Election New Brunswick

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jerrym
Election New Brunswick

It's increasingly looking like Premier Higgs embatteled government will call an election soon. "New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs is dangling the prospect that he could send the province to the polls this fall, a year ahead of schedule, citing the risk of "instability and stagnation" if the legislature resumes sitting next month." When six PC MLAs voted with the opposition this summer in calling  for an external review of the 713 policy that required students under 16 who are exploring their gender identity to get their parents' consent before teachers can use their preferred first names or pronouns at school, this caused an ongoing split in the PC party. Many Conservatives are also upset with Higgs authoritarian style. A total of 26 PC riding president's called for a review of Higgs leadership in June but that was shelved in August.

New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs is dangling the prospect that he could send the province to the polls this fall, a year ahead of schedule, citing the risk of "instability and stagnation" if the legislature resumes sitting next month.

Higgs said in an emailed statement Wednesday that he is worried "political drama" could overshadow elected officials' job of helping New Brunswickers when the new session of the legislature opens Oct. 17.

"I know there is a lot of speculation about a possible fall election," he said in the statement. "As with all of the decisions I make as premier, my focus is always on doing what is best for New Brunswick."

The Progressive Conservative government has faced internal revolt in recent months, following changes made to the province's policy on sexual orientation and gender identity in schools. The main thrust of the changes to Policy 713 is that students under 16 who are exploring their gender identity must get their parents' consent before teachers can use their preferred first names or pronouns at school.

Two ministers — Trevor Holder who held the labour portfolio and Dorothy Shephard in social development — quit earlier this year, citing Higgs' leadership style and the changes made to the gender identity policy.

After six Tory members of the legislative assembly voted with the Opposition in June to call for an external review of the policy, the premier dropped dissenters from cabinet and named five new ministers.

But Higgs' troubles began before he introduced changes to the policy in June. Dominic Cardy, who was education minister, resigned from cabinet last October, calling out the premier's leadership style and values. The premier has also faced criticism on his now-stalled French immersion policy reform, where the government said their goal was that all graduates in the anglophone sector have at least a “conversational level” of the language. The proposed reform was dropped.

Some Progressive Conservative party members have called for Higgs to step down, but after months of speculation they failed to trigger a leadership review and dropped the call in August.

Looking ahead to the next session of the legislature, Higgs said in his statement: "The question we face is will the focus be on delivering results for New Brunswickers or will it be 12 months of political drama causing instability and stagnation in government?"

J.P. Lewis, political science professor at the University of New Brunswick, Saint John, said speculation about an election has been swirling for months, but there might be more reason now for Higgs to want to strengthen his position and call an election ahead of the October 2024 date specified in provincial law.

Higgs was facing pressure from the outside where the Progressive Conservatives were down in the polls earlier this year and from the inside with turmoil in the cabinet and the party, he said.

"He might look at all this pressure … (and say) if this is real, then we're going to test it at the polls," Lewis said. "He can look at it and say, 'The way for me to strengthen myself within the party is to lead the party to another majority government. I'm not going to wait around. I'm going to do it now.'"

While the Tories remain strong in the southern part of the province, he said the Liberals are formidable in the north. But an election this year would be nothing like 2020, when Higgs was riding high on his handling of the pandemic.

"This is completely different. There's different issues that are top of mind," Lewis said. He listed the housing crisis, a shortage of health-care staff and the soaring cost of living as issues likely to be prominent in a campaign.

"Then you have something like Policy 713. I don't think anyone would have predicted that would be what would take up most of the political energy in the province for the last two or three months. But it has," Lewis said.

Green Leader David Coon said it is rich that Higgs is saying he can't function in the midst of so much political drama, "when he's the one who was the instigator of all the political drama."

Liberal Leader Susan Holt said Higgs should come clean about whether the election will be this this fall or next.

"I think one of the reasons the premier is hesitant to return to the legislature is, as he said, he's lost the leadership of his team," she said. "He no longer has the ability to lead his caucus and cabinet and so he's considering an election to try and fix that."

On Wednesday evening, as the premier arrived at a $500-a-head fundraiser in Fredericton billed as "An Evening With Premier Higgs," a small group of LGBTQ+ people gathered on the sidewalk holding signs protesting Policy 713. Higgs had a 15-minute conversation with the group, answering questions and defending his government's position.

https://www.richmond-news.com/new-brunswick-news/election-speculation-in...

jerrym

Although the Liberals won 37.8% of the vote in the 2018 election to the Progressive Conservatives 31.9%, the PCs won 22 seats to the Liberals 21 seats because the Liberal vote was so concentrated in the northern Francophone ridings, the Greens took 3 seats with 11.9% of the vote, the People's Alliance took 3 seats with 12.6% of the vote, and the NDP fell from 13.0% of the vote and no seats in the 2014 election to no seats and 5.0% of the vote. The People's Alliance then supported the Higg's government. The Liberals are therefore expected to need to have a substantial advantage in the vote share to win an election. In the 2020 election, with the help of the Covid crisis Higgs won a majority 27 seats with 39.3% of the vote while the Liberals won 17 seats with 34.4% of the vote, the Greens took 3 seats with 15.2% of the vote, the People's Alliance took 2 seats with 12.6% of the vote and the NDP took no seats with 1.66% of the vote. In March 2022 the two People's Alliance MLAs joined the PC party and government. 

Premier and Progressive Conservative leader Blaine Higgs expressed excitement about his party's new MLAs, but reiterated the party's support for official bilingualism when questioned about the People's Alliance's previous stances on the issue. The acceptance of MLAs who had expressed anti-bilingual opinions was criticized by the Acadian Society of New Brunswick, an organization promoting the rights of francophones in the province, when their president Alexandre Cédric Doucet said that he was happy to see the Alliance dissolve, but that it was "a sad day" for the Progressive Conservatives. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/41st_New_Brunswick_general_election)

The most recent poll was one done by Narrative Research on August 21st. The PCs at 36% and the Liberals at 38% are in a statisical tie for the lead in voter support in New Brunswick, although dissatisfaction with Premier Higgs at 59% remains high and more people prefer Liberal leader Holt at 28% than Higgs at 23% as Premier.

While the majority of New Brunswickers continue to express dissatisfaction with the performance of the provincial government led by Premier Blaine Higgs, dissatisfaction has declined this quarter compared to last, according to the latest survey by Narrative Research. Six in ten (59%, down from 64% in May 2023) are currently dissatisfied, while four in ten (37%, up from 31%) express some level of satisfaction with the government’s overall performance. Dissatisfaction is highest in Northern NB and lowest in Southern NB, albeit Southern NB residents are nearly evenly-split between being satisfied or dissatisfied.

The PCs and Liberals continue to garner similar levels of support from decided voters. Four in ten would vote for either the Liberals (38%, compared with 34% in May 2023) or the PCs (36%, compared with 34%) if an election were held today. Two in ten would vote for the Green Party (16%, compared with 19%), while one in ten would vote for the NDP (8%, compared with 10%). The People’s Alliance of New Brunswick has backing from 1% of decided voters (compared with 2%). Liberals have the highest support in Moncton and its surrounding area, followed closely by Northern NB, while the PCs continue to have the highest support in Southern NB.

Susan Holt of the Liberal Party remains in the lead as most preferred for Premier. Susan Holt is preferred by close to three in ten (28%, compared with 25% in May 2023), while one-quarter voice preference for Blaine Higgs (23%, up from 18%). One in ten prefer David Coon of the Green Party (13%, compared with 17%), while only a small minority prefer either Alex White, interim leader of the NDP (6%, compared with 5%) or Rick DeSaulniers of the People’s Alliance of New Brunswick (3%, compared with 5%).

https://narrativeresearch.ca/nb-the-pcs-and-liberals-are-neck-and-neck-i...

jerrym

 Even many of the Progressive Conservatives in New Brunswick want Higgs to resign after his changes to Policy 713 reducted safety for LGBTQ2S+ elementary and secondary students. His changes to Policy 713 have become the "tipping point" in demands for his resignation. In addition to cabinet minister resignations  and 26 of 49 New Brunswick provincial riding presidents who have written signed letters asking for a leadership review over this, and another four former New Brunswick Conservative riding association presidents are demanding a leadership review. 

Troubles for New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs worsened Friday as Labour Minister Trevor Holder resigned from cabinet, and four past Progressive Conservative party presidents joined the chorus calling on the premier to step down. In other words, if he won't resign they want a leadership review to get rid of him. 

In the letter Friday, Holder said Higgs lacks empathy and cannot work collaboratively with caucus members. "Under the leadership of Premier Higgs, caucus has been less about consensus and more about him getting his own way," Holder said in the letter. Holder, whose portfolios also included post-secondary education and training, is the second minister to resign this month citing Higgs’s leadership style. Dorothy Shephard resigned June 15 as social development minister.

Shephard has accused the premier of not trusting his cabinet and criticized him for the decision to change the sexual orientation policy in schools, known as Policy 713. The main change to the policy is that it will no longer be mandatory for teachers to use the preferred pronouns or names of transgender or nonbinary students under the age of 16, starting July 1.

On Thursday, Higgs repeated in a statement that the vast majority of caucus had supported the changes and added "it is extremely unfortunate that all of this gets lost with the strategically planned political drama that is now unfolding."…

Also Friday, a two-page letter from ex-party presidents Claude Williams, Jason Stephen, Lester Young and Brian Harquail, obtained by The Canadian Press, says that despite the premier's achievements there have been significant missteps that stem from Higgs's top-down, authoritarian style of leadership. They say Higgs ignores input from his cabinet, caucus, the party and civil servants.

"The members of the party have never had a say in the direction of the party under his leadership. That is not how democracy works," the four past presidents say in the letter.

"Instead, the premier depends on an echo chamber of confidantes who do not seem to understand the nuances of New Brunswick society and the delicate balance required to govern this province effectively."

Changes made to the province's policy on sexual orientation in schools, they said, was just the tipping point in a long line of disrespect Higgs has shown to the party.

https://ca.news.yahoo.com/brunswick-premier-loses-second-cabinet-1613354...

jerrym

Ironically, after Blaine Higgs warned that there was too much power in the Premier's office, his critics now agree that he is exerting too much power, with it all coming to a head over his changes to policy 713 that reduced protections for LGBTQ2S+ students. 

Blaine Higgs began his term as New Brunswick premier promising not to run his government from the top down like he accused his predecessor, Brian Gallant, of doing. "Today there is too much power in the premier's office," he wrote in a personal letter to voters during the 2018 election campaign.   "The Premier's office ends up making all the decisions. The voices of citizens and elected officials are not allowed to be as strong as they could and should be. I want to be the Premier who says 'No we don't do it that way anymore.'"

Five years later, with his government roiled by a series of cabinet resignations and firings and mounting accusations of his own tendency toward centralized rule, Higgs still maintains he is a leader who values different points of view and is open to learning from those who do not agree with him. "I'm never happy when someone quits and walks away because the way we find balance — and the way we respect each other's views in doing so — is how we improve democracy," Higgs told CBC News last week. 

But a growing list of government MLAs and ex-ministers claim that is not the Blaine Higgs they know. Three weeks ago, former social development minister Dorothy Shephard resigned from cabinet in opposition to the government changing Policy 713, which provides guidance for the treatment of LGBTQ students in schools. In interviews about the decision, Shephard expressed specific concerns about the policy change but also a long simmering frustration about Higgs making decisions on his own and bypassing ministers by running departments directly from his office. "There's no conversation with the premier's office. It's all a direct line from the premier's office to the deputy minister," she said.

The criticism was nearly identical to one made nine months ago by former education minister Dominic Cardy in his resignation letter from cabinet. Cardy claimed major government policy shifts, such as the ill-fated attempt to overhaul French immersion in schools or to disband elected representation on health boards, were increasingly personal decisions being made directly by the premier. "Your order to abolish the democratically elected Regional Health Authorities without informing Cabinet represents a steady consolidation of power in your own hands," Cardy wrote in the letter.

The New Brunswick Progressive Conservative party had told voters in 2018 that with Higgs as leader it would delegate power and "move decisions closer to communities," but Cardy described the opposite happening, especially, he said, after the party went from a minority to a majority government in 2020. At the time, Cardy's letter was viewed as incendiary and disloyal. It triggered his expulsion from the government caucus and forced him to sit in the legislature as an independent. But in the last month, a number of Cardy's former cabinet colleagues have been making nearly identical points as they either resigned, like he did, or were fired by Higgs. ...

Trevor Holder, the most senior government MLA in the New Brunswick legislature, gave up his cabinet position two weeks ago and, like Cardy and Shephard before him, cited a concentration of power and decision-making in the hands of one. "Under the leadership of Premier Higgs caucus has been less about consensus and more about him getting his own way," wrote Holder in an open letter explaining his departure.  ,,,

Lori Turnbull, the director of the school of public administration at Dalhousie University, told Information Morning on Monday that it is not unusual for premiers or prime ministers in parliamentary systems to be accused of wielding too much power. 

But she said what is happening in New Brunswick appears to be something beyond those standard complaints. "This is not just a Blaine Higgs thing," said Turnbull. "However, it seems like this particular situation has gone too far for some of the people around him." Higgs no longer references his 2018 commitment to voters to curtail unilateral decision-making in the premier's office, but he does acknowledge some blame for internal problems in his government and said he "has to be part of the solution."  However, last week he also said he finds some of the complaints about him "a bit over dramatic" and appeared to misstate or misunderstand that the concerns ex-ministers express about him cover multiple policies that stretch back several months.

 

https://www.msn.com/en-ca/news/canada/higgs-warned-of-too-much-power-in-...

jerrym

Higgs was in trouble within the New Brunswick Progressive Conservative because of his anti-LGBTQ changes that triggered 26 of 49 PC riding presidents to write signed letters asking for a leadership review. But it goes deeper than than. He was originally a Liberal who quit the party to become a member of the very right wing provincial Confederation of Regions (COR)Party over bilingualism and ran for its leadership before joining the PCs (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blaine_Higgs). So he is an outsider inside the PC party who doesn't have the lifetime party allies that is often typical of party leaders and is further to the right than many Maritime PCs. More important Higgs hired Derek Robinson the same month Higgs began his review of Policy 713 on school protections for LGBTQ students.  Robinson was "a key player in western Canadian conservative groups, and is advising the premier through his communications firm MASH Strategy" (https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/blaine-higgs-attack-susan-h...). Robinson led the strategy to defeat long-time and sole Liberal Saskatchewan MP by repeatedly linking him to Trudeau in advertising. He brought that strategy to New Brunswick, attacking the Liberal leader, Susan Holt by linking her to Trudeau on the LGBTQ2S+ issue. " On Saturday night, Higgs linked Trudeau's stand on LGBTQ issues to Holt — even though Holt herself is keeping her distance from the prime minister. "Susan Holt & Justin Trudeau don't believe parents need be involved in such critical discussions as gender identity, even in children as young as 4," Higgs said in two tweets posted Saturday night at 6:53 p.m. and again at 9:18 p.m." 

(https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/blaine-higgs-attack-susan-h...)

The problem is what works on in Saskatchewan and Alberta doesn't necessarily work elsewhere, especially when it was the PCs who were the ones who brought in the original Policy 713. Furthermore, it had worked well for two years with only three complaints from parents that Higgs brought forward to argue it needed to change, so it looked like the manufacturing of an issue that had some resonance on the prairies and a lot of resonance for Republicans in the US, but seemed was so far a non-issue in New Brunswick. 

On CBC Newsworld Saschi Kurl of the Angus Reid Institute, a polling firm, warned that American style culture wars played for political gains have largely failed in Canada, but if they do get a large following here, it will be very difficult to ever get them out of our politics. 

Furthermore, culture war policies that look like sure fire winners in one region may be disastrous in another region for a political party. I wonder if Poilievre, unlike Higgs, have figured that out yet.  

jerrym

While some PCs are disturbed by Higgs Policy 713 changes that now require students under 16 to have their pronoun usage change reported to parents, right wing Christians are calling their followers to join the New Brunswick PCs to push their far right policies forward, calling "trans issues a new hub for Christian conservatives" because ""They haven't had a rallying issue since same-sex marriage that brought people out to the polls." One of their leaders of these Chrisitian conservatives, Faytene Grasseschi, is not ruling out running in the next New Brunswick election and has met and been photographed with Premier Blaine Higgs. Biggs margin of victory in the last leadership review of 2,734 voting PC members was just 394 votes, a lot less than the number of Conservative christians who have indicated a willingness to support Higgs.  She hopes to get Higgs to "issue tax credits to parents who take their children out of public schools and enrol them in private schools, in effect allowing them to move their tax dollars out of the public system". ... "The nation and our communities are shaped by those who show up in the process," Grasseschi said. ... "Grasseschi is part of a movement called the New Aposotolic Reformation that aims to put believers in government leadership positions so Canada can be "restored to be a Christian nation in time for the second coming of Christ," she said.

A man with grey hair and glasses posing with a woman with long blond hair

Grasseschi says she met with Higgs in March in his role as Quispamsis MLA, before the Policy 713 controversy began. (Submitted by Faytene Grasseschi)

A Christian conservative group rallying support for New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs now has enough signatures to be a decisive factor in any leadership review vote. It and another organization rallying support for the embattled Progressive Conservative leader have flexed their muscles in the last month, gathering enough names to swing the vote in his favour. "A lot of times it's hundreds or even dozens of people that can make a difference in some of these elections," said Faytene Grasseschi, who runs the group 4 My Canada from Quispamsis, outside Saint John.

As of Wednesday she said she had collected almost 9,000 names from across Canada, including 2,000 from New Brunswick who could sign up as provincial PC members. "If it goes to a leadership review, I think it's buying that membership and making your voice heard," said Grasseschi. "This is just basic democracy, right?"

"The nation and our communities are shaped by those who show up in the process," Grasseschi said.

Another group, Right Now, has more than 1,200 signatures. Co-founder Alissa Golob estimates more than 90 per cent of them are from New Brunswickers who are eligible to become provincial party members. "We'll be ready if it does come to a leadership review or if it comes down to an election," said Golob, who describes her organization as non-religious.

Twenty-six PC riding association presidents have signed letters calling for a review, hoping to trigger a vote by members on whether to dump Higgs. New Brunswick's premier has lost or fired several cabinet ministers in recent months over his leadership style, and stance on issues like a gender policy in the province's schools. 

The next hurdle is a two-thirds vote by the party's governing body to schedule a convention. But if that happens, Higgs has a good chance of surviving thanks to Grasseschi and Golob. Just 2,732 PC members cast ballots in the third and final round of the party's 2016 leadership vote that Higgs won. His margin was 394 votes — far fewer than the number of names collected by 4 My Canada and Right Now. 

The two groups started mobilizing last month after Higgs faced a cabinet and caucus revolt in the legislature over changes to Policy 713.

The original policy required school staff to respect the name and pronoun choices of students under 16 in the classroom, without notifying parents if that's what the child wanted.

Journalist Marci McDonald, author of a 2010 book on the Christian conservative movement, called her "very compelling and charismatic" and "one of the leading figures in this country's emerging Christian right."

McDonald said in an interview she believes Grasseschi and others are using the issue of LGBTQ rights in schools as "a new hub to get Christians, evangelical Christians, the religious right, involved in politics again, as a new rallying cry.

"They haven't had a rallying issue since same-sex marriage that brought people out to the polls."

Right Now has existed since 2016 and focuses mainly on abortion. 

Its online petition to support Higgs cites both Policy 713 and his refusal to fund abortions in Fredericton's Clinic 554. 

Golob said she believes most of the New Brunswickers who have signed are not PC members because many of them opposed some of his other policies, such as COVID-19 restrictions early in the pandemic. 

But she said they form a base that can be deployed in any leadership review or election where Higgs's future is on the line. 

The strategy of the two groups is already bearing fruit.

Roxana Kreklo, a Sussex parent of school-age children who works for Harvest Prison Ministries, said she joined the PC party two weeks ago expressly to support Higgs.

"I think it's important for all of us to get involved civically," she said.

Kreklo moved to Canada as a child from Romania, shortly after the collapse of Communist rule there — one reason she said she's getting involved politically now.

"I understand the value of … coming to a place that is a free and democratic society," she said. "So I want to do what I can to preserve that for my kids and for other kids as well." ...

McDonald said Grasseschi is part of a movement called the New Aposotolic Reformation that aims to put believers in government leadership positions so Canada can be "restored to be a Christian nation in time for the second coming of Christ," she said.

Grasseschi would not confirm that.

"You know, that would be a good question," she told CBC News. "I don't know. I hear these types of terms thrown around. People assume that I know. I actually have the same question myself."

Higgs's spokesperson was asked for a comment on that idea, but the premier's statement to CBC News didn't include a response. 

Grasseschi would not say if she'll lobby Higgs for more on Policy 713 or on issues such as abortion access or Medicare coverage of gender-confirming surgery for transgender people.  "If some of these other things come back onto the radar down the line, maybe we can have another conversation at that point," she said ...

Besides running 4 My Canada, Grasseschi is also executive director of a charity called V-Kol Media Ministries, which runs a range of programs and produces her Faytene TV  show. The program, which looks at current affairs from a faith-based perspective, airs online and on several cable channels. V-Kol and 4 My Canada shared the same mailing address, but Grasseschi said they are "separate legally and financially" and she recently set up a separate post office box for the charity to make that clear.  V-Kol issues charitable tax receipts to donors, so it is restricted from political advocacy, while 4 My Canada, a non-profit without charitable status, is free to be vocal and active. Right Now and 4 My Canada also operate outside provincial laws on election transparency. Since 2015, Elections New Brunswick has required party leadership candidates and riding nomination candidates to register and disclose their donors. But there's no such rule for party leadership reviews. There are also rules on third-party advertising, but they only apply during election campaigns.

Grasseschi won't rule out another election run  Grasseschi herself has already waded directly into electoral politics. Not long after moving to New Brunswick, she ran unsuccessfully to be the Conservative Party of Canada candidate for Saint John-Rothesay in the last federal election.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/christian-conservatives-sup...

kropotkin1951

In the meantime on the other coast our Premier knows what to say to right wing assholes spewing hatred.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cWKx61yv0Q4

jerrym

More signs of rebellion in the New Brunswick Progressive Conservative as speculation about an election call continues to boil. The six MLAs who "broke ranks with Higgs in June over changes to Policy 713, the gender-identity policy for schools, were not at the meeting" that Higgs called to a meeting that may be about an election call although those entering the meeting denied knowing what the meeting was about.

Progressive Conservative ministers and backbenchers were called to a meeting with Premier Blaine Higgs on Tuesday afternoon as New Brunswickers waited to see if the premier would call a snap election. Several cabinet ministers including Attorney-General Ted Flemming and Finance Minister Ernie Steeves were seen driving into the parking garage at Chancery Place, where the premier's office is located. Three backbench MLAs, Mike Dawson, Michelle Conroy and Ryan Cullins, also arrived, walking into the main entrance. The Speaker of the legislature, Bill Oliver, showed up too, claiming to be unaware what was going on. "I'm just going to a meeting. … I'm not sure yet," he said.

But the six PC MLAs who broke ranks with Higgs in June over changes to Policy 713, the gender-identity policy for schools, were not at the meeting. The premier's chief of staff, Paul d'Astous, buttonholed by reporters outside the building, said the meeting was unrelated to a possible election and was not a full caucus meeting. He said it was a meeting of the policy and priorities board, a committee of cabinet ministers that some backbenchers are able to attend. But some of the MLAs arriving did not seem to know that.  "I'm not even sure myself," Cullins said when asked what the meeting was. Speakers of the legislature, who are officially neutral in their roles, do not attend most caucus meetings for partisan discussions.

But d'Astous said Oliver was there Tuesday as a "resource person" to the group because he'll be presiding over the opening of a new session of the legislature on Oct. 17. D'Astous wouldn't guarantee that will happen, however. "Anything can change," he said.

The June rebellion and what Higgs calls the resulting "instability" and "political drama" in his caucus is why he has not ruled out a snap election this fall. As a result, all political parties have been preparing for the possibility.

Social Development Minister Jill Green announced last week she will run again.

Another member of cabinet, Health Minister Bruce Fitch, said last week he doesn't think Higgs should call an election this fall. Under the province's Elections Act, it's now too late for a provincial election to take place Nov. 6. The next possible date is Monday, Nov. 13.

Dawson, elected in 2022 as MLA for Southwest Miramichi-Bay du Vin, said if Higgs asks his advice, he'll encourage him to do it.  "I can go to the polls tomorrow," he said. "Why not? Are we going to able to function … in the middle of this month?" Dawson said he doesn't trust assurances by the six MLAs who broke ranks in June that they'll support Higgs's agenda in the legislature. "They'll probably say whatever they want to get back into the house," he said.

Those six have declared emphatically they won't vote against the government in any confidence votes such as the budget, and some have said they know of no bills this fall they'd vote against. But they also said in a joint letter to the PC caucus in August that they want all Tory MLAs to have more input into government decision-making. They've also accused Higgs of refusing to hold a full meeting of the 29-member PC caucus to sort out the disagreement.

Some of the MLAs arriving told reporters they weren't aware that the group of six had not been invited. "You know more than we do," Conroy said.

A spokesperson notified reporters hours before the meeting started that Higgs would not be available to speak to reporters.

https://www.msn.com/en-ca/news/canada/some-but-not-all-pc-mlas-gather-as...

jerrym

The opposition parties are speculating that Premier Higgs could use a poison pill, such as anti-trans kids legislation, to force opposition parties and his own PC parties opponents to be unable to support his throne speech on Tuesday, thereby triggering an election while blaming them for the election call. There could potentially be several ex-Tories who run as Independent conservative candidates, possibly upsetting Higgs’s chances of a majority.

New Brunswick opposition leaders are criticizing Premier Blaine Higgs after he left the province guessing for weeks about whether he would plunge them into an early election campaign. Although the Progressive Conservative premier seems to have pulled back from his threat to call an election before the legislature resumes sitting Tuesday, critics say he could still orchestrate his government’s defeat in a throne speech. Election speculation has swirled since six members of Higgs’s party voted against the government in June on a motion related to the province’s policy on sexual orientation and gender identity in schools.

Higgs said in a statement last week that his government could not function if the dissident Tories are determined to operate independently within their own party. “A government cannot function in this manner,” he said in the statement. “On many topics, consensus is not always achieved, but democracy works because the majority of participants support the agenda.” Higgs wasn’t available for an interview Friday.

Green and Liberal party leaders are speculating that Higgs could use the throne speech as a poison pill to upend his government and trigger an election. “If I was going to make a bet on it, I would say that there’s a good chance that the premier will design the throne speech to contain a poison pill — things that will be impossible for rebels in his caucus, and maybe a couple of others in his caucus to support, so that the vote on the throne speech will fail, and that will trigger the election,” said Green Leader David Coon. “And then he can say, ‘well, it wasn’t my choice. But, you know, the Opposition parties, together with the conservative rebels voted my throne speech down. So now we’re going to election.'”

Liberal Leader Susan Holt said she’s heard similar speculation. “So that Higgs can then blame the election on us and on them. Well, we’re waiting to see Tuesday whether that’s the case.” She said she got a notice from the Speaker Thursday that the throne speech would go ahead next week. “I’m really frustrated, actually. I think we are wasting New Brunswickers’ time and tax dollars right now with the premier’s indecision and game-playing on a possible election call.” Higgs has to call a general election on or before Oct. 21, 2024.

New Brunswick chief electoral officer Kim Poffenroth said her agency had to move up its plans and prepare to go to the polls early. In anticipation of the snap election call, the agency purchased printed material, training guides and manuals, she said, and hired returning officers and secured polling spaces for five Mondays in October and November. Some of the printed material can be reused, and some of the officers who underwent accelerated training can return the next time an election is called, she said. But there won’t be a return on money spent to reserve polling spaces, Poffenroth said. The invoices are still coming in, she said, when asked how much money was spent. “There may be some costs that were incurred there. Some of these things are costs that were incurred early, but we’ll still use them,” she said. “In other cases, it’s money spent as insurance as far as we’re concerned. We need to be ready if an election is called.”

J.P. Lewis, a political science professor at the University of New Brunswick, Saint John, said it would be a smart move if Higgs used the throne speech to lay out his vision for the province. “That becomes kind of the launch of your campaign. You can say, ‘this is what we want to do in New Brunswick. This is our viewed future for New Brunswick and the Opposition isn’t letting us do it, so we need a new mandate,'” he said. “That sets up the justification for an early election much easier.”

However, Lewis said the Progressive Conservatives, who hold 29 of the legislature’s 49 seats, could face a tight race. “It would definitely point, as everything stands right now, to a very competitive election — if it happened now,” he said. “I would say that with confidence.”

John Williston, the party’s vice-president for the Moncton and Albert County areas, said there could potentially be several ex-Tories who run as Independent conservative candidates, possibly upsetting Higgs’s chances of a majority. “All that can be avoided by the premier working with his caucus and cabinet and fulfilling his mandate … there’s still 12 months roughly left in that.”

https://globalnews.ca/news/10023662/nb-election-call-poison-pill/

jerrym

More evidence of a possible election this fall. Higgs is saying that "he is holding off on cost-of-living relief for New Brunswickers in case he needs to announce those measures in a possible election campaign" and Liberal leader Susan Holt says she will introduce an amendment to the throne calling for no confidence in the PC government. The Liberals have also recruited a former Green candidate to run for them. 

Premier Blaine Higgs says he is holding off on cost-of-living relief for New Brunswickers in case he needs to announce those measures in a possible election campaign.

The premier made the comments to reporters after Opposition Liberal Leader Susan Holt declared she will push for an election this fall — a shift in her position.  Holt slammed the Progressive Conservative government's throne speech for containing no specific new policies to help people cope with inflation. Finance Minister Ernie Steeves promised Sept. 27 that he would take new affordability measures to cabinet within weeks and would announce them "fairly soon."

But Higgs said he can't do that until he establishes first whether five rebellious PC MLAs in his caucus will support him or help the opposition trigger an election.  "There's an element of that," he said. "We will need it in a platform."  Higgs said a party's platform is normally released in the third week of an election campaign, and he's not announcing inflation relief measures now "because an election is still a possibility."

The premier was responding to a new tone from Holt, who in her official response to the throne speech introduced an amendment that declares no confidence in the Higgs government. She told reporters she would invite the five offside Tory MLAs to vote for her amendment, just as they defied Higgs to vote with the Liberals in June on their motion calling for more consultations on Policy 713.  If that motion passed, it would trigger an election. Until this week, Holt wasn't calling for an election, saying New Brunswickers didn't want one even though they needed a change in government.

Now she says, "every day it gets worse, and more and more New Brunswickers tell us they want Higgs gone and that they deserve better.… We need a new premier and we need a new government." ...

Higgs said people who can't afford the high cost of food, housing and gas, and who can't wait for his campaign platform, should be "going after" Holt and her connections with the Trudeau government, whose carbon tax he blamed for inflation.  "The reason we're in this state is because of federal energy policies," he said. "It's simple. Let's not put Band-Aids on a problem that originates from the Ottawa regulations." The premier called the tax "the major issue driving inflation," even though other countries without carbon taxes, such as the United States and the United Kingdom, have had higher rates of inflation this year. ...

Holt's amendment declaring no confidence in the government will come up for a vote on Oct. 27.  She acknowledged in a scrum with reporters that the five MLAs who voted with her in June have said they won't try to bring down the government. Two of them, Jeff Carr and Dorothy Shephard, sent messages to CBC News on Thursday restating that they'll support the government during the vote. That makes Holt's motion largely symbolic, but "we have lost confidence in this government and that's how we express that."...

Holt was surrounded by Liberal MLAs and potential election candidates for the party, including Luke Randall, who ran for the Green Party in Fredericton North in 2020. Randall, a business owner, won 31.4 per cent of the vote for the Greens in 2020, placing second behind PC candidate Jill Green.  He said running for the Greens three years ago was "the right decision at the right time," but he was switching to the Liberals, "a party that can win," to unite voters who want Higgs removed from power. "I really felt like we need to bring this community together," he said. "We are truly all New Brunswickers first, and we need to get on the same team together, and Susan Holt is the perfect leader … to do that," he said. ...

Green Leader David Coon said by recruiting a well-known former Green candidate, Holt was risking splitting the vote in Fredericton North and allowing the PCs to win the seat again. "What's she's focused on, I believe, is trying to win a majority government, and we're saying things are only going to get better if there are more Greens in the Legislative Assembly, and that will bring about a minority government."  Coon said Green MLAs will vote against the PC throne speech next week, but will have to discuss whether to support the Liberal no-confidence amendment. "I haven't heard a great outcry from people in my riding or around the province for an election at this moment," he said. 

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/higgs-holding-off-inflation...

jerrym

Having intimidated the six MLAs, including cabinet ministers, who voted against his anti-trans students changes to Policy 713, by threatening to call an election without them as candidates if they did not get in line with whatever he plans, they folded and Higgs announced he won't call an election this year. 

jerrym

Premier Higgs government is the least popular in Canada with only a 31% approval rating in this March's Angus Reid Premier Approval ratings and we all know what happened in October 2023 to the previous least previous premier, Heather Stefanson in Manitoba. Higgs PCs' are at 34% also 6% behind the Liberals at 40% in the March Narrative Research polls. However, he was able to form a minority government in 2016 with one more seat than the Liberals despite getting 6% less in the election than the Liberals thanks to the support of the three seats very right-wing People's Alliance party that won 12.6% of the vote and the fact that Liberal vote was and is very concentrated in French-speaking regions of the province. Higgs then won a majority government in August 2020 when all Canadian governments at a time were winning in a response to deal feeling the governments had done a good job during the early part of the Covid pandemic. However, the People's Alliance currently has no seats because its two MLAs from the 2020 election joined the PCs and is now polling at 2% in the most recent poll, behind even the NDP, who at 8% haven't won a seat since 2005. Moving to the right on trans and other issues has enabled Higgs to pick up two People's Alliance MLAs and the vast majority of their support, but it also leaves him with very little further right-wing voters to pull support from The Greens now hold three seats with 15% support in the latest poll (February 22, Narrative Research). Higgs anti-trans kids agenda has done nothing to increase his popularity, ahead of the scheduled October 21st election. His earlier indications that he would call an election did intimidate the six PC MLAs who opposed his anti-trans kids legislation to get onside or be replaced, but the failure of the anti-trans policy to increase the party's popularity caused him to put off the election call.

In New Brunswick, Blaine Higgs is heading into election as the least popular premier in the country. The Progressive Conservative leader is approved of by 31 per cent of residents, and has spent considerable time in recent months defending his controversial – but supported – position on parental rights and LGBTQ2+ policies in schools. Higgs’ government recently conveyed $75 million in affordability payments, though he noted significant negative coverageof the payments had frustrated him, after critics suggested certain groups, like retirees, should have been eligible for benefits but weren’t.

https://angusreid.org/premier-approval-march-2024/

 

jerrym

Premier Higgs finished lowest in the Angus Reid Premier Approval polls with just 31% support. It's not surprising considering how voters view how he has managed the key issues. Focusing on social issues such as anti-trans school kids hasn't worked so far in terms of increasing support and may well be backfiring since voters want what they consider the key problems solved first. 

That hyper focus on the shortcomings of the health-care system and the worsening housing crisis will likely make it tough for the government to ask for a new mandate when the province heads to the polls at some point this year. “These are traditionally key issues in election campaigns in Canadian federal and provincial elections, so the idea that it could become a referendum on who would have a better handle on improving the health-care system is not a new thing at all,” said JP Lewis, a professor of political science at the University of New Brunswick.

The challenge is laid out starkly in recent polling from Angus Reid. The polling firm found that the top three issues in most provinces, including New Brunswick, are health care, affordability and housing. Over the last four years the satisfaction of New Brunswickers over how the government is handling those issues has taken a nose dive.

In 2020, 42 per cent of those surveyed said the government was doing a good or very good job on health care. In polling done at the end of 2023, that number slid to just 14 per cent, while 83 per cent said the government was doing a poor or very poor job. On cost of living, 86 per cent gave the government failing marks and on housing that number was 85 per cent.

It’s an environment that isn’t unique to the province, but shows the difficulty that incumbent governments are facing right now. Lewis says that the PCs of premier Blaine Higgs may look to make the case that they are better than the alternative. “It might not just be a matter to sell what you’ve done, it might be a matter of ‘who do you trust going forward,'” he said. “Then it’s a matter of saying ‘well this is the alternative if this other party is in power.'”

Messaging to do just that has been coming from the government for months. Member statements from backbench government MLAs during legislative sitting days often include attempts to tie Liberal leader Susan Holt to decisions made by the previous Liberal government of Brian Gallant – where she spent time working for as a policy advisor, or to prime minister Justin Trudeau. Social development minister Jill Green admitted that she has seen the Angus Reid polling and feels that the government needs to do a better job of letting people know about their successes. She pointed to a $200 increase in the low income senior’s benefit as an example.

It’s also possible that the government may look to distract from the top issues like healthcare and affordability, Lewis says, as Higgs has continued to focus on issues around school gender identity policy and, more recently, gender affirming care. In the last week the government has held media availabilities with two controversial clinical psychologists who have recently made presentations to government about gender affirming care. Fundraising messaging has also continued to champion Higgs as a defender of “parental rights.” But focusing their efforts on those topics may backfire, Lewis says. “Even though there might be lots of attention to other policy questions, it’s hard to imagine this drifting away from a referendum on who can best handle the economy and improve the health-care system,” he said.

https://globalnews.ca/news/10219517/difficult-environment-for-incumbents...

jerrym

Premier Higgs is facing a lot of internal opposition to his social conserative agenda, especially on his anti-trans students changes to Policy 713 on gender identity. Three term PC Environment Minister Gary Crossman has resigned immediately from the government bring to 10 out of 27 PC MLAs&nbsp;who have either resigned or indicated they will not run in the next election, a very high rate of departure for a governing party. Another former cabinet minister ,Trevor Holder,&nbsp;Crossman&nbsp;said&nbsp;"My personal and political beliefs no longer align in many ways with the direction of our party and government". The high rate of resignation reflects the split in the New Brunswick Conservative Party over Premier Higgs adopting more social conservative policies and recruiting more social conservatives as candidates for the 2024 election. Crossman had said he would not run in the next election six months ago but said he would stay on until the election. His decision to quit now with less than six months to go until the election and his comment that he should have quit six months ago reflect how deep the split in the party is. The local&nbsp;mayor,Jeremy Salgado,&nbsp;Crossman favoured&nbsp;to replace him dropped out&nbsp;citing what he called <em><strong>"the misalignment of my beliefs and values with the current structure of our party.&nbsp;Instead, Christian conservative activist and broadcaster Faytene Grasseschi was acclaimed over the opposition of the local PC riding association</strong></em>." Much of the opposition to Higgs shift to social conservative issues is a result of his taking a more socially conservative stance on trans kids in school. How much this split over social conservative issues will hurt the party in the election remains to be seen.&nbsp;</p>

<blockquote>
<p>Environment Minister Gary Crossman is resigning as a Progressive Conservative cabinet minister and will quit as an MLA within days, citing his differences with Premier Blaine Higgs.</p>

<p>Crossman, who had already announced he would not run in this year's election, made the announcement in a Facebook post.&nbsp;</p>

<p>The three-term MLA for Hampton said he wanted to make his health a priority but also made it clear he's not happy with Higgs's leadership.</p>

<p>"My personal and political beliefs no longer align in many ways with the direction of our party and government," he said.</p>

<p>Crossman turned down an interview request from CBC News, but in a brief phone conversation suggested that he had been tempted to leave last fall.</p>

<p>"It was time," he said. "I stayed with it about six months longer than most would have."</p>

<p>He wouldn't elaborate, but last fall Crossman said he wasn't happy with how the nomination race to succeed him was unfolding in the new riding of Hampton-Fundy-St. Martins.</p>

<p>He had backed Hampton deputy mayor Jeremy Salgado to become the PC candidate, but Salgado dropped out citing what he called "the misalignment of my beliefs and values with the current structure of our party."</p>

<p>Instead, Christian conservative activist and broadcaster Faytene Grasseschi was acclaimed over the opposition of the local PC riding association.</p>

<p>Crossman told CBC News last December he wasn't sure he would vote for her.</p>

<p>He made his resignation announcement just days after he spoke on his department's 2024-25 budget estimates in the legislature.</p>

<p>With his PC colleague and former cabinet minister Trevor Holder planning to give up his seat before the legislature returns in May, the PCs will be reduced to 26 seats in the legislature compared to 20 opposition MLAs.</p>
</blockquote>
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/gary-crossman-resigns-polit...