Former Liberal cabinet minister is next New Brunswick senator - Action News
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New Brunswick

Former Liberal cabinet minister is next New Brunswick senator

Victor Boudreau has been named to Canada's Senate after a long and sometimes controversial career in New Brunswick politics.

Victor Boudreau of Shediac to join upper chamber after over a decade as New Brunswick MLA

A person in a blue suit smiles, a large lobster statue is to the right in the background.
Former MLA and Liberal cabinet minister Victor Boudreau was appointed to Canada's Senate on Friday. (Alix Villeneuve/CBC)

Former Liberal MLA and cabinet minister Victor Boudreau was appointed to Canada's Senate on Fridayafter over a decade in provincial politics.

Boudreau, currently the chief administrative officer for theTown of Shediac,said on Saturday he was excited to receive the news.

"I'm very excited about the opportunity to get to work, to represent New Brunswick and New Brunswickers' interest in our federal parliamentary system," he told Radio-Canada in Shediac.

However, Boudreau said he has yet to commit to any particular Senate group, including Justin Trudeau's Independent Senators Group.

Victor Boudreau is New Brunswick's next senator

3 months ago
Duration 1:05
Former Liberal MLA looks forward to representing the province in new role.

"I obviously want to take my time to get to understand the various groups that are represented in the Senate, and decide which one aligns more with my values, and what's important to me," he said.

"No doubt there will be some causes that I will be more passionate about. Social causes are always something throughout my career that have been very important to me."

Boudreau was elected to New Brunswick's legislature in 2004 and was re-elected forseveral terms after that. In that time, he held several cabinet portfolios, includinghealth, finance, economic development and the Regional Development Corporation.

He was also appointed to the interim Liberal leader role in 2010, replacingformer New Brunswick premier Shawn Graham.

A man speaking with reporters in the legislature rotunda.
Victor Boudreau is pictured speaking to reporters in 2015 about the auditor general's report on the previous Liberal government's Atcon fiasco. He was finance minister when Atcon's bankruptcy cost taxpayers over $70 million. (CBC)

His time in the legislative assembly was also marked by some controversy for his role in the Atcon scandalsigning off on removing security on $64 million in loan guarantees and for his now-droppedinvestment in a proposed Shediac campground.

The former was subject to an investigation by the auditor general, asover 70 million in taxpayer dollars were lost when Atcon went bankrupt.

The appointment comes after New Brunswick senator and longtime Progressive Conservative MLA Percy Mockler, fromSaint-Lonard, retired in April.

Shediac Mayor Roger Caissie said he's known Boudreau for over 35 yearsafter they met in university.

A man with short grey hair smiles at the camera, standing outdoors next to a road. He's wearing a white polo shirt.
Mayor Roger Caissie says the Town of Shediac will miss Boudreau as he begins his new senator role. (Gary Moore/CBC)

"He believes in what he says, and I know that during his past life as a politician ... obviously the folks here wished to have him," Caissie said.

"He was well liked within his party, he was well liked by the opposition partybecause he treats everybody reasonably. He's as solid a person as they come."

While Boudreau has yet to declare an affiliation, political scientist J.P. Lewis said Trudeau's appointment of longtime Liberal politicians to the Senate may cast doubts on his earlier commitment to make the Senate less partisan.

A man in a suit and tie sits facing a camera in a TV studio.
J.P. Lewis, a political scientist at the University of New Brunswick in Saint John, said nominations of long-time politicians may undermine Justin Trudeau's promise to end partisanship in the Senate. (CBC)

"If you want senators with political experience, obviously Boudreau has a record of public service in the province," Lewis said.

"But a longtime Liberal provincial minister is, it's difficult to make the case that they are independent ... I guess a tiger can change their stripes."

With files from Alix Villeneuve