Liberal Party winners (and some losers). Credit: VIA TWITTER

It was a night of twists and turns, but the Liberal Party will once again form Nova Scotia’s government.

The victory was bittersweet, though. Stephen McNeil’s second mandate lost several important seats, and just barely held onto the party’s majority at Province House. Still, the premier-designate called the night’s results “democracy at its best.”

“Nova Scotia, you have spoken,” McNeil told an assembled crowd in Bridgetown.

The Progressive Conservatives, meanwhile, are once again the official opposition, having picked up seven ridings for a total of  17 seats in the legislature. Keith Bain took back Victoria–The Lakes in Cape Breton from Pam Eyking, who unseated the former MLA four years ago. Challenger Alana Paon also pulled off a huge win against longtime Liberal MLA Michel Samson in Cape Breton–Richmond.

In HRM, former regional councillor Brad Johns defeated Stephen Gough in Sackville–Beaver Bank, and Barbara Adams replaced Liberal incumbent Joyce Treen in Cole Harbour–Eastern Passage. Tim Halman claimed Dartmouth East for the Tories, walking away with the riding that retired independent MLA Andrew Younger left up for grabs.

Progressive Conservative leader Jamie Baillie said it was a “great night” for the party.

“Look how far we’ve come,” Baillie told a crowd of supporters in Springhill. “Look at the gap we’ve closed. Look at what you’ve done.”

Both Baillie and McNeil picked up easy wins in their respective ridings. But the most dramatic leadership race went to the NDP and Gary Burrill, who overcame Liberal incumbent Joachim Stroink and PC challenger John Wesley Chisholm to become the MLA for Halifax Chebucto.

Burrill spoke at a rally in Halifax, saying he was moved with gratitude for his campaign team. Although the New Democrats had a smaller percentage of the vote than in 2013, the party was still able to pick up a total of seven seats.

Paraphrasing Yeates, Burrill called the results a “defeat more glorious than many a victory.”

Incumbents Lisa Roberts, Dave Wilson and Lenore Zann were all re-elected to the legislature, while Claudia Chender took the vacant riding of Dartmouth South. Several former Liberal MLAs were toppled by a crop of new NDP candidates, such as Tammy Martin defeating David Wilton, and Zuppa Theatre co-artistic director Susan Leblanc unseating former community services minister Joanne Bernard in Dartmouth North.

Even with those losses, the Grits had plenty of wins. Ben Jessome defended his seat in Hammonds Plains–Lucasville against HRM councillor Matt Whitman. Nearby, Brendan Maguire picked up a strong win in Halifax Atlantic, while Hugh MacKay defeated Denise Peterson-Rafuse in Chester–St. Margaret’s. Former cabinet ministers Keith Colwell, Kelly Regan, Mark Furey, Zach Churchill, Karen Casey, Randy Delorey, Lena Diab, Margaret Miller, Leo Glavine, Geoff MacLellan and Labi Kousoulis were all re-elected.

A few ridings saw extremely close results, pushing predictions of whether the Liberals would form a minority government late into the night.

The final tally of seats will force Nova Scotia’s new government to work much more closely with its opposition parties. Anticipating that, McNeil seemed to reach out to opponents during his acceptance speech.

“This election was about moving our province forward,” he said. “We have a plan, and the opposition parties have a plan. We can work together to make it better.”

The olive branch was also extended by Baillie, with some conditions.

“I think the people of Nova Scotia are saying they want their political parties to work together, and we get that message,” the Tory leader told party members, while warning that Conservative MLAs would not support the Liberals’ recently proposed budget.

Final results and vote tallies from Elections Nova Scotia are still being tabulated (and will be adjusted in this post when released), but at the end of the night, CBC reported the Liberals had nearly 40 percent of the popular vote, which is down from nearly 46 percent four years ago.

The Conservatives saw a jump of 10 points, pulling in 36 percent of the vote. The NDP dropped by six percent, even while picking up extra seats (only five NDP incumbents were up for re-election).

There was also a big jump for the Greens. Nova Scotia’s fourth party didn’t win any ridings, but it did increase its vote share from 0.85 to nearly three percent. The Atlantica Party only pulled 0.5 percent.

Winners are posted below. The full results from Elections NS can be found here.

———


ANNAPOLIS

Stephen McNeil (Liberal)

CLARE-DIGBY
Gordon Wilson (Liberal)

HANTS WEST
Chuck Porter (Liberal)

KINGS NORTH
John Lohr (PC)

KINGS SOUTH
Keith Irving (Liberal)

KINGS WEST
Leo Glavine (Liberal)

ARGYLE–BARRINGTON
Chris d’Entremont (PC)

CHESTER–ST. MARGARET’S
Hugh MacKay (Liberal)

LUNENBURG
Suzanne Lohnes-Croft (Liberal)

LUNENBURG WEST
Mark Furey (Liberal)

QUEENS–SHELBURNE
Kim Masland (PC)

YARMOUTH
Zach Churchill (Liberal)

COLCHESTER–MUSQUODOBOIT VALLEY
Larry Harrison (PC)

COLCHESTER NORTH
Karen Casey (Liberal)

CUMBERLAND NORTH
Elizabeth Smith-McCrossin (PC)

CUMBERLAND SOUTH
Jamie Baillie (PC)

HANTS EAST
Margaret Miller (Liberal)

TRURO–BIBLE HILL–MILLBROOK–SALMON RIVER
Lenore Zann (NDP)

CLAYTON PARK WEST

Rafah DiCostanzo (Liberal)

FAIRVIEW–CLAYTON PARK

Patricia Arab (Liberal)

HALIFAX ARMDALE

Lena Diab (Liberal)

HALIFAX CHEBUCTO
Gary Burrill (NDP)

HALIFAX CITADEL–SABLE ISLAND
Labi Kousoulis (Liberal)

HALIFAX NEEDHAM
Lisa Roberts (NDP)

BEDFORD
Kelly Regan (Liberal)

HALIFAX ATLANTIC
Brendan Maguire (Liberal)

HAMMONDS PLAINS–LUCASVILLE
Ben Jessome (Liberal)

SACKVILLE–BEAVER BANK
Brad Johns (PC)

SACKVILLE–COBEQUID
Dave Wilson (NDP)

TIMBERLEA–PROSPECT
Iain Rankin (Liberal)

WAVERLEY–FALL RIVER–BEAVER BANK
Bill Horne (Liberal)

COLE HARBOUR–EASTERN PASSAGE
Barbara Adams (PC)

COLE HARBOUR–PORTLAND VALLEY
Tony Ince (Liberal)

DARTMOUTH EAST
Tim Halman (PC)

DARTMOUTH NORTH
Susan Leblanc (NDP)

DARTMOUTH SOUTH
Claudia Chender (NDP

EASTERN SHORE
Kevin Murphy (Liberal)

PRESTON–DARTMOUTH
Keith Colwell (Liberal)

ANTIGONISH
Randy Delorey (Liberal)

GUYSBOROUGH–EASTERN SHORE–TRACADIE
Lloyd Hines (Liberal)

PICTOU CENTRE
Pat Dunn (PC)

PICTOU EAST
Tim Houston (PC)

PICTOU WEST
Karla MacFarlane (PC)

CAPE BRETON CENTRE
Tammy Martin (NDP)

CAPE BRETON–RICHMOND
Alana Paon (PC)

GLACE BAY
Geoff MacLellan (Liberal)

INVERNESS
Allan MacMaster (PC)

NORTHSIDE–WESTMOUNT
Eddie Orrell (PC)

SYDNEY RIVER–MIRA–LOUISBOURG
Alfie MacLeod (PC)

SYDNEY–WHITNEY PIER
Derek Mombourquette (Liberal)

VICTORIA–THE LAKES
Keith Bain (PC)

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5 Comments

  1. Ndp wins same number of seat but loses 25 percent of their parties popular vote and it is considered a “huge gain”? Spin much?

  2. I said “big” not “huge,” but that was largely about getting their leader into the Legislature. Also the party had only five incumbents heading into the night, so seven ridings with Burrill defeating Stroink (along with the surprise toppling of Joanne Bernard in Dartmouth North) sure felt like a victory if you were asking any New Democrats last night. But for clarity’s sake, I did update the post above to mention how many seats they had at dissolution. Thanks!

  3. I haven’t read the Coast since that hack Tim Bosquet did a hit job piece on Stan Kutcher right before the 2011 election. I then watched with glee 4 years later as their Messiah, Megan Leslie got taken down by the Liberals, along with every other useless Dipper that night. Oh if only Provincial voters were as smart. But, alas we won our majority and all of you Liberal haters can, in the immortal words of Ricky from Trailer Park Boys, take a boat to fuck-offity-land.

    Majority baby and it feels sooooooooooooo good!

  4. It’s my estimation that with the number of union employees in the province, that voting isn’t in their contract. How’s the “work to rule” working for ya?

  5. My mistake i was half awake when i was reading it. not huge win but big win. I don’t know honestly what the NDP is celebrating. This is a party that formed government just over 4 years ago. Your standards need to be higher in this situation. You cannot be happy with his and it should be treated as a giant failure

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