Big losers, big winners of N.B. election night - Action News
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New Brunswick

Big losers, big winners of N.B. election night

With the election of a Liberal majority in New Brunswick, here's a breakdown of some of the major wins and losses.

Several PC cabinet ministers were unseated, along with the premier

People sitting in booths, staring up
Supporters of New Brunswick Premier Blaine Higgs watch results at a bar in Quispamsis, where the Progressive Conservative lost to Liberal Aaron Kennedy. (The Canadian Press)

With the election of a Liberal majority in New Brunswick, here's a breakdown of some of the major wins and losses.

Some big losses:

  • New Brunswick Premier and PC Leader Blaine Higgs lost his seat in Quispamsis to Liberal Aaron Kennedy. This win for Kennedy also means that NDP Leader Alex White was defeated.

  • Jill Green, the social development minister, lostin Fredericton North to Liberal Luke Randall.

  • Rjean Savoie, the minister responsible for the Regional Development Corp.,was unseated by Liberal Sam Johnston in Miramichi Bay-Neguac.

A man in a blue suit and white shirt wearing glasses and a lapel pin.
PC cabinet minister Kris Austin, who used to lead the People's Alliance before moving to the PCs, won his seat in Fredericton-Grand Lake. He beat the current People's Alliance leader, Rick DeSaulniers. (Ed Hunter/CBC)
  • Greg Turner, the minister of post-secondary education, training and labour, lost to Liberal Claire Johnson in Moncton South.

  • Ernie Steeves, the finance minister,lost to Liberal Tania Sodhi in Moncton Northwest.

  • Ted Flemming, the attorney general,lost to Liberal Alyson Townsend in Rothesay.

  • Faytene Grasseschi, a Christian conservative activist who was running for the PCs in Hampton-Fundy-St. Martins, lost to Liberal John Herron, a former Progressive Conservative MP.

  • Green Kevin Arseneau, who served as the MLA for Kent North since 2018, lost to Liberal Pat Finnigan, reducing the Greens to two seats.
  • Bathurst Mayor Kim Chamberlain, running for the PCs in Bathurst, lost to Ren Legacy, who was re-elected for the Liberals.

  • People's Alliance Leader Rick DeSaulniers lost to Kris Austin, the former Alliance leader who became a PC cabinet minister,in Fredericton-Grand Lake.

  • Kevin Arseneau, one of three Green members of the last legislature, lost in Kent North to Pat Finnigan of the Liberals, aformer MP.

Notable wins:

  • Dr. John Dornan won the Saint John Portland-Simonds seat. Dornan was the CEO of Horizon Health and was fired by Premier Blaine Higgs in 2022 and was awarded a payout after filing for unjust dismissal.

  • Liberal David Hickey, a city councillor, won in Saint John Harbour, a riding that has swung between PCs and Liberals in recent years.

A smiling man dressed in a suit and tie, standing with his arm around a smiling woman, wearing a dress and blazer, with a red and white New Brunswick Liberal Party sign behind them.
Dr. John Dornan, pictured with Liberal Leader Susan Holt, won the Saint John Portland-Simonds seat. (New Brunswick Liberal Party)
  • Green Megan Mitton was re-elected, winning Tantramar with a 48.9 per cent share of the vote against Liberal John Higham, the co-chair of Sackville's Rural Health Action Group.

  • Sherry Wilson, the minister responsible for addictions and mental health,held ontoAlbert-Riverview. She had faced criticism during the campaign after she compared New Brunswick's original 2SLGBTQ+ policy to Indigenous residential schoolson the National Day for Truth and Reconciliation.

  • Mary Wilson, the minister responsible for military affairs,wonin Oromocto-Sunbury.

  • Margaret Johnson, the agriculture minister, won Carleton-Victoria.

A eight-pane photo with eight different headshots
Clockwise, PC cabinet ministers Sherry Wilson, Mary Wilson, Richard Ames, Bill Hogan, Margaret Johnson, Kathy Bockus, Glen Savoie and Tammy Scott-Wallace won their seats in the provincial election. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)
  • Richard Ames, the transportation minister, wonin Carleton-York.

  • Bill Hogan, the education minister, won in Woodstock-Hartland.

  • Kathy Bockus, the minister for seniors,woninSaint Croix.

  • Glen Savoie, the former house leader, won in Saint John East.

  • Tammy Scott-Wallace, the tourism minister, won in Sussex-Three Rivers