Robert Gauvin joining the race for provincial Liberal leadership - Action News
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New Brunswick

Robert Gauvin joining the race for provincial Liberal leadership

MLA Robert Gauvin will seek the leadership of the New Brunswick Liberal Party, CBC News has confirmed.

Former deputy premier crossed from Progressive Conservatives to Liberals in 2020

One man with short dark grey hair speaks animatedly into a microphone wearing a button up dress shirt that is sky blue. Behind him, to the right of the photo, stands a man with short grey hair and glasses, smiling and wearing a dark blue suit jacket over a lighter dress shirt.
Robert Gauvin, a former Progressive Conservative deputy premier, will seek the leadership of New Brunswick's Liberal Party, CBC has confirmed. (Michel Corriveau/Radio-Canada)

MLA Robert Gauvin will seek the leadership of the New Brunswick Liberal Party, CBC News has confirmed.

Gauvin was elected in 2018 as theProgressive Conservative MLA for Shippagan-Lamque-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.

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

"I feel a lot more conformableon theLiberal side," he said.

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

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

He said one of his prioritiesas 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, aformer 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.