N.B. party leaders square off in CBC election debate this evening
Blaine Higgs, Susan Holt and David Coon take part in debate to be shown at 6 p.m.
Hoping to get some answers on where the leaders stand as New Brunswick heads toward an election?
On Wednesday, the three major party leaders are sharing a platform for New Brunswick Votes 2024: Leaders on the Record.
The debate is being shown at 6 p.m. on cbc.ca/nb and on the CBC evening news.
TV host Clare MacKenzie and political reporter Jacques Poitras will be moderators.
Voters will get to hear from Progressive Conservative Leader Blaine Higgs, Liberal Leader Susan Holt and Green Leader David Coon.
All of CBC New Brunswick's election coverage can be found on this website under the New Brunswick Votes 2024 page.
Green Party Leader David Coon, Progressive Conservative Leader Blaine Higgs and Liberal Leader Susan Holt will face one another in the New Brunswick Votes 2024: Leaders on the Record debate Wednesday evening. (CBC)
When Higgs went to Lt.-Gov. Brenda Murphy on Sept. 20 to have the legislature dissolved, the election campaign officially began. New Brunswickers will vote on Oct. 21.
However, talk of an election was in the air long before it officially got underway.
In June 2023, several members of Higgs's cabinet spoke out over his changes to Policy 713, a gender identity policy in schools. The question of an early election existed then and intensified that fall as Higgs hinted at an election for six weeks.
But as it became clear Higgs would stick to the scheduled election, the PC Party delivered a major campaign announcement in July, promising to cut the HST from 15 per cent to 13 per cent if re-elected.
The PCs have only made one other promise as the official campaign nears the one-week mark, and that is to expand the scope of practice of nurse practitioners, registered nurses, registered psychiatric nurses, paramedics and pharmacists.
What have leaders promised?
The Green and Liberal parties have made announcements nearly every day of the official campaign so far.
Liberal Leader Susan Holt has promised retention bonuses for nurses, a three per cent rent cap, and that 30,000 new housing units will be built by 2030 by temporarily removing the sales tax on new residential builds.
The Green Party has promised $380 million annually for health care, a guaranteed-livable wage for seniors,to restore rural services like a year-round Campobello Ferry and courthouses in Charlotte County and the Acadian Peninsula, and to protect local heritage sites like the Memramcook Institute.
Party leaders also spoke to a group of mayors and municipal officials about how they would address shortfalls in local funding following municipal reform last year. Indigenous leaders and teachers have also asked political parties for their responses to key issues.
Polls suggest it will be a close race.
The province has also shaken up its electoral map and added a sizable number of people to its population since the previous election in 2020.
I am stocked up with peanuts and popcorn
David Amos
Content Deactivated
Deja Vu Anyone?
N.B. party leaders clash over bilingualism at second televised debate
By Kevin Bissett The Canadian Press
Posted September 15, 2018 10:10 am
Higgs, Liberal Premier Brian Gallant and the other party leaders squared off on a community centre stage in Fredericton in a 90-minute debate carried on Rogers TV.
Gerald Bourque, the folksy, cowboy-hatted leader of the KISS party – or Keep It Simple Solutions – said with modern translation it’s not necessary for the premier to speak both English and French.
He joked that if you want a bilingual premier, you should vote for Gallant.
“He’s putting this province into debt in both official languages,” Bourque quipped, drawing laughter from the audience of staff and supporters for all the parties.
Gallant later acknowledged the joke was “pretty funny,” but stressed it’s important for the premier and cabinet ministers to demonstrate to both communities that they take their language seriously.
Reply to Hugh MacDonald
Reply to Hugh MacDonald
Reply to Jos Allaire
Reply to Jos Allaire
William Murdoch
Reply to Don Corey
Reply to William Murdoch
Regardless of policies, candidates or track record, I will always vote for the Conservative candidate.
Lynette Browne
Reply to Jim Redmond
You know, Bill.
Jim Redmond
Reply to Lynette Browne
Please elaborate.
Lynette Browne
Reply to Jim Redmond
You know who you vote for no matter what.
End.
Jim Redmond
Reply to Lynette Browne
Yes, I will always support the Progressive Conservatives.
Ron parker
Reply to Jim Redmond
well lets bake you a cake with blue sprinkles.
Jim Redmond
Reply to Ron parker
Sounds good to me. Thanks.
David Amos
Content Deactivated
Reply to Jim Redmond
Say hey to Higgy for me will ya?
Ted DiBlase
Reply to Jim Redmond
You sound like the pm`s followers.
Tom Campbell
Reply to Jim Redmond
colour blind?
Reply to Ron parker
Reply to David Amos
Reply to Bryan Jones
Reply to Matt Steele
And claimed it would save NBers $1,000 a year... since average income is 46,800... how is that possible?
Bad plan. Let's hope it never happens.
Just address the root cause which is an explosion in population in the last two years.
But disagree the root cause is the "explosion in population". Immigration is an easy target, but a very small part of the problem. Govts stopped building social housing, the feds back in the early 90's, handing off the policy to the provinces who didn't follow through (except P.Q.). Then, for decades, money was essentially free, interest minimal, and everyone was buying houses as homes and investments, and retirement funds.
Meanwhile, provinces and employers are asking for new people, especially lower-wage workers, but also in construction and HC.
Reply to Walter Vrbetic
Seeing Higgs smile looks forced.
Ronald Miller
Reply to William Peters
Maybe it will be a debate question of JP's.
James Risdon
Reply to William Peters
A bad photograph is an excellent way for you to make up your mind on which candidate will do the best job of governing the province.
Lou Bell
Reply to James Risdon
Yeah , but really , what more would you expect ? After all , look at what the Liberals ran in the 2 previous elections . Certainly wasn't their qualifications !
James Risdon
Reply to Lou Bell
I keep expecting - and getting disappointed when they don't - that people will actually use their brains and think about the issues in a logical and rationale manner and vote accordingly.
David Amos
Content Deactivated
Reply to James Risdon
I bet you two would like to forget this election EH?
Liberals hang on to most of north, but lose a minister
Liberal cabinet minister Wilfred Roussel defeated in Shippagan-Lameque-Miscou
Shane Magee · CBC News · Posted: Sep 25, 2018 1:37 AM ADT
Bathurst West-Beresford
Liberal incumbent and Education Minister Brian Kenny won with 4,351 votes.
PC Yvon Landry had 1,082 votes, while Mike Rau for the Green Party had 503, NDP candidate Anne-Renée Thomas had 443 and KISS candidate James Risdon had 64.
There were 6,443 ballots cast in the riding with 10,878 eligible voters.
valmond landry
Reply to James Risdon
The expert has spoken
David Amos
Reply to valmond landry
2018
Bathurst West-Beresford
Liberal incumbent and Education Minister Brian Kenny won with 4,351 votes.
PC Yvon Landry had 1,082 votes, while Mike Rau for the Green Party had 503, NDP candidate Anne-Renée Thomas had 443 and KISS candidate James Risdon had 64.
Reply to David Amos
Reply to Lou Bell
Shifting deck chairs on the Titanic. This election is about seeing who will try the hardest to buy votes using the taxpayer's own money.
It ain't broke, folks. Don't try to fix it.
New Brunswick's finances are in great shape with a half a billion dollar surplus this year which will go at least in part to pay down the debt and lower our future interest costs. That's important because it will then free up more money for things like education and healthcare.
People are coming here from all over Canada and the rest of the world now because they want the quality of life we have here.
Stay the course. Don't mess this up by voting for someone who promises you the moon and then sticks you with the bill.
Alison Jackson
Reply to James Risdon
Like Higgs you mean.
William Peters
Reply to James Risdon
Well, it is severely broken so I suggest you give it a listen if you like theater. We' ll get sense of the problems in NB if we can get questions that aren't about bottom lines.
MR Cain
Reply to James Risdon
So all the concerns about our health care, housing, bread lines, pollution, inflation, tent cities, drugs, crime, is just a figment of our collective imagination?
James Risdon
Reply to Alison Jackson
So, you like Premier Blaine Higgs? I'll be sure to pass on the compliment the next time I see him.
James Risdon
Reply to MR Cain
What exactly is your concern?
James Risdon
Reply to William Peters
I'll pass. The nonsense that passes for debate among political leaders makes me sick.
David Amos
Reply to James Risdon
Remember your party leader's last statement when he debated them in 2018?