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Robert Gauvin joining the race for provincial Liberal leadership

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https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/robert-gauvin-leadership-1.6333072

 

Robert Gauvin joining the race for provincial Liberal leadership

Former deputy premier crossed from Progressive Conservatives to Liberals in 2020

Gauvin was elected in 2018 as the Progressive Conservative MLA for Shippagan-Lamèque-Miscou and named deputy premier by Blaine Higgs. He quit the cabinet in early 2020 over the government's proposed hospital reforms that would have closed six emergency departments at night.

He crossed the floor and snagged the Shediac Bay-Dieppe riding as a Liberal candidate the same year. 

Gauvin told Radio-Canada Sunday that "the intention is confirmed" and a formal announcement will be made in the coming weeks. 

"I want to make a positive difference for the province of New Brunswick... I believe in this province," he said. 

Gauvin said after New Brunswickers were faced with the COVID-19 pandemic, they deserve someone who will make their lives happier. 

He said he's been a Liberal now just as long as he was part of the Progressive Conservative party. 

"I feel a lot more conformable on the Liberal side," he said. 

He's worked to support Clinic 554, increasing inclusion and building stronger relationships with First Nations communities, which Gauvin said has been rewarding. 

"It's the compassionate side.... I feel in my place," said Gauvin. 

He said one of his priorities as the Liberal leader would be to strengthen New Brunswick's health-care system with better wages and services. 

There are now four candidates in the Liberal race. The others are T.J. Harvey, a former Tobique-Mactaquac MP, Liberal MLA Donald Arsenault and Rothesay businessman Seamus Byrne. 

The Liberals announced last year they would select a new leader this August. 

Roger Melanson is the party's interim leader.

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices

 

 

 

 

95 Comments

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David Amos
Methinks the former comedian just made the circus even more entertaining Higgy changes his opinions nearly as often as Trudeau the Younger changes his socks but mine remain the same even after Cardy his favourite turncoat sent me butter tarts N'esy Pas?

'My opinion has changed': Higgs addresses COR past in bid to win French support

PC leader says his perspective on language rights has changed over the last 30 years
Jacques Poitras · CBC News · Posted: Aug 21, 2018 5:00 AM AT
 
 
 
 
 
 
Buford Wilson
The expression on Blaine's face speaks volumes
 
.
Marguerite Deschamps
Reply to @Buford Wilson: Ya, Higgs looks like someone who has no clue.
 
 
Matt Steele
Reply to @Buford Wilson: ....Very true , it looks like Premier Higgs is about to burst out laughing at Robert Gauvin ; Higgs was probably wondering if Gauvin would demand that the taxpayers buy him a sports car like vroom , vroom had , to tour around the province with . 
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Marguerite Deschamps: Do you??? 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Matt Steele
Maybe Robert Gauvin wants to see if there is still any of that 130 MILLION Francophonie Games money still around as 2 or 3 million had already been doled out before Premier Higgs shut it down . Where that 2 or 3 million of taxpayer cash went seems to be a mystery .
 
 
Marguerite Deschamps 
🦜🦜❗
 
 
Roland Stewart
Reply to @Marguerite Deschamps: The red gives you away.
 
 
Marcel Belanger
Reply to @Matt Steele: Mystery solved, it went to the pulp mills to help pay that lectric bill Higgs is getting NB Power to pay for the pulp mills. Or maybe 🤔 it went to add to the $250 million in stumpage fees Higgs gave to the big lumber mills. Seems to me the Francophone games would have been a lot less expensive plus all the millions in income the local businesses would have earned instead of our money going to the ones that don’t need any more.
 
 
phil mckay
Reply to @Matt Steele: ah yes
Gotta luv the francophone xenophobia
 
 
Marguerite Deschamps
Reply to @Harvey York: How about anti-French❓That one would stick pretty good❗
 
 
Marguerite Deschamps
Reply to @Harvey York: How so❓ This is mostly all we read on here❗
 
 
Marguerite Deschamps
Reply to @Harvey York: If it had been 💰💰💰 for the south, with all the spinoff generated by the event together with the federal 💰💰💰 that came with it and that went elsewhere other than New Nouveau-Brunswick, we would not have heard a boo❗Now, do you understand❓
I am more impressed b what he didn't say than by what he said.
 
 
Marguerite Deschamps
Reply to @Harvey York: It's the ones harping about bilingualism on here all the time that are playing the victim.
 
 
Marguerite Deschamps
Reply to @Harvey York: Then zero in on where most of the 💰💰💰 and resources are funneled, to filthy rich friends of both governing parties hording their wealth in tax havens and not paying their fair share of taxes, causing tariffs to be slapped on us because our governments keeps subsidizing them all the while competing with private woodlot owners. That's what hard working taxpayers should first complain about❗
 
 
Marguerite Deschamps
Reply to @Harvey York: Yet, they never do.
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Marguerite Deschamps: Methinks Harvey Baby could not stand the heat so he snuck out of the kitchen N'esy Pas?
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Marguerite Deschamps
I'll vote Green. I like their platform and their leader.
 
 
Marc Bourque
Reply to @Marguerite Deschamps: another lost vote to guarantee JT another 2 years
 
 
JOhn D Bond
Reply to @Marc Bourque: Lol wrong level of Government.
 
 
Marguerite Deschamps
Reply to @Marguerite Deschamps: JT who❓
 
 
Graham McCormack
Reply to @Marguerite Deschamps: Their leader is just another politician like the rest of the leaders.
 
 
Marguerite Deschamps
Reply to @Graham McCormack: The least of all evils.
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Marguerite Deschamps: Thats a lame excuse
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Cleve Gallant
Brain Gallant screwed the liberal party for years to come,
 
 
Marguerite Deschamps
Reply to @Cleve Gallant: Come on, a Gallant would never do that❗
 
 
 
Toby Tolly
Reply to @Cleve Gallant: not alone. The Dominator was all over it
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Toby Tolly: Yup
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
DJ Redfearn
"Oppertunist a person who exploits circumstances to gain immediate advantage rather than being guided by consistent principles or plans."

Says it all....
 
 
Marguerite Deschamps
Reply to @DJ Redfearn: Just like Cardy❗
 
 
DJ Redfearn
Reply to @Marguerite Deschamps:
Perhaps, he seems to be a "loose cannon" on the deck...
 
 
Matt Smith 
Reply to @DJ Redfearn: Now replace "a person" with "a Liberal" in your definition. Still reads true.
 
 
Marguerite Deschamps
Reply to @Matt Smith: you could replace it with CORservative as well. Would still reads true.
 
 
David Amos
Reply to @Marguerite Deschamps: Greens turncoat too
 
  

 

 

 

https://davidraymondamos3.blogspot.com/2018/08/cbc-is-blocking-me-already-and-my-name.html 

 

Tuesday, 21 August 2018

CBC is blocking me already and my name isn't even on a ballot yet

 

 https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/nb-progessive-conservative-acadian-support-1.4792502

'My opinion has changed': Higgs addresses COR past in bid to win French support

PC leader says his perspective on language rights has changed over the last 30 years


Jacques Poitras· CBC News· Posted: Aug 21, 2018 5:00 AM AT  


PC leader Blaine Higgs gave a 10-minute speech in French at Kevin Haché's nomination meeting. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)

Thirty years ago, Blaine Higgs probably never pictured himself doing what he was doing last Tuesday night: standing at attention among a crowd of Acadians as they sang their national hymn, Ave Maris Stella, in a village hall outside Caraquet.

The provincial Progressive Conservative leader likely also never imagined he'd deliver a 10-minute speech to Acadians, entirely in French.

But that was the scene in Bertrand on the night of Aug. 14 as PCs gathered to officially nominate their candidate for the riding of Caraquet in next month's provincial election.

The table is part of the election strategy that Higgs hopes will let him engineer a PC majority that includes MLAs from francophone New Brunswick.

Two star candidates

"Every government needs an Acadian voice," says Robert Gauvin, the party's candidate in Lameque-Shippagan-Miscou. "We're here and we have to be heard."

Robert Gauvin, the PC party’s candidate in Lameque-Shippagan-Miscou, says Acadians are here and need to be heard. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)
 
Gauvin is one of two star candidates running for the party in the Acadian Peninsula. The actor and performer is the son of the late former PC MLA Jean Gauvin.
 
The other is Kevin Haché, a bilingual lawyer and the mayor of Caraquet.

The two men face different challenges. Shippagan-Lamèque-Miscou has gone PC more often than not in recent decades, and the party lost it by just 44 votes in the last election.

Caraquet, meanwhile, is a Liberal stronghold that almost never elects Conservatives. In 2014, the Liberal candidate there almost tripled the PC vote.

Some voters convinced

But both Gauvin and Haché share the same challenge in this election: convincing voters to look past Higgs's involvement 30 years ago with the Confederation of Regions (COR) party, a movement that campaigned on repealing official bilingualism.

Last week in Bertrand, Higgs confronted the issue directly.

"Over the last 30 years, I've discovered our province," he said in French. "I've learned that when we look outside our own party and our own community, we learn things. I've learned that people can have different experiences."

PC leader Blaine Higgs speaks with party supporters at a recent nomination meeting in Bertrand, N.B. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)
 
Higgs told the crowd that three decades ago, he hadn't travelled widely in New Brunswick.
 
"I have a different perspective on things today. … I believe that all New Brunswickers, French and English, have the opportunity to speak their own language and to learn another one. My opinion has changed over the last 30 years."

Continuing in French, Higgs added: "Our province is a better place because we've had the courage to be an officially bilingual province and to find a goal that's common to two great cultures … Francophones, listen to me carefully: I will not leave you behind."

Not perfect

The partisan crowd lapped it up, giving Higgs — who spoke no French when he won the PC leadership two years ago —credit for making the effort.

"Tonight he certainly did his best to show people that he's trying really hard," said Riba Girouard-Riordon, who ran for the federal Conservatives in the last national election. "Even though it was not perfect, I understood his speech."

That's what francophones used to say about Richard Hatfield: as tortured as his French could be at times, his stubborn determination to speak the language won them over.

Those who attended the nomination meeting for Kevin Haché gave PC leader Blaine Higgs positive reviews for delivering a 10-minute speech in French. (Jacques Poitras/CBC) 
 
Still, there were some off-notes at the nomination meeting in Bertrand.
 
Haché refused to answer questions from CBC News about why the town of Caraquet, with him as mayor, went to court to stop Radio-Canada from obtaining travel and expense claims from AcadieNor, an economic development corporation set up by the municipality.

Those records showed a series of pricey travel and meal claims.

Work for community

Meanwhile, former PC candidate Philippe Chiasson talked up Higgs by noting he was the finance minister in the Alward government when the initial agreement for the New Brunswick Naval Centre was signed.

When the financing fell through and the province had to take over the yard in 2016, the PC opposition blamed the Liberals.

But on other local issues, such as employment insurance and the fate of the Caraquet hospital, Higgs sounded the right notes about listening to local communities and working to help them.

And on language politics, his comments are a sign to voters he has left his COR views behind, Haché said.

"He told me personally he doesn't want to change anything and he wants to fight for our rights," he said. "If I had any doubt in my soul that he was not going to respect me as a francophone, or me as an Acadian, I would never have ran for him."

Sit at table

Gauvin has a particular perspective on the issue: in 1994, his father, as a PC MLA, fought to block former COR candidates and MLAs from being welcomed back into the Tory party.


Tomorrow I'll look at PC efforts to recruit star candidates, and win seats, in the Acadian Peninsula.

"I agree with what my dad did back then," Gauvin said. "But he also told me, 'Robert, one day it might be your turn.' He told me, 'If you want to change things and make sure our rights are respected, you have to be sitting at the table.'"

Gauvin says he was skeptical of Higgs at first, "like everybody else who was Acadian," but was reassured when he learned the PC leader's four daughters went through French immersion and that he supported the construction of a francophone school in his riding of Quispamsis.

Slash programs

Liberal candidates in the region are making Higgs an issue, but not on the language front.

Wilfred Roussel, the Liberal MLA for Shippagan-Lamèque-Miscou, says if the PCs are elected, they will cut programs. (Jacques Poitras/CBC) 

Wilfred Roussel, the Liberal MLA for Shippagan-Lamèque-Miscou, says voters talk about Higg's COR past — "of course we hear about that"—but the message he's pushing is that a PC government would slash government programs.

"He doesn't have any programs for economic development," Roussell said. "He wants to do cuts. He doesn't want to put any money in programs. [The star candidates] will have to work with Mr. Higgs if he is ever elected, and that guy is only there to do cuts."

But a recent editorial in L'Acadie Nouvelle, the Caraquet-based French-language daily newspaper, gave Higgs credit for recruiting good candidates, including former MLAs Jeannot Volpé and Claude Landry, who can vouch for him in francophone regions.

"The worst scenario would be to wake up Sept. 25, the morning after the election, with a Higgs government that includes not a single francophone MLA," wrote editorialist François Gravel.

Voice needed

That's been a refrain of PC candidates in the past: if there's going to be a Conservative government, better to have a voice in it than to be excluded from it.

Previous PC leaders Richard Hatfield, Bernard Lord and David Alward won majority governments with strong francophone contingents.

But in the last election the PCs were reduced to a single francophone MLA, Madeleine Dubé, who is not running in this campaign.

In what's expected to be a close election, the ability of Higgs and his candidates to win over voters in francophone ridings could determine whether he completes his conversion from his COR days — and leads a government with MLAs from both language groups.

About the Author


Jacques Poitras
Provincial Affairs reporter
Jacques Poitras has been CBC's provincial affairs reporter in New Brunswick since 2000. Raised in Moncton, he also produces the CBC political podcast Spin Reduxit.

 

43 Comments
 Commenting is now closed for this story.



David Amos
Content disabled.
David Amos
Methinks Jennifer McKenzie and everybody else knows why I am enjoying the circus N'esy Pas?

If not go figure

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/fundy-royal-riding-profile-1.3274276





David Amos
Content disabled.
David Amos
@David Amos Methinks it interesting that CBC blocks a comment with a link to their own article after it had been read N'esy Pas?







Phil Nadeau 
wayne guitard
Odd that an Anglophone politician has to apologize for belonging to COR, but no francophone politicians, especially Liberals, have to apologize for belonging to the separatist Acadian Party. Double standards are nothing new in this province with the left wing media coverage.


David Amos
Content disabled.
David Amos
@wayne guitard CBC is blocking me already and my name isn't even on a ballot yet


SarahRose Werner
SarahRose Werner
@wayne guitard - When did this Acadian Party exist? I've lived in New Brunswick for 20 years and have never heard of it.

SarahRose Werner
SarahRose Werner
@SarahRose Werner - Okay, found it in Wikipedia. It disbanded in 1986, 32 years ago, so really, who cares? Is there anyone still actively involved in politics now who was a member back then? By contrast, the COR didn't disband until 2002. There are still people actively involved in politics who were members. Francophone NB-ers are right to call them to account.
 

David Amos
David Amos 
 @SarahRose Werner Methinks its best to just admit the dude was correct N'esy Pas



David Amos
Content disabled.
David Amos
@wayne guitard Methinks that many would agree that the liberals are banking on the anglophone argument will split the right vote and they will win another mandate by default N'esy Pas?






 Phil Nadeau 
Rose Michaud
He does what his Irving overlords tell him. (so do the liberals, but this is a bit more obvious)


Colin Seeley
Colin Seeley
@Rose Michaud
Yeah !

Like people who work for Irving don’t count eh !

Perhaps NB needs to chose to elect only those who will oppose the Irving’s.
 

David Amos
David Amos
@Colin Seeley Methinks that will not be one of your political heroes N'esy Pas?
 
 
Colin Seeley
Rosco holt
@Colin Seeley
Like people who don't work for Irving don’t count.  
 
 
Colin Seeley
John Valcourt
they all do as they are told from Saint John government office. 

Colin Seeley
Colin Seeley
@David Amos
Do svidaniya Comrade


David Amos
Content disabled.
David Amos
@Colin Seeley Methinks that you do not have the first clue as to who I am N'esy Pas?
 
 
Colin Seeley
Rosco holt
@Colin Seeley
Never got a freebies, paid dearly for everything that I have. I get pissed off when the chosen few get these gifts repeatedly do. 


David Amos
David Amos
@Colin Seeley Methinks CBC picked a bad day to side with you against me N'esy Pas?






 Phil Nadeau 
Daniel White
How good was Mr Higgs at reaching out prior to this election bid. He must have had quite the revelation. Truth will set you free. Perhaps the start of a new religion?


David Amos
David Amos
@Daniel White "Truth will set you free."

Methinks speaking truth to power gets one locked up Everybody knows I learned that the hard way N'esy Pas?






 Phil Nadeau 
Redmond O'Hanlon
Another politician telling people what they want to hear before an election. A minority government is almost a given this election. Red and Blue have failed this province and it would appear that the Green Party and/or PAP will hold the balance of power.


David Amos
David Amos 
@Redmond O'Hanlon "A minority government is almost a given this election."

YUP

 

 






Matt Steele 
Matt Steele 

Sounds like the Liberals are going to try to use language as a wedge issue in order to gain votes ; much the same as Frank McKenna did when he was Premier . Politicians should be focused on debt reduction , and economic development , and put language on the back burner for a while . With a nearly 14.5 BILLION dollar debt , and one of the oldest populations in Canada....N.B. is in crisis . I believe the city Detroit was at around the 18 billion debt mark when they were forced into bankruptcy ; I wonder if the same could happen to N.B. with Gallant's out of control spending ? N.B. will have to pay the piper eventually.....



David Amos
David Amos
@Matt Steele "N.B. will have to pay the piper eventually."

YUP






 Phil Nadeau 
Jeff LeBlanc
We need a candidate with the stones to run on a platform of scrapping official bilingualism.


David Amos
David Amos
@Jeff LeBlanc YUP





Phil Nadeau 
Edward J Clement
Talk about posturing for the election. What a joke.


David Amos
David Amos
@Edward J Clement YUP







 Phil Nadeau 
AJ Maisey
Higgs had a chance prior to this sad attempt to garner a few French votes while alienating most of the English voters who speak with their vote only.


David Amos
David Amos
@AJ Maisey Methinks leopards do not change their spots and desperate politicians do desperate things N'esy Pas?






 Phil Nadeau 
Mario Doucet
OB is the single biggest mistake ever adopted by government and needs to be abolished.


David Amos
David Amos
@Mario Doucet What is OB?

Denis Thomas
Denis Thomas
@David Amos Official Bilingualism
Colin Seeley
Rosco holt 
@Mario Doucet
Nope, the biggest mistake is when government started to handout free money to businesses. Subsidizes just pile up without ever being reviewed or ending. 
Colin Seeley
Dan Lee
@Rosco holt
He knows..... 
 
 
 
 
 
  

  Phil Nadeau 
David Stairs

This is why we need a complete change in this Province..We need a government for New Brunswicker's,not a government for special interest groups...I see nothing but division with the current parties...if you want to save your culture or your language,feel free to do so, at your own interest and expense..not mine...I want to see unity not division...let's try this and see what happens...


David Amos
David Amos
@David Stairs "if you want to save your culture or your language,feel free to do so, at your own interest and expense..not mine."

I concur






SarahRose Werner
SarahRose Werner
Higgs changed his opinion when - and only because - he realized he had to do so in order to have a shot at being premier.


David Amos
David Amos
@SarahRose Werner YUP


David Amos
David Amos






Phil Nadeau 
Lou Bell

Alwards government PROMISED an end to patronage and patronage appointments and was worse than ever ! Not that Gallant and his " chosen generals " running the show are any better ! Take a good look at what they have to offer . One has sold out anglophones and the other promises to if elected .


David Amos
David Amos
@Lou Bell Methinks Premier Hatfield sold out the Anglophones in New Brunswick a long time ago when he made a deal with Trudeau The Elder N'esy Pas?
 
 
 






Phil Nadeau 
Dan Lee

Well...Well...is this where all the old Cor members meet..............sureeeee looks like it.


David Amos
David Amos
@Dan Lee Methinks everybody knows I have never belonged any political party nor have ever voted N'esy Pas?









Fred Brewer 
Fred Brewer
Some people will do anything to get elected.
 

David Amos
David Amos
@Fred Brewer "Some people will do anything to get elected."

I agree

Methinks Jennifer McKenzie, Brian Gallant, Blaine Higgs, Kris Austin and David **** are fine examples to support your opinion. I rust that every other political animal in New Brunswick knows why I am enjoying the circus N'esy Pas?

If not go figure

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/fundy-royal-riding-profile-1.3274276






Samuel Porter 
Content disabled. 

Samuel Porter 

The atcon six has yet to pay for their misdeeds. Carte blanche for ripping off NB taxpayers. Stop spraying NB forests, and blueberry fields. Make a difference with your vote.



David Amos
Content disabled.
David Amos
@Samuel Porter Methinks everybody knows one thing for certain and that is it is gonna be a very interesting circus particularly after the recent success of the "Ford Nation" and the yapping of Maxime Bernier N'esy Pas?

 


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