Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


Jump to content
WikipediaThe Free Encyclopedia
Search

New Brunswick Confederation of Regions Party

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
icon
This articleneeds additional citations forverification. Please helpimprove this article byadding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "New Brunswick Confederation of Regions Party" – news ·newspapers ·books ·scholar ·JSTOR
(November 2012) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Canadian provincial political party
New Brunswick Confederation of Regions Party
Former provincial party
FounderArch Pafford
Founded1989 (1989)
DissolvedMarch 31, 2002 (2002-03-31)
IdeologyConservatism
Regionalism
Anti-bilingualism
Political positionRight-wing
ColoursGreen,Yellow
MostMLAs (1991)
8 / 58

TheNew Brunswick Confederation of Regions Party was a political party in theProvince ofNew Brunswick,Canada. It was the only branch of theConfederation of Regions Party of Canada to win any seats in their respective legislature. Having won the second most seats in the1991 provincial election, the party was the official opposition in theLegislative Assembly between 1991 and 1995, before losing all its seats in thefollowing election.

History

[edit]

Uprising

[edit]

In the late 1980s, support for theProgressive Conservative Party ofPremierRichard Hatfield had collapsed because of corruption scandals in the government. As well, many English-speakingNew Brunswickers were unhappy with the government's promotion ofofficial bilingualism (the use of English and French in public services).

Thefederal Confederation of Regions Party (CoR) promised to repeal the 1969Official Languages Act, which made theEnglish andFrench languages equal for all official purposes in all public services. CoR proposed providing government services in French only in areas with a predominantlyfrancophone population. The French-speakingAcadian population believed this to be an anti-francophone policy, and so the CoR had no support in areas of majority francophone population.

In the1988 federal election, the CoR Party had considerable success in New Brunswick, where it nominated candidates in seven of the ten electoral ridings and captured 4.3% of the vote within the province.

Formation

[edit]

The CoR Party's New Brunswick provincial wing was founded in 1989.[1]Miramichi businessmanArch Pafford was elected its first leader, and former Hatfield cabinet ministerEd Allen became the party's most notable candidate.Blaine Higgs, who would decades later become leader of the Progressive Conservative Party andPremier, also ran for the CoR leadership, placing second behind Pafford.[2]

1991 provincial election

[edit]
Ridings with CoR candidates in the 1991 election

The party's greatest success came in the1991 provincial election. Going into the election, theLiberals held all the seats in the legislature, but many conservatives, especially in theFredericton area and rural southern New Brunswick, were still upset with the Progressive Conservatives over the issue of bilingualism. CoR was able to capitalize on the situation, winning 21.04% of the vote (87,256 votes) and eight seats despite only running candidates in 48 of the 58 ridings.Despite their success, the CoR Party's leader,Arch Pafford, did not win his seat, placing third behind the Liberal and Progressive Conservative inMiramichi-Newcastle.[3]Danny Cameron, who won his seat inYork South, was chosen as the party's interim leader following the election.[1]

The party ran full slates inNorthumberland,Westmorland andVictoria counties, which have mixed English-speaking and Acadian populations, and a full slate in the Acadian-but-bilingualRestigouche county. The party also nominated one candidate inKent County and two inGloucester County. No candidates for the CoR ran in the very unilingual FrenchMadawaska County. The Progressive Conservatives, which ran a full slate of 58 candidates, received only 20.7% of the vote and three seats.

The results allowed the CoR Party to form the official opposition, and their success prompted pro-bilingual politicians in the governing Liberal Party to enshrinesection 16.1 in theCharter of Rights in 1993. The section guarantees equality between English-speaking and French-speaking residents of New Brunswick.

Internal divisions

[edit]

Internal differences resulted in political infighting within the CoR. A rivalry formed between Cameron, who was seen as a moderate within the party, and fellow CoR MLABrent Taylor, who was seen as more radical. A year after Cameron's election as interim leader, the party's board of directors sought to remove him. A structural problem arose, as the party policy was that an elected member is responsible to the electorate first, the party second, and the leader last, yet under its constitution the board of directors (and not the elected caucus) could call a leadership convention, which inevitably gave the party control over the elected members.Martin, Geoffrey (1995)."The Rise and Fall of the New Brunswick CoR Party, 1988-1995".Canadian Parliamentary Review.18 (3):19–22. Retrieved4 October 2024. The party council then held a leadership race at the 1992 convention inCampbellton, where Taylor narrowly defeated Cameron and became leader. However, Cameron and his supporters argued that the race was illegal. Cameron's supporters later gained control over the party's presidency, allowing Cameron to fire a large portion of the party executive and council. Taylor and fellow CoR MLABev Brine were kicked out of the caucus in 1994 due to their ongoing opposition to Cameron. During this period, party membership dropped from 20,000 to 5,000.[citation needed]

Cameron eventually chose to resign the leadership to try to settle the internal divisions affecting the party. The entire party membership was allowed to vote in the race that followed. Pro-Taylor Gary Ewart was chosen over pro-CameronGreg Hargrove, but neither Ewart nor caucus leader Ab Rector were able to resolve their differences with Cameron's supporters. Ewart resigned 23 days later, leaving the party in limbo.[citation needed]

1995 provincial election

[edit]

The executive electedGreg Hargrove leader in time for the1995 election, but the damage had been done. None of the party Members of the Legislative Assembly were re-elected in 1995, and the party received just 27,684 votes (7.1% of the popular vote), placing them behind theNew Democrats.[4]

1999 provincial election

[edit]

By 1999, Conservative voters were being wooed back by the charismatic leadership ofBernard Lord, who looked poised to return the party to power after ten years in the wilderness. The Confederation of Region Party, now led byJim Webb, slipped further in the1999 provincial election to just 2,807 votes (0.7% of the total).[5] Following the election,Colby Fraser, who had run federally for the party in 1988, replaced Webb as leader.

Dissolution

[edit]

In 2001, Fraser contacted the remaining members, who voted to dissolve the party.[citation needed] The dissolution formally occurred March 31, 2002.

Leaders

[edit]

Members of the New Brunswick Legislative Assembly

[edit]

Election results

[edit]

The CoR Party contested three general elections, with diminishing success. Despite being shut out of the legislature in 1995, they placed second in a number of ridings while by 1999 they placed fourth in every riding they ran a candidate.

ElectionSeats WonSecond placeThird placeFourth placeNot on ballot
199181817510
1995-2171719
1999---1837

See also

[edit]

Further reading

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abPoitras, Jacques (2004).The right fight : Bernard Lord and the Conservative dilemma. Fredericton, N.B.: Goose Lane Editions.ISBN 978-0-86492-598-5.OCLC 244770693.
  2. ^Livesey, Bruce (September 30, 2020)."Political instability roils New Brunswick".Canada's National Observer. RetrievedSeptember 25, 2024.
  3. ^"Thirty-Second General Election, September 23, 1991"(PDF).Elections NB. Retrieved2021-06-14.
  4. ^"Thirty-Third General Election, September 11, 1995"(PDF).Elections NB. 1996-02-06. Retrieved2021-06-14.
  5. ^"Thirty-Fourth General Election, June 7, 1999"(PDF).Elections NB. 1999-11-01. Retrieved2021-06-14.
Federal
Official opposition
No representation
Historical
Provincial and territorial
In government
Official opposition
No representation
Alberta
British Columbia
Manitoba
Nova Scotia
Ontario
Quebec
Saskatchewan
Yukon
Historical
Alberta
British Columbia
Manitoba
New Brunswick
Northwest Territories
Ontario
Quebec
Yukon
Others
Municipal
British Columbia
Quebec
Calgary
Toronto
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=New_Brunswick_Confederation_of_Regions_Party&oldid=1323233057"
Categories:
Hidden categories:

[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp