elected in Cumberland North, marking the first time an Independent has won back-to-back elections in Nova Scotia.
Smith-McCrossin said health care and the Chignecto isthmus — the land connection between Nova Scotia and New Brunswick — will be her focus over the next four years.
“[It’s] critical that we get that work not only started with a berm, but the real work that needs to get done there to protect all Nova Scotians,” she said in an interview Tuesday night.