Friday, 28 February 2025

Smaller Ontario parties, Independents looking to score wins in snap election

Bobbi Ann Brady 
 




---------- Original message ---------
From: Leader's Office <leader@gpo.ca>
Date: Fri, Feb 28, 2025 at 6:13 PM
Subject: Re: RE The local MPP who made Doug Ford eat his words
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

Hello David,

Thank you for your email. You have reached the office of the Leader of the Ontario Greens. 

If you live in Guelph and are trying to reach Mike Schreiner, please contact mschreiner-co@ola.org, or call 519-836-4190.

Please note that we receive a lot of correspondence so it may take several days for us to respond. 

If you are emailing from the media please call us at 888-647-3366 or email us at media@gpo.ca

Thank you once again for contacting me

Mike Schreiner
Leader
Green Party of Ontario



---------- Original message ---------
From: Ontario NDP <info@ontariondp.ca>
Date: Fri, Feb 28, 2025 at 6:13 PM
Subject: Automatic reply: RE The local MPP who made Doug Ford eat his words
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

(le français suit) 

 

Hello; 

 

Thank you for your email.  It has been received and we are working to respond to all concerns as quickly as possible.  

  

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During the election, you may want to reach out to your local candidate. Please reach out to the candidate directly at their campaign email, which is formatted: firstname.lastname@ontariondp.ca. Where the name is hyphenated, the hyphen will appear in the name (ex. judith.monteith-farrell@ontariondp.ca). Please follow up with us again only if you do not receive a timely response or if you are having issues with the campaign email.

  

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We are hoping that the information provided above will help address your concerns and allow you to take immediate steps to access support.  

  

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Bonjour, 

Nous vous remercions de nous avoir fait parvenir un courriel. Nous nous efforçons de répondre à toutes les préoccupations le plus rapidement possible. 

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La correspondance adressée à cheffe des néo-démocrates de l’Ontario, ou celle portant sur des questions de politique générale sont transmises quotidiennement à Queen’s Park. En raison du volume reçu,     la réponse peut tarder. Mais, nous tenons à vous assurer que vos préoccupations sont entendues et que le NPD de l'Ontario et notre Caucus de l'Opposition font tout ce qui est en leur pouvoir pour assurer le bien-être de tous(toutes) les Ontarien(ne)s en ce moment. 

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Pour savoir qui est votre député(e) provincia(e) de l'Ontario), veuillez consulter le site Web de l'Assemblée législative de l'Ontario. Entrez votre code postal pour trouver votre député(e) provincial(e) ainsi que ses coordonnées : https://www.ola.org/fr/deputes. 

Pour savoir qui est votre député(e) fédéral(e), veuillez consulter le site Web de la Chambre des communes.              Entrez votre code postal pour trouver votre député(e) fédéral(e) ainsi que ses coordonnées : https://www.noscommunes.ca/Members/fr. 

Nous espérons que les informations fournies ci-dessus vous aideront à répondre à vos préoccupations et vous permettront de prendre des mesures immédiates pour obtenir de l’aide. 

Cordialement, 

L'équipe du NPD de l'Ontario 




---------- Original message ---------
From: Contact <contact@ontariondp.ca>
Date: Fri, Feb 28, 2025 at 6:13 PM
Subject: Automatic reply: RE The local MPP who made Doug Ford eat his words
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

Thank you for taking the time to write Ontario's NDP.


If you need assistance, please direct your inquiry to one of the email addresses below and a member of our team will be glad to assist:

For general inquiries contact: info@ontariondp.ca or call: 

1-866-390-6637

For membership inquiries contact Ashley Shiwprasad at: leadershipmembership@ontariondp.ca


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---------- Original message ---------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Feb 28, 2025 at 6:12 PM
Subject: RE The local MPP who made Doug Ford eat his words
To: <jrobinson@postmedia.com>, premier <premier@ontario.ca>, <kory@rubiconstrategy.com>, <info@on.ndp.ca>, Leader's Office <leader@gpo.ca>, <contact@ontariondp.ca>, <bonnie@ontarioliberal.ca>
Cc: <info@libertarian.on.ca>, <ontariomoderate@gmail.com>, <info@ontarioparty.ca>, <lionelwaynepoizner@gmail.com>, <info@ppont.ca>, <info@progressontario.org>, <stopthenewsexedagenda@gmail.com>, <ontariocentristparty@gmail.com>, <info@ontario-alliance.ca>, <jjod2020@outlook.com>, <northernontarioparty@hotmail.com>, <info@nota.ca>, <info@newblueontario.com>, Freedom Party <feedback@freedomparty.on.ca>, <peter.house@electoralreformparty.ca>, <info@communistpartyontario.ca>


I enjoyed yohr article so here is a little tip for you

 
 

Ontario election: The local MPP who made Doug Ford eat his words

'Here we are, ordinary people who have done the extraordinary.'

SIMCOE – Voters gave Haldimand-Norfolk independent MPP Bobbi Ann Brady a resounding endorsement in Thursday night’s provincial election as she easily won a second term and proved Premier Doug Ford wrong.

The ultra-rare non-party politician secured a landslide victory with 33,669 ballots for 63.7 percent of the vote, easily outpacing her closest rival, Norfolk County Mayor Amy Martin, the Tory candidate who despite a rising tide of support for Ford only mustered 12,949 votes.

“Here we are, ordinary people who have done the extraordinary,” Brady told supporters at her campaign headquarters at the former Eli’s Gun and Archery in Simcoe. “Not only have you done it once, you’ve now done it twice.

“Tonight, we celebrate a victory that isn’t just about a win, but the triumph of hope, unity, and the collective power of our great communities here in Haldimand-Norfolk. We know that when we come together with a shared purpose and a common vision there is nothing we cannot achieve.”

A Delhi-area mother of two, Brady called the night a “monumental victory” and said she was “deeply honoured” to represent the Southwestern Ontario riding at Queen’s Park a second time.

Brady spent two decades as an administrative assistant and campaign manager of longtime Tory MPP Toby Barrett but ran as an Independent in 2022 after then-Haldimand County Mayor Ken Hewitt was chosen by Ford to represent the Progressive Conservatives. It proved to be a major mistake by the Tories.

Despite not having major party backing, Brady’s numbers grew significantly from her inaugural campaign three years ago. The 2022 election saw her claim 15,921 ballots and 35 per cent of the vote, a victory she recalled political insiders saying was a fluke.

“I reminded them they were the same people who told us we’d never do it in the first place,” Brady said. “I stand before you with my heart brimming with so many things, most of all, gratitude.”

Ford – who won his third straight majority – and Brady have sparred publicly since, with the most notable instance coming in April 2024 while at Queen’s Park when the premier told Brady: “You won’t have a job next election.”

As a provincial and national kickboxing champion, Brady wasn’t about to back down. “I said in 2022 that courage would be contagious, and look at this room tonight,” Brady said.

https://smartcdn.gprod.postmedia.digital/nexus/wp-content/uploads/2025/02/sr-0301-sr-martin.jpg?quality=90&strip=all&w=564&type=webp&sig=8pUJgdggKoQpZ5rG_nfkVg

Haldimand-Norfolk Progressive Conservative candidate Amy Martin addresses supporters in Delhi after losing the race on Feb. 27, 2025. (Postmedia staff)

Martin, who took a leave as Norfolk County mayor to run in the election, said she was proud of her campaign despite the loss.

“While we may not have won, we didn’t go down without a fight,” Martin said to a few dozen people gathered at Capitol 33 in Delhi.

After Thursday night’s election, the 124-seat Ontario legislature breaks down as follows: 80 Progressive Conservatives, 27 New Democrats, 14 Liberals, two Greens and one Independent – Brady.

jrobinson@postmedia.com

 
 
 

---------- Original message ---------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Feb 28, 2025 at 3:39 PM
Subject: Fwd: Methinks King has been reading my emails to Ford et al N'esy Pas?
To: <babrady-co@ola.org>


 
 
 

PCs take Hamilton Mountain for 1st time in 30 years, while NDP win Hamilton Centre

PC Party Leader Doug Ford secures a majority government for 3rd time

See full results for local ridings below.

As NDP incumbents across the Hamilton and Niagara areas held on to their seats this provincial election, the PCs picked up Hamilton Mountain in a surprise win.

Ontario Premier Doug Ford also won his third straight majority government, a win projected within minutes after the polls closed Thursday.

Before the night was over, all polls had been counted in Hamilton Centre, where NDP candidate Robin Lennox won, beating out incumbent and Independent candidate Sarah Jama.

"I'm very excited, I'm very grateful," Lennox told CBC Hamilton at her campaign party on James Street North. "It was a tremendous effort by a lot of the people in this room... I'm just so appreciative and I'm so grateful to everyone who's gone out and voted and supported us."

During her speech to supporters, Lennox thanked Jama for her service and running a strong campaign. Lennox is a family doctor who works with patients with substance use disorders. She said she decided to run for office because she was so frustrated with the PC government.

A portrait of a woman standing in amid a crowd in a bar. Lennox ran with the NDP in Hamilton Centre. She celebrated her win with supporters at an event space on James Street North. (Justin Chandler/CBC)

Jama told CBC Hamilton she's "very proud" of her team. 

"Even though the results aren't what we wanted, I hold a lot of hope that we did something beautiful in Hamilton Centre," Jama said. "And we definitely paved a way for people to consider doing politics differently."

PC candidate Monica Ciriello won Hamilton Mountain after a close race with the Liberal and NDP candidates. Previously the riding was held by the NDP but there was no incumbent after NDP's Monique Taylor announced she'd run federally.

The last time the PCs won Hamilton Mountain was in 1995. 

"I am absolutely thrilled. We have made history here in Hamilton. We have flipped a seat that hasn't been conservative in 30 years," Ciriello told CBC Hamilton.

Ciriello, who was the city's bylaw director until the election campaign, said she wasn't surprised by the results. "I think that the voters have spoken, the voters have never been wrong and I think that they are excited for a change in this riding."

In an interview, NDP candidate Kojo Damptey thanked all Hamilton Mountain residents who went out and voted. His advice to them is to hold their new MPP accountable over the next four years. 

Dawn Danko, who ran for the Liberals, said she understands why people may have voted for the PCs. "They feel uncertain and wanted to stick with someone they knew," she said, referring to Ford. 

Burlington PC candidate wins late, by only 40 votes

A tight race played out in Hamilton West-Ancaster-Dundas between NDP incumbent Sandy Shaw and PC candidate John Demik. Shortly after 10 p.m., Shaw was projected to win the riding and said she was "proud" to be re-elected.

"It was a nail biter," Shaw said. "I think I was nervously eating carrot sticks just to deal with the nerves."

In Burlington, shortly before 1 a.m., PC incumbent Natalie Pierre finally won the riding — by 40 votes — over Liberal candidate Andrea Grebenc. Three out of 90 polls in the riding remained for much of the night, and the riding was too close to call. After all polls were counted, Pierre had received 24,118 votes, and Grebenc 24,078.

Many PC incumbents held onto their ridings in the region, including Donna Skelly in Flamborough-Glanbrook, Sam Oosterhoff in Niagara West, Will Bouma in Brantford-Brant, Neil Lumsden in Hamilton East-Stoney Creek and Effie Triantafilopoulos in Oakville North-Burlington. 

A collage showing two people's portraits.    PC candidates Donna Skelly and Neil Lumsden were both re-elected on Thursday. Skelly was the incumbent candidate for Flamborough-Glanbrook and Lumsden for Hamilton East-Stoney Creek. (Samantha Craggs/CBC, Chris Young/Canadian Press)

Lumsden, a former CFL player, said he and his campaign team went into the election planning to "dominate" and that's what they did.

"I'm ecstatic," he told CBC Hamilton Thursday night. "The message is resonating with what the people of Ontario want. We're going to move forward to fix this province on all fronts. We've actually been doing it and will continue to do it."

Skelly said she was very excited, shocked and relieved when the results came in so quickly that showed her win. The first order of business for the Ford government will likely be the next budget, she said.

"The budget is going to reflect what has to happen to protect our workers if there are job losses and creating a plan to tackle the tariffs," Skelly said in an interview.

Haldimand-Norfolk's Brady wins big

In Haldimand-Norfolk, Independent incumbent Bobbi Ann Brady beat out PC candidate Amy Martin, the mayor of Norfolk. Brady received 63.7 per cent of the votes — or 33,669 ballots cast in her favour — the largest share of any candidate in the Hamilton and Niagara area. 

A group of people pose together against a wall. Independent incumbent Bobbi Ann Brady, at centre with flowers, beat out PC candidate Amy Martin, the mayor of Norfolk. (Submitted by Bobbi Ann Brady)

She told CBC Hamilton she was "astounded" by the amount of support and number of people who "enjoy their independent voice and are standing up for democracy." 

"They like the fact I speak up and stand up to heavy development and I fight to retain that rural way of life we're accustomed to," she said.

The election was a test for the New Democrats in the Hamilton and Niagara regions on whether they could keep a slew of ridings they won last provincial election.

Niagara Falls NDP incumbent Wayne Gates held on to his riding, as did St. Catharines NDP incumbent Jennie Stevens and Niagara Centre NDP incumbent Jeff Burch.

In an interview, Stevens said she was "so thrilled" the residents of St. Catharines elected her for the third time in a row. She noted little had changed this election in terms of party riding wins and questioned why it was necessary for Ford to have called it early.

The money to run the election would've been better spent on health care and schools, Stevens said. 

CBC News has an interactive map with results from all 124 ridings across the province here.

Local riding results here

Brantford-Brant (61/61 polls reporting)

  • Will Bouma, PC Party of Ontario - 47.4%
  • Harvey Bischof, Ontario NDP - 23.5%
  • Ron Fox, Ontario Liberal Party - 20.3%
  • Karleigh Csordas, Green Party of Ontario - 5%
  • Joshua Carron, New Blue Party - 2.2%
  • Rob Ferguson, Ontario Libertarian Party - 1%
  • Mike Clancy, None of the Above Party - 0.6%
  • James Carruthers, Ontario Alliance - 0.2%

Burlington (90/90 polls reporting)

  • Natalie Pierre, PC Party of Ontario - 43.1% (24,118 votes)
  • Andrea Grenbec, Ontario Liberal Party - 43.1% (24,078 votes)
  • Megan Beauchemin, Ontario NDP - 8.0%
  • Kyle Hutton, Green Party of Ontario - 3.4%
  • James "Chilli" Chillingworth, New Blue Party - 1.3%
  • David Crombie, None of the Above Party - 1.0%

Flamborough-Glanbrook (54/54 polls reporting)

  • Donna Skelly, PC Party of Ontario - 49.4%
  • Joshua Bell, Ontario Liberal Party - 31.4%
  • Lilly Noble, Ontario NDP - 12.7%
  • Janet Errygers, Green Party of Ontario - 4%
  • Kristen Halfpenny, New Blue Party - 2.6%

Haldimand-Norfolk (61/61 polls reporting)

  • Bobbi Ann Brady, Independent - 63.7%
  • Amy Martin, PC Party of Ontario - 24.5%
  • Vandan Patel, Ontario Liberal Party - 5.5%
  • Erica Englert, Ontario NDP - 4.1%
  • Anna Massinen, Green Party of Ontario - 1.6%
  • Garry Tanchak, New Blue Party - 0.7%

Hamilton Centre (51/51 polls reporting)

  • Robin Lennox, Ontario NDP - 38.4%
  • Eileen Walker, Ontario Liberal Party - 21.3%
  • Sarah Bokhari, PC Party of Ontario - 18.9%
  • Sarah Jama, Independent - 14.9%
  • Lucia Iannantuono, Green Party of Ontario - 4.9%
  • Mitch Novosad, New Blue Party - 1.3%
  • Nathalie Xian Yi Yan, Independent - 0.3%

Hamilton East-Stoney Creek (45/45 polls reporting)

  • Neil Lumsden, PC Party of Ontario - 42.1%
  • Heino Doessing, Ontario Liberal Party - 31.6%
  • Zaigham Butt, Ontario NDP - 17.6%
  • Pascale Marchand, Green Party of Ontario - 5.3%
  • Drew Garvie, Communist Party Ontario - 1.6%
  • Heather Curnew, Ontario Party - 1.5%
  • Wieslawa Derlatka, New Blue Party - 1.4%

Hamilton Mountain (38/38 polls reporting)

  • Monica Ciriello, PC Party of Ontario - 36.2%
  • Dawn Danko, Ontario Liberal Party - 30.9%
  • Kojo Damptey, Ontario NDP - 26.0.%
  • Joshua Czerniga, Green Party of Ontario - 4%
  • Layla Protopapa, New Blue Party - 1%
  • Ejaz Butt, Independent - 0.7%
  • Dan Preston, None of the Above Party - 0.7%
  • Bing Wong, Ontario Party - 0.5%

Hamilton West-Ancaster-Dundas (84/84 polls reporting)

  • Sandy Shaw, Ontario NDP - 38.8%
  • John Demik, PC Party of Ontario - 33.8%
  • Julia Brown, Ontario Liberal Party - 22.2%
  • Guy Bisson, Green Party of Ontario - 3.5%
  • Lee Weiss Vassor, New Blue Party - 1.2%
  • Spencer Rocchi, None of the Above Party - 0.4%
  • Nori Smith, Electoral Reform Party - 0.2%

Niagara Centre (66/66 polls reporting)

  • Jeff Burch, Ontario NDP - 42.3%
  • Bill Steele, PC Party of Ontario - 37.3%
  • Damien O'Brien, Ontario Liberal Party - 14.7%
  • Natashia Bergen, Green Party of Ontario - 2.6%
  • Jimmy Jackson, New Blue Party - 1.8%
  • Darryl Weinberg, Ontario Party - 1.1%
  • Angela Browne, Ontario Alliance - 0.3%

Niagara Falls (76/76 polls reporting)

  • Wayne Gates, Ontario NDP - 55%
  • Ruth-Ann Nieuwesteeg, PC Party of Ontario - 34.5%
  • Shafoli Kapur, Ontario Liberal Party - 6.3%
  • Celia Taylor, Green Party of Ontario - 1.6%
  • Gary Dumelie, New Blue Party - 1.6%
  • Joedy Burdett, Independent - 0.5%
  • Andrew Soifert, Ontario Party - 0.5%

Niagara West (67/67) polls reporting)

  • Sam Oosterhoff, PC Party of Ontario - 50.2%
  • Shauna Boyle, Ontario Liberal Party - 25%
  • Dave Augustyn, Ontario NDP - 16.5%
  • Mark Harrison, Green Party of Ontario - 4.5%
  • Aaron Albano, New Blue Party - 1.5%
  • Aaron Allison, Ontario Party - 1.4%
  • Stefanos Karatopis, Ontario Libertarian Party - 0.7%
  • Jim Torma, Populist Party Ontario - 0.2%

Oakville North-Burlington (44/44 polls reporting)

  • Effie Triantafilopoulos, PC Party of Ontario - 49.7%
  • Kaniz Mouli, Ontario Liberal Party - 40.9%
  • Caleb Smolenaars, Ontario NDP - 5.4%
  • Ali Hosny, Green Party of Ontario - 2.7%
  • Charles Wroblewski, New Blue Party - 1.3%

St. Catharines (55/55 polls reporting)

  • Jennie Stevens, Ontario NDP - 42%
  • Sal Sorrento, PC Party of Ontario - 35%
  • Robin McPherson, Ontario Liberal Party - 17.3%
  • Stephen Vincelette-Smith, Green Party of Ontario - 2.5%
  • Rob Atalick, New Blue Party - 1.7%
  • Natalia Benoit, Stop the New Sex-Ed Agenda - 0.7%
  • Liz Leeuwenburg, Ontario Party - 0.6%
  • J. Justin O'Donnell, Ontario Alliance - 0.2%
CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices
 
 
 
 

Smaller Ontario parties, Independents looking to score wins in snap election

New Blue fields more than 100 candidates while others offer unique policies

Apart from the four major parties you're familiar with 16 parties and 41 independents will be looking to win a riding in the Ontario election.

It's a rare but not impossible feat.

In Ontario's last election in 2022, a lone independent candidate, Bobbi Ann Brady, catpured the seat of Haldimand-Norfolk. And this year, she's running again. According to her website, Brady became the first female independent MPP ever elected in this province and the first to be elected as an independent without previously winning with a major party since 1905.

In this year's snap winter election, triggered early by PC Leader Doug Ford, more than three dozen independents will be looking to the same.

Remember, in Ontario's system you vote for who you want to be your local MPP, not who you want to be premier. That means smaller parties that don't often have the reach or resources of the major parties (the PCs, NDP, Liberals and Greens) will still often get candidates onto your ballot.

The best way to see who is running in your riding is use the candidate search on Elections Ontario's website.

New Blue party fields more than 100 candidates

The New Blue Party was the most successful party not to win a seat in the last provincial election, and has candidates in 108 of the 124 ridings this year. One of them, Belinda Karahalios, was a Progressive Conservative MPP before she was removed from the party caucus for opposing its COVID-19 emergency measures.

She and her husband, Jim Karahalios, then launched a new party. They say Ford hasn't done enough to cut taxes.

"There's never been any tax relief that they've put in place, and Doug Ford continues to promise that every election cycle," Jim Karaholios said in an interview last week.

"And then when he gets another mandate, he never provides permanent tax relief." 

A woman and man pose for a photo at a political post-election gathering Belinda and Jim Karahalios of the New Blue Party pose for a photo after the results of the 2022 Ontario election results were in. The party won the most total votes of any party that didn't win a seat that year. (Hala Ghonaim/CBC)

The party wants to cut the HST from 13 per cent to 10. 

Karahalios says "cleaning house at Queen's Park" is a priority for the New Blue Party.

"Because whether it's PCs or Liberals, all we see is cronyism, scandals after scandals, and no one that's respecting taxpayers in this province," he said. 

The New Blue Party received nearly 130,000 votes in 2022, the most of any party that didn't win a seat. Second best among those parties was the Ontario Party, founded in 2018, which took home nearly 85,000 votes.

Ousted NDP, PC MPPs running as independents

Voters in some Ontario ridings will also see a few familiar names running as independents.

In Hamilton, Sarah Jama, a housing and disability activist who won Hamilton Centre for the NDP in a byelection in March 202, will be running as an independent. In October 2023, Jama was ousted from the party after she made a statement in support of Palestinians following the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas attack on Israel that led to the current Israel-Hamas war. Jama called for an immediate ceasefire and an "end to all occupation of Palestinian land." 

Michael Mantha, who was removed from the NDP caucus in August 2023 after allegations of workplace misconduct, is also running again in Algoma-Manitoulin.

Mantha promises to disrupt conventional party dynamics and could potentially split votes in a riding that has elected New Democrats and Liberal candidates for the past four decades.

Meanwhile, Vincent Ke, a Toronto MPP who resigned from the PC caucus and sat as an independent over allegations he's linked to election interference by China, is running again in Don Valley North. 

Ke's team, in a news release this week, maintained he's done nothing wrong. "He has never been charged or convicted of any crime. While allegations were made against him, there is no evidence to support those false and defamatory claims," the release said.

None of the Above party pushing for electoral change

Greg Vezina, leader of the None of the Above Direct Democracy Party, wants to see referendums on main issues, saying he'd push for a "direct democracy" system similar to Switzerland's. It's one of the party's main priorities

"In Ontario, we have no say, absolutely no control once we elect a government," Vezina said last week.

But he says he knows it's tough for smaller parties like his to come up with big wins.

"We've got two chances of winning: slim and none," Vezina said. 

The Ontario Party and New Blue Party won a combined 4.5 per cent of the total vote in 2022, while the remaining parties that didn't win a seat, including None of the Above, combined to receive 0.5 per cent.

Still, Vezina says he hopes his party can win enough votes to move the needle on key issues.

The Ontario election takes place Thursday.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Ethan Lang

Reporter

Ethan Lang is a reporter for CBC Toronto. Ethan has also worked in Whitehorse, where he covered the Yukon Legislative Assembly, and Halifax, where he wrote on housing and forestry for the Halifax Examiner.

With files from Lorenda Reddekopp and John Rieti

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices
 
 
 
 

Often election underdogs, Independent and minor party candidates say they shake up the 2025 Ontario vote

Seat or no seat, they say they’re important in the electoral process

Steven Hanssen, an Independent candidate in Thunder Bay–Superior North, won't be voting for himself this Ontario election.

Hanssen said he ran because none of the major parties offered platforms he resonated with, but will be saving his vote for another major party candidate he feels has a better shot at being elected. 

"There was a need to break from the established parties to have the freedom of flexibility to craft the future for us," said Hanssen. 

"I'm not expecting to win." 

Hanssen is among candidates in the 2025 provincial election who don't have the support of one of the four major parties. Considered underdogs, they rarely win seats, but Independent and minor party candidates say running is worth it to connect with people unhappy with what the status quo has to offer. 

Hanssen, a former public servant, said this is his first time running for official public office. He decided to jump in after finding major parties' climate change platforms were lacking. 

"Having a realistic, pragmatic, business-orientated way of aligning our economy to the changing climate is important," Hanssen said. 

He said he thinks candidates of major parties don't have as much freedom as Independents, who aren't beholden to maintaining party lines. 

Hanssen said that if elected Thursday, he would be free to take more decisive action on climate change by building climate change-resistant infrastructure: namely, underwater cities on the ocean floor. 

"I came to the conclusion that moving under the ocean made sense given the challenges we face." 

Thunder Bay–Superior North is not located on the coast, but Hanssen said this idea could work with lakes too. 

A man with a beard takes a selfie. He's holding what appears to be a Boston cream donut with all the frosting removed. Independent candidate Steven Hanssen says he doesn't expect to win Thunder Bay–Superior North, but feels participating in the electoral process has been a valuable experience. (Submitted by Steven Hanssen)

His platform also includes food bank reform, addressing the opioid epidemic and creating a framework for a provincial relationship with artificial intelligence (AI). He said voters he met while campaigning seemed to take interest in his platform because it was grassroots and reflected the concerns of their community instead of major party talking points.

"People got really excited about [it] with hope for these reforms to, say, the food bank because they see the problems."

Hanssen said he's glad he's running, even though he doesn't think he'll win and ultimately chose to vote for a major party candidate to avoid splitting the vote. 

"Seeing [the electoral process] from the perspective of a candidate is a very rare opportunity in the history of our democracy."

Small parties offer increased choice: candidate

Like Hanssen, Thunder Bay–Atikokan candidate Martin Tempelman said he was disappointed in the platforms of the major parties — the Progressive Conservatives, Liberals, NDP and Green Party — and wanted to give voters an alternative option. 

He's one of over 200 provincial candidates running for a smaller party that caters to all political stripes. Ontario ballots this year will include candidates from Libertarian, Communist, Populist and Freedom parties. Some run on specific issues, like "Stop the New Sex-Ed Agenda Party" or the "Party for People with Special Needs." There's also a "None of the Above Party."

Six candidates in northwestern Ontario are running for the New Blue Party and the Northern Ontario Party. The Northern Ontario Party was not able to provide any candidates available to be interviewed. 

Tempelman, a candidate with New Blue, said he's been unhappy with the direction the Ontario Progressive Conservative Party has gone and wants to provide right-leaning voters another choice. 

"Doug Ford is no different than the Liberals, or NDP or the Green," he said. 

"New Blue Party, I would term as a party that's fiscally responsible, unlike the other parties that are all fiscally progressive."  

 Martin Tempelman stands on a roadside holding a New Blue signMartin Tempelman, a New Blue candidate in Thunder Bay–Atikokan, says small party candidates shouldn't be counted out. (Submitted by Martin Tempelman)

Tempelman's platform includes lowering taxes, incentivizing more housing development, increasing road safety and supporting pro-life policies. 

He said if elected, he'd like to open the latter up for debate in a way other parties haven't.

"Political parties throughout the last number of decades, they don't want to touch that issue," said Tempelman. 

Concerns about vote splitting

Some Ontario candidates have voiced concern about vote splitting or dropped out entirely in hopes of increasing other similar candidates' chances of winning. 

Tempelman said vote splitting shouldn't discourage minor-party candidates from running. 

"The only thing that would concern me about vote splitting is a person who believes the same thing I do, understands the issues the same way I do, and would not vote for me. That's vote splitting."

The New Blue Party, which was formed in the last provincial election, hasn't won a seat in any riding before. But in 2022, it won the most total votes of any party that didn't take a seat in that election

Tempelman said he estimates his chances of winning his Thunder Bay–Atikokan are, "with the Lord's help, 110 per cent." 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Michelle Allan is a reporter at CBC Thunder Bay. She's worked with the CBC's Investigative Unit, CBC Ottawa and ran a pop-up bureau in Kingston. She won a 2021 Canadian Association of Journalists national award for investigative reporting and was a finalist in 2023. You can reach her at michelle.allan@cbc.ca.

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices
 
 
 
 
 
 

3-term MPP's independent bid shakes up conventional race in Algoma- Manitoulin

Michael Mantha was kicked out of the NDP after report found he sexually harassed a staffer

The 70,000 or so voters in Algoma-Manitoulin will have one more option on their ballot in the upcoming provincial election with incumbent MPP Michael Mantha running as an independent candidate.

The addition promises to disrupt conventional party dynamics and could potentially split votes in a riding that has elected New Democrats and Liberal candidates for the past four decades.

Mantha successfully ran for the NDP in the past three elections, but was removed from that party's caucus in 2023 after a workplace investigation concluded he sexually harassed one of his staffers.

He previously told CBC he disagrees with the investigation's findings and intends to leave his political future "in the hands of voters in Algoma-Manitoulin." 

NDP replaces Mantha with political newcomer 

New Democrats in Algoma-Manitoulin nominated David Timeriski to fill in the gap left by Mantha.

It'll be his first time running for political office after a 30-year career as a paramedic and volunteer firefighter. 

The Elliot Lake resident says he's always been a supporter of NDP policies, especially when it comes to health. 

A man in front of a campaign bus. David Timeriski has worked as a paramedic and volunteer firefighter for 30 years. This is his first experience in politics. He says the NDP team and volunteers are working hard to support his campaign. (Submitted by David Timeriski)

He's advocating for strategies that would help recruit and retain health professionals across "the circle of care," from doctors to lab technicians. He says frequent closures of emergency rooms, such as the ones experienced in Thessalon, are unacceptable.

Timeriski says that while there are special circumstances that led to his nomination, he's confident the riding's NDP voters will throw their support behind him. 

"The voters have a right to choose," he said. "This is their opportunity to hold anybody accountable." 

Liberal candidate focused on health, affordability

The Algoma-Manitoulin candidate for the Ontario Liberals is Reg Niganobe. 

It's his first time vying for a provincial seat after 15 years in politics, first as the chief of Mississauga #8 First Nation, then as the grand council chief of the Anishinabek Nation. 

Niganobe says he wanted to make the jump to provincial politics after seeing key issues go unaddressed in the small towns and First Nations that make up the riding.

"We have 40,000 citizens here in Algoma-Manitoulin that don't have a family doctor," he said. 

Portrait of a man listening to a conference. Reg Niganobe has worked in politics for 15 years, recently as the grand council chief of the Anishinabek Nation. This is his first jump into provincial politics. (Submitted by Reg Niganobe )

He says northern Ontario money is being spent on projects that benefit the residents of the province's south.

"The proposed tunnel under Highway 401 or the health spa [in] downtown Toronto are not very useful to us up here," he said. 

He says the current government hasn't made progress on some of the key infrastructure issues in the riding, including the Manitoulin Swing Bridge and the Dean Lake Bridge near the Municipality of Huron Shores. 

Mantha says he can be a voice for northern Ont. as an independent

As for Mantha, he says he wants to continue to advocate for the north, including on three key issues he's heard from his constituents: healthcare, highway safety and affordability. 

"Once you get elected, it doesn't matter if you're in government or opposition," he said. "You have one job, and it's to work across party lines to get benefits in your riding."

He says he's developed his craft over the past 13 years. 

Asked whether voters were concerned about the sexual harassment allegations against him, Mantha says it's a personal matter that hasn't really come up his conversations with constituents.

"When I'm talking to people on doorsteps, they're more concerned with the issues that they faced with here in the province," he said. 

"They're more focused on obtaining a doctor, an affordable home, and not getting caught in the carnage of an accident." 

Conservative candidate focuses on tariff threat

Algoma-Manitoulin's progressive conservative candidate Bill Rosenberg has declined multiple interview requests from CBC. 

In a statement, his campaign manager said potential tariffs from the U.S. would hit the riding's lumber and steel industries hard. 

Two campaign signs on a snowbank. Progressive conservative candidate Bill Rosenberg's campaign focuses on the tariff threat and how best to counter it. (Aya Dufour/CBC)

"Now more than ever, we need strong leadership to protect our jobs, businesses and communities," he wrote. 

The Green Party of Ontario candidate for Algoma-Manitoulin is Maria Legault.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Aya Dufour

reporter

Aya Dufour is a CBC reporter based in northern Ontario. She can be reached at aya.dufour@cbc.ca

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices
 
 
 
 
Bobbi Ann Brady

Democracy is in peril, but I’ll keep fighting for you

By MPP Bobbi Ann Brady

“We the people tell government what to do…it doesn’t tell us. We the people are the driver, the government is the car, and we decide where it should go, by what route and how fast.”

Those are the words of Ronald Reagan on January 11, 1989, as he delivered his farewell address to the United States of America. ‘We the people’ were the three little words Reagan used to reverse the course of government throughout his eight years as president.

President Reagan was right, and the preservation of freedom is why government exists, period. However, freedom is a fundamental value of democracy but today democracy is in peril.

Over the past 10 years, Canada and all Western countries have seen marked changes in the nature of the world order. Two trends are particularly worrisome and have contributed to “democratic backsliding.” We see elected governments incrementally eroding democratic institutions, rules, and what we know as social norms. Secondly, there are people in power, and leaders, who are hiding non-democratic practices behind democratic institutions. These leaders are focussed on gaining or retaining power but are undermining democracy using various strategies, such as buying votes and eliminating or silencing political opposition.

You might be thinking, “Sure, that’s happening around the world but not in our neck of the woods.” Make no mistake—it’s happening at every level of Canadian government including Haldimand-Norfolk.

In 2024, I wrote a few newspaper columns citing examples of democratic erosion in the Ontario Legislature. With a quick scan, you’ll find numerous examples across Ontario such as school board trustees and municipal councillors being silenced. 

On December 29th, the United States’ 39th President Jimmy Carter passed away. Like many leaders, Carter left us with much to ponder through the written word. On January 5, 2022, he penned a piece for the New York Times titled: I Fear for our Democracy.

In this piece, Carter said, “For American democracy to endure, we must demand that our leaders and candidates uphold the ideals of freedom and adhere to high standards of conduct.” While I cannot agree with all his politics, I can wholeheartedly stand by this statement, and I am proud to be working with a handful of others across the country who believe the same.

We must continue to stand up, to ask questions, to demand accountability, because what we are witnessing is what ensues when powerful business interests have too much sway over government decisions whether it is municipally, provincially, or federally. Sadly, government is not working for you.

We need Reagan’s great rediscovery of the 1980s where, “Low and behold, the moral way of government is the practical way of government: Democracy, the profoundly good, is also the profoundly productive.”

Together, we can restore democracy and protect our freedoms. It won’t be easy because leaders and special interests have their people in place to shut us down—they fear monger, and they try to convince voters that opposition should not exist. I remind you that without opposition there is not accountability, and there is no protection of public interest.

These same folk also tell others that the tough questions I ask on your behalf are somehow hurting us. I ask if these people believe in a dictatorship.

“We the people are free. The future should always be ours.” It’s time government let us get in the driver’s seat and take the wheel. 

Bobbi Ann Brady is the MPP for Haldimand-Norfolk

 

Contact

Contact Bobbi Ann Brady
Tel: 519-428-0446
E-mail: babrady-co@ola.org

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Tuesday, 25 February 2025

Miramichi MP Jake Stewart faces party turmoil ahead of election

 

Conservative MP Jake Stewart says he won't run in upcoming election

In social media post, Stewart says politics has taken a toll on his family and health

Miramichi-Grand Lake Conservative MP Jake Stewart will not be a candidate in the federal election expected to be called soon, Stewart announced in a social media post Thursday.

Stewart wrote that as he enters his 18th year in electoral politics, "I have come to realize the toll it's taken on my family and my health. Therefore, I will not be re-offering in the upcoming election."

Stewart has not responded to an interview request.

The first-term MP's announcement follows criticism by Conservatives in the riding, including two-time federal candidate Mike Morrison.

Morrison told CBC News last week that he doubted Stewart could win the riding again because of feuds between Stewart and former staffers and party volunteers.

The financial agent for the Miramichi-Grand Lake Conservative riding association resigned in January, citing a "toxic and manipulative atmosphere" in Stewart's office.

In January, a House of Commons lawyer sent Morrison's son Shawn, who had worked on Stewart's office, a cease-and-desist letter, telling him to stop contacting Stewart's wife and his office.

An old man poses for a photo Stewart's announcement comes after concerns were raised by Mike Morrison, a longtime Conservative organizer in Miramichi, about feuds between Stewart and former staff and party volunteers. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)

Stewart had already been nominated as the Conservative candidate for the federal election that could be called as early as next week.

Kelly Wilson, the president of the party riding association, did not respond to a request for comment Thursday morning. 

Kevin Price, the New Brunswick representative on the federal Conservative Party's national council, said he would not comment on Stewart's decision..

Lisa Harris, who ran as the federal Liberal candidate against Stewart in 2021 and lost by fewer than 1,500 votes, announced last week she'll seek her party's nomination again.

Stewart was a Blackville municipal councillor and then served as a provincial MLA for 11 years before resigning in 2021 to run federally. 

He was one of the first MPs to endorse Pierre Poilievre to lead the party in 2022 and was appointed caucus committee coordinator, part of the leadership team, when Poilievre took over.

As a provincial member, he ran for the leadership of the Progressive Conservative Party of New Brunswick in 2016 and was minister of aboriginal affairs in the Blaine Higgs government from 2018 to 2020.

Stewart said in his Facebook post on Thursday that being a politician was "incredibly hard for your family these days," and he thanked his wife Shannon and his four children for their support.

"I want you to know I have given my very best to local causes and I am forever grateful for all your support over the years from municipal through provincial to federal politics," Stewart wrote.

"I sincerely hope to have made a real, impactful difference in our community."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Jacques Poitras

Provincial Affairs reporter

Jacques Poitras has been CBC's provincial affairs reporter in New Brunswick since 2000. He grew up in Moncton and covered Parliament in Ottawa for the New Brunswick Telegraph-Journal. He has reported on every New Brunswick election since 1995 and won awards from the Radio Television Digital News Association, the National Newspaper Awards and Amnesty International. He is also the author of five non-fiction books about New Brunswick politics and history.

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices
 
 
 
 
 

Veteran Miramichi Conservative says MP Jake Stewart can't win

Two-time candidate Mike Morrison says the local party organization he helped build has been ‘decimated’

A two-time federal Conservative candidate in Miramichi says he doesn't think current party MP Jake Stewart can win again in a federal election that is expected to start within weeks.

Mike Morrison says he has contacted the office of Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre to advise them of what's happening but has had no response.

"I don't think he should be the candidate," Morrison said.

Morrison said the party organization he helped build has "tanked" because Stewart has alienated or cut ties with many Conservative supporters, including many of his own staff and volunteers who helped elect him.

WATCH | 'We're not going to win with Jake Stewart': 
 

Former Conservative candidate says MP Jake Stewart can’t win

Longtime volunteer says Conservatives could lose Miramichi-Grand Lake over party turmoil.

The 79-year-old veteran political organizer and two-time candidate says Stewart is hiding from constituents and onetime allies, leading many to conclude not only that he'll lose the seat but that he should resign.

"Everything's gone downhill," Morrison said in an interview at his home. "It's gone right off the end. There's no credibility. It's very toxic. … Nobody can get any answers."

Morrison's son Shawn is one of several people who were fired from or quit Stewart's office.

A man poses for a photo Stewart is hiding from constituents and allies, leading to a 'toxic' atmosphere, Morrison says. (Pascal Raiche-Nogue/Radio-Canada)

In January, a House of Commons lawyer sent Shawn Morrison a cease-and-desist letter, telling him to stop contacting Stewart's wife and his office.

"People [are] coming up to me saying, 'They're trying to blame everything on the Morrisons,'" Mike Morrison said. "We did nothing.

"What's happened here right now has been created by Jake Stewart himself."

Stewart has not responded to repeated requests from CBC News for an interview.

The financial agent for the Miramichi-Grand Lake Conservative riding association, Denver Brennan, resigned in January citing a "toxic and manipulative atmosphere" in Stewart's office.

He named eight people who left jobs in the office or were fired over three years.

Morrison confirmed some of the departures and said they often had to do with Stewart's temper.

"These kids … were having mental distress there with what was happening," he said. "Make one mistake in a letter or something like that — it was the end of the world."

The result now is a local board and party organization he calls "non-functional," while former campaign donors will no longer support Stewart.

"We're in a mess today," Morrison said, "and here we've got an election coming."

Two spokespeople for Poilievre have not responded to questions from CBC News about the situation.

An old man holds up a phone showing texts. Morrison says he received texts from Stewart with links to the band the Strokes, which he took as mocking after Morrison himself suffered a stroke. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)

Morrison said he asked Kevin Price, New Brunswick's representative on the Conservative Party's national council, to take his concerns to Poilievre adviser Jenni Byrne.

Price "knows where we're coming from," Morrison said. "He understands what's happening here."

So far though, no one from Poilievre's office has contacted him.

Price did not respond to an interview request.

It's a sad development for Morrison, who helped build the local Conservative Party of Canada organization in Miramichi after the 2003 merger of the Canadian Alliance and Progressive Conservative parties.

He was the first candidate for the party in Miramichi, running in both 2004 and 2006.

He worked on the 2008 campaign that led to the party's breakthrough win with Tilly O'Neill-Gordon, who went on to serve two terms in Ottawa.

More recently, he was the financial agent for Stewart's 2021 campaign and helped organize an early visit to the riding by Pierre Poilievre after he became party leader, an event attended by almost 400 people.

Poilievre "couldn't get over the organization," Morrison said. "He fell in love with Miramichi."

He believed Stewart was in line for a possible cabinet position in a Poilievre government, representing a chance to get some federal attention for Miramichi.

But "something turned," Morrison said. "Jake become another person."

He pointed to text messages from Stewart linking to music videos by the band the Strokes — apparently mocking the fact Morrison suffered a stroke in December.

"I kind of felt belittled, betrayed."

But, he added, "what hurts me the most about it all is the volunteers, the donors, all the people like ourselves, board people over the years that worked to get us to where we were, OK — how that has been decimated." 

"I feel sorry for them. They put their trust in Jake Stewart. I put my trust in Jake Stewart."

Morrison said he was speaking to CBC News because no one else was acknowledging the problem. 

"At least somebody is listening. The party doesn't want to listen. The national party doesn't want to listen. People have a right to know what's going on."

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

 
Jacques Poitras

Provincial Affairs reporter

Jacques Poitras has been CBC's provincial affairs reporter in New Brunswick since 2000. He grew up in Moncton and covered Parliament in Ottawa for the New Brunswick Telegraph-Journal. He has reported on every New Brunswick election since 1995 and won awards from the Radio Television Digital News Association, the National Newspaper Awards and Amnesty International. He is also the author of five non-fiction books about New Brunswick politics and history.

 
 
 
 

Miramichi MP Jake Stewart faces party turmoil ahead of election

Financial agent quits, office closes, House of Commons sends warning to ex-staffer

A New Brunswick Conservative MP running for re-election this year is losing some of his supporters after a falling out with former staffers and resignations from the local party organization.

Jake Stewart, the MP for Miramichi-Grand Lake, recently had a House of Commons lawyer send a cease-and-desist letter to Shawn Morrison, a longtime Conservative who used to work in his office.

The letter, dated Jan. 30 and obtained by CBC News, was sent to Morrison after an exchange of fiery and sometimes personal social media posts between him and Stewart.

That came a few days after the financial agent for the Conservative riding association in Miramichi-Grand Lake resigned in an email to members of the association board.

WATCH | Conservative MP Jake Stewart faces questions: 
 
Miramichi MP Jake Stewart faces turmoil with former supporters
 
The Conservative MP for Miramichi-Grand Lake won’t explain office closure, staff resignations, cease-and-desist letter.

"My decision stems from a profound distrust in the current board and staff within MP Stewart's office," Denver Brennan wrote in a Jan. 24 email obtained by CBC News.

He also said the atmosphere at Stewart's office was "toxic and manipulative" and eight other people had left jobs with the MP over three years, though one of them, Aiden Ingersoll, appeared in a Feb. 11 social media photo with Stewart.

Stewart, a first-term Conservative MP and former provincial cabinet minister in the Blaine Higgs government, has been nominated as the party candidate for the federal election expected this spring.

He has not responded to text messages or to phone calls or an email to his office requesting an interview.

In one Facebook post in January responding to Morrison, the MP appeared to challenge him to a physical confrontation.

"My address hasn't changed," Stewart wrote, daring him to "bring it" and using a profanity to describe Morrision.

Morrison and Brennan would not do interviews with CBC News.

Kelly Wilson, the president of the Conservative riding association board, did not respond to requests for comment.

Meanwhile, Stewart's office on the King George Highway in Miramichi was closed for several weeks after the Christmas break, with a sign in the window citing "security reasons."

Man stands in front of a Higgs Party bus. Stewart's office was 'toxic and manipulative,' according to a resignation email from a party volunteer. (CBC)

Stewart posted two photos on his social media accounts on Feb. 11 showing him greeting constituents at the office, and when CBC News photographed the office the next day, the sign was gone.

But Brunswick News reported the sign was back later in the day.

When CBC News visited the office again on Feb. 20, there was no such sign in the window, but the door was locked and no one responded to repeated rings on a buzzer.

Stewart took part in a community event in Miramichi the same day.

The cease-and-desist letter to Morrison was signed by Aleksandra Pisarek, a lawyer in the office of the House of Commons law clerk.

It says Morrison has engaged in "unwelcome, malicious and vindictive behaviour," including unwelcome contact with Stewart's staff and his spouse.

It asks him to "immediately cease and desist" and warns him that if he continues, "all possible legal recourses will be considered."

Two spokespeople for Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre did not respond to a request for comment. Kevin Price, the New Brunswick representative on the party's national council, did not respond either.

Stewart was first elected to the New Brunswick legislature in 2010 and was re-elected in 2014, 2018 and 2020.

He ran for the provincial Progressive Conservative Party leadership in 2016, placing fifth in the first round of voting.

Premier Blaine Higgs appointed Stewart minister of aboriginal affairs when the PCs formed a minority government in 2018, but dropped him from cabinet after winning a majority in 2020.

Stewart resigned as an MLA the following year to run federally and was elected MP for Miramichi-Grand Lake in the September 2021 election.

He was among the first MPs to endorse Poilievre for leader of the federal Conservative Party after MPs pushed Erin O'Toole out of the position in early 2022.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Jacques Poitras

Provincial Affairs reporter

Jacques Poitras has been CBC's provincial affairs reporter in New Brunswick since 2000. He grew up in Moncton and covered Parliament in Ottawa for the New Brunswick Telegraph-Journal. He has reported on every New Brunswick election since 1995 and won awards from the Radio Television Digital News Association, the National Newspaper Awards and Amnesty International. He is also the author of five non-fiction books about New Brunswick politics and history.

 
 
 
 
---------- Original message ---------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Feb 28, 2025 at 1:56 PM
Subject: Fwd: RE Miramichi MP Jake Stewart faces party turmoil ahead of election
To: <info@faytene.tv>


V-Kol Media // PO Box 21045, Quispamsis, NB, E2E 4Z4, Canada 

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---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, Feb 28, 2025 at 12:43 PM
Subject: Fwd: RE Miramichi MP Jake Stewart faces party turmoil ahead of election
To: <jim@miramichionline.com>


 
 
 
 
 
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
Date: Tue, Feb 25, 2025 at 2:49 PM
Subject: RE Miramichi MP Jake Stewart faces party turmoil ahead of election
To: <michel.bedard@parl.gc.ca>, <aleksandra.pisarek@parl.gc.ca>, <carolyn.lecheminant-chandy@parl.gc.ca>
Cc: <susan.brophy.256@parl.gc.ca>, jake.stewart <jake.stewart@parl.gc.ca>, pierre.poilievre <pierre.poilievre@parl.gc.ca>, <ps.ministerofpublicsafety-ministredelasecuritepublique.sp@ps-sp.gc.ca>, Mark.Blakely <Mark.Blakely@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, Michael.Duheme <Michael.Duheme@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>, robert.gauvin <robert.gauvin@gnb.ca>, Susan.Holt <Susan.Holt@gnb.ca>, pm <pm@pm.gc.ca>, Katie.Telford <Katie.Telford@pmo-cpm.gc.ca>



--------- Original message ---------
From: Holt, Susan Premier (PO/CPM) <Susan.Holt@gnb.ca>
Date: Mon, Nov 4, 2024 at 11:43 AM
Subject: Automatic reply: Premier Susan Holt and her new cabinet know some folks have a long memory and keep good records as well EH Ian Lee?
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

Thank you for your email. This account receives a high volume of emails. Thank you for your patience as our team prepares a response.

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From: Bockus, Kathy (LEG) <Kathy.Bockus@gnb.ca>
Date: Mon, Nov 4, 2024 at 11:43 AM
Subject: Automatic reply: Premier Susan Holt and her new cabinet know some folks have a long memory and keep good records as well EH Ian Lee?
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

Thank you for your email. I will respond as soon as I can. 
 
 
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From: Moore, Rob - M.P. <Rob.Moore@parl.gc.ca>
Date: Mon, Nov 4, 2024 at 11:44 AM
Subject: Automatic reply: Premier Susan Holt and her new cabinet know some folks have a long memory and keep good records as well EH Ian Lee?
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

*This is an automated response*

 

Thank you for contacting the Honourable Rob Moore, P.C., M.P. office. We appreciate the time you took to get in touch with our office.

 

If you did not already, please ensure to include your full contact details on your email and the appropriate staff will be able to action your request. We strive to ensure all constituent correspondence is responded to in a timely manner.

 

If your question or concern is time sensitive, please call our office: 506-832-4200.

 

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From: <info@votefaytene.ca>
Date: Sun, Oct 13, 2024 at 4:30 PM
Subject: Auto: RE PC Faytene won't discuss 'security concerns' that caused event's cancellation
To: <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>

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From: Chrystia Freeland <Chrystia.Freeland@fin.gc.ca>
Date: Sun, Oct 13, 2024 at 4:30 PM
Subject: Automatic reply: RE PC Faytene won't discuss 'security concerns' that caused event's cancellation
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From: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>
To: "info@votefaytene.ca" <info@votefaytene.ca>; blaine.higgs <blaine.higgs@gnb.ca>; Mark.Blakely <mark.blakely@rcmp-grc.gc.ca>; "james@jsmklaw.ca" <james@jsmklaw.ca>; "info@ezrainstitute.ca" <info@ezrainstitute.ca>; "info@libertycoalitioncanada.com" <info@libertycoalitioncanada.com>; "laura.myers@greenpartynb.ca" <laura.myers@greenpartynb.ca>; "aconradi@meridiancp.com" <aconradi@meridiancp.com>; "brian.boucher@greenpartynb.ca" <brian.boucher@greenpartynb.ca>; fin.minfinance-financemin.fin <fin.minfinance-financemin.fin@canada.ca>; kris.austin <kris.austin@gnb.ca>
Cc: "awaugh@postmedia.com" <awaugh@postmedia.com>; Jason Lavigne <jason@yellowhead.vote>; art <art@streetchurch.ca>; "steve.outhouse@gnb.ca" <steve.outhouse@gnb.ca>; pierre.poilievre <pierre.poilievre@parl.gc.ca>
Sent: Sunday, October 13, 2024 at 04:30:28 PM ADT
Subject: RE PC Faytene won't discuss 'security concerns' that caused event's cancellation


---------- Original message ---------
From: Faytene Grasseschi / PCNB - Hampton-Fundy-St. Martins 2024 Candidate <info@votefaytene.ca>
Date: Mon, Oct 7, 2024 at 9:29 PM
Subject: Re: RE Calls from Moncton RCMP (506 856 8139) about ‘PJ’ Andreetti and I
To: David Amos <david.raymond.amos333@gmail.com>


David,

I just tried to call you back.  My apologies again that we had to keep the call short today due to an appointment. Thank you for your care, kindness and defence of me.  I do appreciate it.

Please know how much we respect you.

Faytene
 
 
 
 

Premier's former spokesperson wants to run against Liberal Leader Susan Holt

Nicolle Carlin sets sights on Fredericton South-Silverwood

 
Sam Farley · CBC News · Posted: Jun 06, 2024 6:00 AM ADT 
 
 
Nicolle Carlin
Nicolle Carlin says she resigned from her job as deputy minister of strategic initiatives and communications on Monday to campaign full time. (Alix Villeneuve/Radio-Canada)

Nicolle Carlin, who has worked as spokesperson for Premier Blaine Higgs since 2018, has announced she is seeking the Progressive Conservative nomination in Fredericton South-Silverwood.

It's the same riding where Liberal Leader Susan Holt plans to run in the next election, which is scheduled for October.

Carlin said she resigned from her job as deputy minister of strategic initiatives and communications on Monday to campaign full time.

"I've been very fortunate. I do have a strong voice at the table and the premier's put a lot of faith in me and he's allowed me to be vocal," Carlin said in an interview with Radio-Canada.

"I loved serving in my job, but this is completely different. When you have people you are speaking for, when you are taking their issues to heart, when you're advocating for them, that's a completely different responsibility."

Carlin said she wasn't recruited by the PC Party and the decision to run was hers alone.

Stands with Higgs on Policy 713

Carlin has previously been a municipal councillor in Hanwell and worked as a reporter for both CTV Atlantic and CBC New Brunswick.

When asked, she said she stands with Higgs on the issue of Policy 713, the gender-identity school policy his government changed last summer. 

The revised Policy 713 requires that school staff obtain parental consent before letting a student under 16 adopt a new name or pronoun that reflects their gender identity.

"I do stand with the premier on 713, and I don't think that there is a line between being progressive and supporting the role that parents play," Carlin said.

A woman waves in front of a Liberal sign.

Liberal Leader Susan Holt, shown here at the recent Liberal nomination meeting for Hampton-Fundy-St. Martins, is running for a seat in Fredericton South-Silverwood. (Sam Farley/CBC News)

She said children should feel welcome in their schools and classrooms, but parents should be involved with elementary-aged kids transitioning and using a different name and pronouns.

"I'm very progressive. I'm a progressive in my views, I'm a Progressive Conservative and I stand with the premier on that issue, 100 per cent," Carlin said.

In an emailed statement, Liberal Leader Susan Holt said she welcomes Carlin to the race.

"Glad to see that PCs have found a candidate to make this a good race, which is critical to a strong democracy," Holt said.

"I look forward to seeing Nicolle at the doors and engaging in meaningful discussions about the most important issues to the people of Fredericton South-Silverwood."

Holt won a seat in a 2023 byelection in the riding of Bathurst East-Nepisiguit-Saint-Isidore, but has chosen to run in a Fredericton riding come October. The Liberal leader lives in the city of Fredericton.

A man with glasses wears a headset and sits starting into a camera, with a shelf and desk against th wall behind him.

Simon Ouellette is the Green Party candidate for the riding. (Radio-Canada)

The Green Party's candidate for the riding, Simon Ouellette, also welcomed Carlin to the race in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

"I'm looking forward to a fair and competitive race focused on good ideas and honest politics. I hope to see Nicolle at local debates, where we can share our different visions for the future of our province," Ouellette said.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Sam Farley

Journalist

Sam Farley is a Fredericton-based reporter at CBC New Brunswick. Originally from Boston, he is a journalism graduate of the University of King's College in Halifax. He can be reached at sam.farley@cbc.ca

With files from Alix Villeneuve

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices
 
 
 
142 Comments 

 
David Amos
Oh My My Isn't this news rather special?
 
 
David Amos
  
I wonder who Higgy and Outhouse have picked to run against the Green Leader in Fat Fred City
 
 
David Amos
Holt and I both lost in the 2018 election but at least she was honest with me in a public forum in Fat Fred City before the writ was dropped and the Green leader definitely was not
 
 
David Amos
I remember Madame Carlin Perhaps she should check Tweets

2004

All eyes turned, cameras were flashing, and Nicolle Carlin, budding reporter, just stood waiting to hear an answer from an MP in Ottawa. Only in Gr. 10, Carlin caught the MP off guard when she asked if her school could have some money back to fund their music program which had been cancelled. Reporters scrummed her afterwards and it is then, Carlin recounts, that she realized that she had an interest in journalism.

“Wow, I like asking questions…and I kind of like catching him off guard.” thought young Carlin at the time. Now 25 and a Videojournalist at ATV in Fredericton, there is no looking back. Carlin grew up in Saint John and chose to study Journalism at St. Thomas University.

 
 
Matt Steele
Certainly a good choice by Carlin as apparently the Liberals are in a complete disarray , and are having a very difficult time organizing and fund raising for the upcoming fall election . It certainly wouldn't be a surprise if Holt can't even win her own seat in Fredericton . 
 
David Amos  
Reply to Matt Steele
Holt is in quite a horse race now
 
David Amos  
Reply to Matt Steele 
I wonder who Higgy and Outhouse have picked to run against the Green Leader in Fat Fred City 
 
Le Wier  
Reply to David Amos  
It says Pam Allen Leblanc on their website is the candidate for Fredericton York  
 
David Amos  
Reply to  Le Wier  
Thanks 
 
Le Wier  
Reply to David Amos  
Ryan Cullin isn’t reofferring for the PCs?
 
David Amos  
Reply to  Le Wier  
Hard telling not knowing for sure but I bet the Leader of the KISS Party and one of my brothers knows the gossip
 
 
 
Marcel Belanger 
Apparently Carlin is the one pushing the anti sex ed and anti transgender agenda.
 
David Amos  
Reply to Marcel Belanger
Higgy is She just following orders 
 
 
 
Don Corey 
.
 
David Amos
 
Reply to Don Corey
Of course not she is a former journalist who knows where all the bones are buried in Fat Fred City  
 
David Amos 
Reply to Don Corey
You would have enjoyed my reply  
 
 
 
Bobby Richards 
The strong women already left the Higgs govt.

Sherry and Mary Wilson are old school women that asks permission to go to the bathroom.

I like Margaret but she is old school too, but she fought for her bridge in Florenceville that will never happen. Higgs keeps dangling that carrot for her though so she’ll run again.

Andrea Anderson Mason and Arlene Dunn…Dorothy Shepherd too stood up to Higgs for years.

Jill Green is fascinated by Higgs when she doesn’t need the money.

Good luck Nicole. Higgs will put you in a woman’s role soon if you are elected as MLA.

David Amos
Reply to Bobby Richards 
Sherry and Mary Wilson not as dumb as you think They know what side of the toast the butter is on 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Bobby Richards 
Oh my  
 
Le Wier
Reply to Bobby Richards  
Higgs and Outhouse must think Mary Wilson is a shoe in. Maybe she is. The Liberals are running Steven Horsman against Wilson. 
 
Don Corey
Reply to Bobby Richards 
After the coming election, Higgs will definitely restock on female cabinet ministers after the latest round of cleaning house.  
 
David Amos 
Reply to  Le Wier   
Stevey Boy has worn out his welcome 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Don Corey   
Horsman was one of the dudes who stole my Harley
 
Le Wier
Reply to David Amos  
Outhouse or Horsman?
 
David Amos 
Reply to Le Wier  
The ex cop 
 
Le Wier
Reply to David Amos  
I thought it was odd the Liberals would move him from the Fred North riding to the Sunbury riding.
 
David Amos 
Reply to Le Wier  
The turncoat has a better chance against Jill
 
 
 
 Kyle Woodman
“Truly amazing, what people can get used to, as long as there are a few compensations.”

― Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale 

David Amos 
Reply to Kyle Woodman
Perhaps you should review our comments 
 
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/susan-holt-fredericton-south-silverwood-1.6987031
 
 
 
Kyle Woodman
 “Ignoring isn’t the same as ignorance, you have to work at it.”

― Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid's Tale

 
 
Kyle Woodman
What a blessed day for women's subservience in NB. Make the commander proud Nicole! 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Kyle Woodman
Surely you jest    
 
Kyle Woodman
Reply to David Amos
I do. 
 
 
 
G. Timothy Walton
"Carlin said she wasn't recruited by the PC Party and the decision to run was hers alone."

Hmmmm, do I believe Higgs's spokescritter on this or any issue at this point?

Le Wier
Reply to G. Timothy Walton
I see Carlin’s father In law was high up in the former NBTel and a prominent family in Quispamsis and her mother was affiliated with the UPC.

Bobby Richards

Reply to G. Timothy Walton
Jake Stewart is the father of Nicole’s baby. That happened 2 terms ago

Bobby Richards
Reply to Le Wier
There used to be a vetting process

David Amos
Reply to G. Timothy Walton
IMHO Never believe anything until Higgy's spokescritter officially denies it

David Amos

Reply to Le Wier
Bingo

David Amos

Reply to Bobby Richards
Wow
 
Le Wier
Reply to Bobby Richards  
Oh when she was a Hanwell consellor?
 
Le Wier
Reply to Bobby Richards  
No wonder Carlin ‘s views are so close to Higgs 
 
Ralph Skavinsky
Reply to Le Wier 
Yes Leo Weir excellent credentials
 
Ralph Skavinsky
Reply to Le Wier
Sorry..Le Weir  
 
Le Wier
Reply to Ralph Skavinsky 
No worries. I was just pointing out no matter what party federal or provincial it is still a who’s who out to gain and control power.
 
Ralph Skavinsky
Reply to G. Timothy Walton
Why not try giving the benefit of doubt..I'd like to think she is ernest in her reproach   
 
David Amos

Reply to Bobby Richards 
I see that your comments did not stand the test of time
 
David Amos
Reply to Le Wier
Notice anything missing?
 
Le Wier
Reply to David Amos
I think my previous post is now missing. I wonder why
 
David Amos
Reply to Le Wier
More than that is missing
  
 
 
Gary Melanson
So Holt plans on abandoning the people in the Bathurst area who put in office, shame on her. Typical of her work history, job jumper.
 
Graham McCormack
Reply to Gary Melanson
Many leaders have done this when they are elected leader mid-term, this is not new.

Keep trying.

Kyle Woodman
Reply to Gary Melanson
Are you new to politics? 
 
Gary Melanson 
Reply to Kyle Woodman
Haha. No just a grumpy old man
 
Bobby Richards
Reply to Gary Melanson  
Unfortunately that’s a normal thing. If Higgs doesn’t get elected in his riding, another MLA will be forced to give up their seat for him. That’s been going on forever.

Higgs has several women that he would boot out if that was the case.

Bobby Richards
Reply to Gary Melanson  
Especially women and yes men. The strong women already left the Higgs govt.
Sherry and Mary Wilson are old school women that asks permission to go to the bathroom.
I like Margaret but she is old school too, but she fought for her bridge in Florenceville that will never happen. Higgs keeps dangling that carrot for her though.
  
Andrea Anderson Mason stood up to Higgs for years.

Jill Green is fascinated by Higgs when she doesn’t need the money.

David Amos
Reply to Gary Melanson
Me too but At least we find some fun in this madness eh
 
Ralph Skavinsky
Reply to Gary Melanson
Oh for Heavens sake man!
 
Ralph Skavinsky
Reply to David Amos
David, maybe you should go for it again..not kidding either. You make so much more sense than many. 
 
David Amos
Reply to Ralph Skavinsky
Clearly you don't know what condition my condition is in
 
Ralph Skavinsky
Reply to David Amos
Sorry,Iwould call Kenny Roger's..but..sighhh
 
David Amos
Reply to Ralph Skavinsky 
Lets just say when I wake up in the morning I am the first to be surprised that I am still alive and glad to that my best friend is happy Perhaps one night I will get lucky and break even but I hope I can outlive my best friend
 
 
 
Bobby Richards  
Another woman being controlled by Higgs. Good on Anderson Mason and Arlene Dunn for standing up to Higgs.
 
David Amos
Reply to Bobby Richards  
Yea right 
 
 
 
Graham McCormack 
If she was approved by Higgs, she's far from progressive.  
 
Patrick Bricker 

Reply to Graham McCormack
 
Graham McCormack  
Reply to Patrick Bricker
Not agreeing with Higg's on the Policy 713 changes would be a start or his entire view on education.  
Actually using facts and data to inform decisions would be another. 
 
Jack Bell
Reply to Graham McCormack
Would anyone else like to see who has an opinion on policy 713 and whether or not they have children? 
 
David Amos
Reply to Jack Bell
You already know my opinion Correct?
 
Jack Bell
Reply to David Amos
Yes I do.
 
 
 
Lorraine Morgan
Great. Mini Higgs.
 
Bobby Richards

Reply to Lorraine Morgan
I think the baby Daddy is now in Ottawa.
 
Bobby Richards
Reply to Lorraine Morgan
Jake S and Nicole were “very very close”. That wasn’t brought up during the vetting process I bet. I’m sure there was no vetting process with Nicole. Unlike how they treated you. 
 
David Amos
Reply to Lorraine Morgan
Ditto 
 
 
 
Bobby Richards
Jake Stewart must be proud. They were very close.
 
Bobby Richards

Reply to Bobby Richard
They spent several nights together at the hotel.
 
David Amos
Reply to Bobby Richards 
Do you have proof of what you claim?
 
Ralph Skavinsky
Reply to Bobby Richards  
Careful....some take these comments to the bank  
 
David Amos
Reply to Ralph Skavinsky 
I already did 
 
 
 
Kyle Woodman
Doesn't she live out in Cardy's riding?
 
Le Wier
Reply to Kyle Woodman
Is she the former CBC and CTV Atlantic reporter?   
 
Le Wier
Reply to Kyle Woodman 
Yes in Cardy’s  
 
Ron parker   
Reply to Le Wier 
yes.
 
Bobby Richards

Reply to Kyle Woodman
She was “very close” to Jake Stewart
 
Bobby Richards

Reply to Bobby Richards
They spent many evenings together in the hotel 

Le Wier
Reply to Ron parker  
Thank you for confirming  
 
David Amos
Reply to Ron parker 
Do ya think Cardy will vote for her?  
 
Ron parker   
Reply to Le Wier 
have a great day. 
 
Ron parker 
Reply to David Amos 
maybe if butter tarts are available. 
 
Ralph Skavinsky  
And if so...
 
Ralph Skavinsky  
Reply to Le Wier  
Uh huh..didn't you read the article?  
 
Le Wier .
Reply to Ralph Skavinsky
She looks different 
 
Ralph Skavinsky  
Reply to Le Wier  
Compared to how long ago, Le Wier  
 
Le Wier .
Reply to Ralph Skavinsky  
2008
 
Ralph Skavinsky  
Reply to Le Wier
16 years..most of us have..I'm not nearly as cute..how about you😁     
 
David Amos
Reply to Ron parker
Of that I have no doubt
 
 
 
Nanny White
Desperate measures to run a staffer from the Premier’s office.
 
Patrick Bricker 
Reply to Nanny White
Not really, do you think they get into this line of work to be a staffer their whole career?
 
Ralph Skavinsky  
Reply to Nanny White
Most times it's better to draw from within the "business" 
 
David Amos
Reply to Nanny White
Holt was a former staffer for the Premier when she ran and lost in 2018 
 
 
 
Luc Newsome
Interesting only one policy question of where she stands…..I guess all the other issues are unimportant. 
 
David Amos
Reply to Luc Newsome
The only issue is how to get elected 
  
 
 
SarahRose Werner
It says a lot about who succeeds in the Higgs administration that Ms Carlin feels "fortunate" that Higgs has "allowed" her to be vocal. Shouldn't being vocal be an elected representative's right rather than some sort of favour they're granted? 
 
Howard Higgs
Reply to SarahRose Werner
Ms. Carlin was a "staffer". Not an elected representative.
 
Luc Newsome
Reply to SarahRose Werner
I would suggest it’s more about being both humble and acknowledging the privilege she was afforded from the position……
 
Bobby Richards
Reply to SarahRose Werner
She will get treated very differently if she is elected and Higgs makes government. Higgs uses everyone for his own gain. Right now she feels on top but Higgs will put her on bottom if she dares speak up for her riding.
 
David Amos 
Reply to Howard Higgs
Perhaps I should ask you the obvious question
 
Howard Higgs
Reply to David Amos
Be my guest. I doubt that your questions surprise.
 
David Amos 
Reply to Howard Higgs
Is that your real name?
 
Howard Higgs
Reply to David Amos
Yes. I'm from AB. Not every Higgs is related. True for Smith or Brown as well.
 
David Amos 
Reply to Howard Higgs
That is particularly true with my family name But everybody in the Conservative Party knows who my Father and Mother were particularly today
 
David Amos 
Reply to Howard Higgs
A lot of Canadians visited my Mother's favourite Brother's grave today
 
 

Kyle Woodman
She fits the mold of right wing yes woman.
 
Bobby Richards
Reply to Kyle Woodman
Indeed

David Amos
Reply to Kyle Woodman
Everybody knows



Kyle Woodman

If she supports Higgs she is not Progressive no matter how many times she says it.
 
Howard Higgs
Reply to Kyle Woodman
Grits or tories, same old stories.
 
Kyle Woodman
Reply to Howard Higgs
I don't believe that is the case in this election.
 
Robert Brannen
Reply to Howard Higgs
Agreed. But only since 2003, starting first at the Federal and having spread progressively to the provinces since.
 
David Amos 
Reply to Howard Higgs
C'est Vrai
 
Howard Higgs
Reply to David Amos
d'accord. 
 
 
 
Robert Brannen 
Ms. Carlin should seriously think long and hard before committing to run politically. There is a huge difference between the drafting of hyperbolic, sugar coated, press releases and such, for a politician and that of presenting the issues of your constituents to government.

One is a matter of creating fantasy; the other, a matter of dealing with the harsh reality of the lives lived by the New Brunswick population.
 
Bobby Richards
Reply to Robert Brannen
You are right. She understands the mechanics of NB government but has had the privilege of being shielded by being on the inside.
 
David Amos 
Reply to Robert Brannen 
Who is the dreamer?
 
 
 
Howard Higgs
It's nice to see young people engaged in the future of their province.
 
David Amos 
Reply to Howard Higgs
Are you gonna vote for your cousin?
 
Howard Higgs
Reply to David Amos
I had an uncle who was an AB MLA in the 1980s. That's it for politics in my family. 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Howard Higgs
So that is not your real name 
 
Howard Higgs
Reply to David Amos
Are you related to everyone whose last name is Amos? 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Howard Higgs
I am the Chief of the Amos Clan Hence I pick who my Family and Septs are 

David Amos 
Reply to Howard Higgs
Higgy et al know that I was not allowed to visit the legislature and even my Mother's home after I ran against their beloved Conservatives in 2004 
 
Howard Higgs
Reply to David Amos 
That sounds really important. I've got no idea what you're going on about though.
 
David Amos 
Reply to Howard Higgs
So why tease me?
 
 
 
Douglas James
The last thing we need is a 'mouthpiece' who only knows how to mimic and echo Higgs. Puppets are the worst kind of politician.
 
David Amos

Reply to Douglas James
Put your name on the ballot again if you are not a puppet 
 
David Amos
Reply to Douglas James
Did you flag me? 



Bobby Richards
 
She was “very close” to Jake Stewart when he was MLA.
 
val harris
Reply to Bobby Richards
Did she work for Jake?
 
 
Bobby Richards
 
Reply to val harris
Only at the hotel
 
Bobby Richards
 
Reply to val harris
Yes outside of business hours
 
Dan Lee

Reply to Bobby Richards
it sure wasnt to check his riding........i dont think Dawson goes around neither..........
 
Bobby Richards
 
Reply to Dan Lee
They checked each other out in the evenings after dark
 
David Amos
Reply to val harris
Good question 
 


Art McCarthy
"I am a progressive." I work for a leader who is old-fashioned, old-school, reactionary, and stogy, who brooks no dissention from his views, yet I am progressive?

Something does not align here.
 
David Amos 
Reply to Art McCarthy
I concur 
 
 
Alison Jackson
Everything Higgs is tainted. If she wants to run for the conservatives (I have long since dropped the word 'progressive') then have at it boss. All it means to us voters is that she is perfectly OK with the 'pronoun war distraction' over real issues.
 
David Amos 
Reply to Alison Jackson
Amen

 
 
Doug McBride
Crafting Higgs Irvings messages must have been hard on her conscience OR perhaps not!
 
Allan Marven
Reply to Doug McBride
I doubt it.
 
Bobby Richards
Reply to Doug McBride
For her......not at all.
 
David Amos 
Reply to Allan Marven
Me too

 
 
JOhn D Bond
" resigned from her job as deputy minister of strategic initiatives and communications on Monday to campaign full time."

There are strategic initiatives in NB? Might they include contract nurses or actually improving the health care system. Based on what people deal with day to day, clearly nothing viable occurring.

There really has been nothing progressive in the Higgs government in the last 5 years. Why think anything will change
 
David Amos 
Reply to JOhn D Bond
Plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose N'esy Pas? 
 
 
 
Deborah Reddon
Well this should be an easy seat for the Liberals to take. As spokesperson for Higgs she has to carry the burden of his misinformation on 713, illegal firings that cost millions, travel nurse contracts, Union lawsuits and preferential tax treatment to his former employer and so much more.
 
David Amos 
 
Reply to Deborah Reddon
I would not bet the farm on your opinion 
 
David Amos 
Reply to Deborah Reddon
Did you flag me? 

 
 
Daniel Henwell
She will no doubt be a strong competitor to go against Holt
 
Deborah Reddon
Reply to Daniel Henwell
Not a chance. She has to check everything she does with Higgy first.
 
Bobby Richards
Reply to Deborah Reddon
This is all Steve Outhouse’s idea.
 
Sean Adams

Reply to Bobby Richards
I see the name Outhouse, I automatically assume they are full of you-know-what...
 
David Amos
Reply to Bobby Richards
Of course thats his job



 

Miramichi MP Jake Stewart faces party turmoil ahead of election

Financial agent quits, office closes, House of Commons sends warning to ex-staffer

 
Jacques Poitras · CBC News · Posted: Feb 25, 2025 6:00 AM AST
 
 
 Man stands holding a feather in front of the Legislature in FrederictonJake Stewart, the Conservative MP for Miramichi-Grand Lake, has been nominated as the party candidate for the federal election expected this spring. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)

A New Brunswick Conservative MP running for re-election this year is losing some of his supporters after a falling out with former staffers and resignations from the local party organization.

Jake Stewart, the MP for Miramichi-Grand Lake, recently had a House of Commons lawyer send a cease-and-desist letter to Shawn Morrison, a longtime Conservative who used to work in his office.

The letter, dated Jan. 30 and obtained by CBC News, was sent to Morrison after an exchange of fiery and sometimes personal social media posts between him and Stewart.

That came a few days after the financial agent for the Conservative riding association in Miramichi-Grand Lake resigned in an email to members of the association board.

WATCH | Conservative MP Jake Stewart faces questions: 
 
Miramichi MP Jake Stewart faces turmoil with former supporters
 
The Conservative MP for Miramichi-Grand Lake won’t explain office closure, staff resignations, cease-and-desist letter.

"My decision stems from a profound distrust in the current board and staff within MP Stewart's office," Denver Brennan wrote in a Jan. 24 email obtained by CBC News.

He also said the atmosphere at Stewart's office was "toxic and manipulative" and eight other people had left jobs with the MP over three years, though one of them, Aiden Ingersoll, appeared in a Feb. 11 social media photo with Stewart.

Stewart, a first-term Conservative MP and former provincial cabinet minister in the Blaine Higgs government, has been nominated as the party candidate for the federal election expected this spring.

He has not responded to text messages or to phone calls or an email to his office requesting an interview.

In one Facebook post in January responding to Morrison, the MP appeared to challenge him to a physical confrontation.

"My address hasn't changed," Stewart wrote, daring him to "bring it" and using a profanity to describe Morrision.

Morrison and Brennan would not do interviews with CBC News.

Kelly Wilson, the president of the Conservative riding association board, did not respond to requests for comment.

Meanwhile, Stewart's office on the King George Highway in Miramichi was closed for several weeks after the Christmas break, with a sign in the window citing "security reasons."

Man stands in front of a Higgs Party bus. Stewart's office was 'toxic and manipulative,' according to a resignation email from a party volunteer. (CBC)

Stewart posted two photos on his social media accounts on Feb. 11 showing him greeting constituents at the office, and when CBC News photographed the office the next day, the sign was gone.

But Brunswick News reported the sign was back later in the day.

When CBC News visited the office again on Feb. 20, there was no such sign in the window, but the door was locked and no one responded to repeated rings on a buzzer.

Stewart took part in a community event in Miramichi the same day.

The cease-and-desist letter to Morrison was signed by Aleksandra Pisarek, a lawyer in the office of the House of Commons law clerk.

It says Morrison has engaged in "unwelcome, malicious and vindictive behaviour," including unwelcome contact with Stewart's staff and his spouse.

It asks him to "immediately cease and desist" and warns him that if he continues, "all possible legal recourses will be considered."

Two spokespeople for Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre did not respond to a request for comment. Kevin Price, the New Brunswick representative on the party's national council, did not respond either.

Stewart was first elected to the New Brunswick legislature in 2010 and was re-elected in 2014, 2018 and 2020.

He ran for the provincial Progressive Conservative Party leadership in 2016, placing fifth in the first round of voting.

Premier Blaine Higgs appointed Stewart minister of aboriginal affairs when the PCs formed a minority government in 2018, but dropped him from cabinet after winning a majority in 2020.

Stewart resigned as an MLA the following year to run federally and was elected MP for Miramichi-Grand Lake in the September 2021 election.

He was among the first MPs to endorse Poilievre for leader of the federal Conservative Party after MPs pushed Erin O'Toole out of the position in early 2022.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Jacques Poitras

Provincial Affairs reporter

Jacques Poitras has been CBC's provincial affairs reporter in New Brunswick since 2000. He grew up in Moncton and covered Parliament in Ottawa for the New Brunswick Telegraph-Journal. He has reported on every New Brunswick election since 1995 and won awards from the Radio Television Digital News Association, the National Newspaper Awards and Amnesty International. He is also the author of five non-fiction books about New Brunswick politics and history.




 




 
 

Darell Fowlie

Darell Fowlie works as Director of Parliamentary Affairs for House of Commons.
Darell can be reached at 506-778-8448

First name
Darell
Last name
Fowlie
Title
Director of Parliamentary Affairs
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506-778-8448
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Fax Number
613-996-8418
Email

Street Address
229 Wellington Street (view on map)
Country
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Province
Ontario
City
Ottawa
Postal Code
K1A 0A6
Department
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House of Commons
Organization
92483-92483

Jake Stewart
 
 

Darell Fowlie's team







Aiden Ingersoll Constituency Assistant 506-778-8448 229 Wellington Street Ottawa Ontario
Andrew Dawson (2023) Parliamentary Assistant 506-778-8448 229 Wellington Street Ottawa Ontario
Andrew Russell (2022) Parliamentary Assistant 506-778-8448 229 Wellington Street Ottawa Ontario
Denver Brennan (2024) Special Assistant 506-778-8448 229 Wellington Street Ottawa Ontario
Eric Walls (2023) Special Assistant 506-778-8448 229 Wellington Street Ottawa Ontario
Ethan Brown (2023) Intern 613-992-5335 229 Wellington Street Ottawa Ontario
Jake Stewart Member of Parliament 613-992-5335 229 Wellington Street Ottawa Ontario
Julia Curtis (2022) Administrative Assistant 506-778-8448 229 Wellington Street Ottawa Ontario
Kateryna Orlova Parliamentary Assistant 613-992-5335 229 Wellington Street Ottawa Ontario
Madeleine Ashe (2022) Administrative Assistant 613-992-5335 229 Wellington Street Ottawa Ontario
Melissa Gilbert (2023) Constituency Assistant 506-778-8448 229 Wellington Street Ottawa Ontario
Michael Morrison (2024) Chief of Staff 506-778-8448 229 Wellington Street Ottawa Ontario
Piper Duffy (2022) Administrative Assistant 506-778-8448 229 Wellington Street Ottawa Ontario
Stephanie Cook Constituency Assistant 506-778-8448 229 Wellington Street Ottawa Ontario
Susan Brophy (2023) Constituency Assistant 506-778-8448 229 Wellington Street Ottawa Ontario
 
 
 
 

Darell Fowlie fired by N.L. PCs over Larry's Gulch scandal

N.L. Tories hired Darell Fowlie to work on the party's re-election campaign

The PC Party of Newfoundland and Labrador has fired former Alward government official Darell Fowlie over his role in the Larry's Gulch cover-up controversy.

The party issued a one-line statement Wednesday saying it only recently learned of the scandal involving the altering of New Brunswick government documents.

"Due to information the PC Party of Newfoundland and Labrador was made aware of recently, the party has concluded its contractual relationship with Mr. Darell Fowlie," the statement says.

An investigation by Anne Bertrand, the province's information commissioner, concluded Fowlie and another PC-appointed deputy minister broke the province's Right to Information and Protection of Personal Privacy law in 2014.

As a favour to newspaper editor Murray Guy, Fowlie arranged for guest logs from the government-owned Larry's Gulch fishing lodge to be changed, removing a reference to Guy's trip there in July 2013. Another PC appointee, Greg Lutes, the deputy minister of tourism, was also involved.

Fowlie was Premier David Alward's deputy minister of communications from October 2010 to September 2013, when he left the New Brunswick government to work as a consultant preparing the New Brunswick PC Party's re-election campaign.

He recently signed on to work for the Newfoundland and Labrador PC Party's campaign ahead of November's election.

On Tuesday, party executive director Sharon Vokey confirmed "that we've hired Darell on" but said his role wasn't defined yet.

She wouldn't comment on whether the Larry's Gulch findings would affect his hiring.

The New Brunswick Liberal government has asked the Office of Public Prosecutions to look at Bertrand's report to decide if charges should be brought to court.

The violation of the act is an administrative offence that carries a maximum $10,200 fine.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Jacques Poitras

Provincial Affairs reporter

Jacques Poitras has been CBC's provincial affairs reporter in New Brunswick since 2000. He grew up in Moncton and covered Parliament in Ottawa for the New Brunswick Telegraph-Journal. He has reported on every New Brunswick election since 1995 and won awards from the Radio Television Digital News Association, the National Newspaper Awards and Amnesty International. He is also the author of five non-fiction books about New Brunswick politics and history.

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices
 
 

Premier announces deputy ministerial appointment

FREDERICTON (GNB) – Gérald Richard has been appointed deputy minister of Education and Early Childhood Development (francophone sector). The appointment is effective Jan. 20.

Premier David Alward made the announcement today.

"I am confident that Gérald's experience, expertise and talent will help support the efforts in the department," Alward said. "Staff will benefit from his leadership as they continue to work together to rebuild education and early childhood needs in the province."

Richard has a well-rounded career. He has held several positions in the education system at the school and district levels. He became assistant deputy minister of Education and Early Childhood Development in January 2011 and most recently served as the superintendent of the francophone south school district in Dieppe.

Alward also thanked the outgoing deputy minister, Roger Doucet.

"I wish to thank Roger Doucet, who retires after more than 20 years of service to the people of New Brunswick," Alward said. "As well, I remain confident that the leadership team moving forward will help us rebuild our province as we work to return to fiscal health and shift our efforts toward a more focused, efficient and effective system of program and service delivery."

Following is the complete list of deputy ministers, deputy heads and presidents of Crown corporations (* denotes a change or addition):

Nancy McKay
Chief of Staff, Office of the Premier

Byron James
Clerk of the Executive Council and Secretary to Cabinet

Darell Fowlie    
Deputy Minister, Office of the Premier

Dallas McCready
Deputy Minister, Strategic Initiatives, Executive Council Office

Greg Lutes
Secretary to the Policy and Priorities Committee of Cabinet, Executive Council Office

Judith Keating
Deputy Attorney General
Deputy Minister, Justice

Dale Wilson
Deputy Minister, Public Safety

Jane Garbutt
Deputy Minister, Finance (acting)
Deputy Minister, Human Resources

Sylvie Levesque-Finn
Deputy Minister, Government Services
President, Service New Brunswick
President, New Brunswick Internal Services Agency

Jean-Marc Dupuis
Deputy Minister, Transportation and Infrastructure

Phil LePage
Deputy Minister, Natural Resources

Jean Finn
Deputy Minister, Energy and Mines

Robert Rioux
Deputy Minister, Agriculture, Aquaculture and Fisheries

Marc Léger
Deputy Minister, Health

Edith Doucet    
Deputy Minister, Social Development

Tom Mann
Deputy Minister, Post-Secondary Education, Training and Labour

Gérald Richard*
Deputy Minister, Education and Early Childhood Development (francophone sector)

Wendy McLeod-MacKnight
Deputy Minister, Education and Early Childhood Development (anglophone sector)

Denis Caron    
Deputy Minister, Environment and Local Government

Margaret-Ann Blaney
President, Efficiency NB

Bill Levesque   
Deputy Minister, Economic Development
President, Regional Development Corporation

Robert MacLeod
President, Invest NB

Kelly Cain
Deputy Minister, Tourism, Heritage and Culture

Carolyn MacKay
Deputy Minister, Healthy and Inclusive Communities

Patrick Francis

Deputy Minister, Aboriginal Affairs

Media Contact(s)

Jesse Robichaud, communications, Office of the Premier, 506-453-2144.

 

 
 
 

Premier announces senior leadership changes

FREDERICTON (GNB) – Premier David Alward today announced changes to his senior leadership team, allowing for an even greater focus on New Brunswick's economic and resource development priorities.

“Creating jobs and strengthening the economy requires the right kind of experience in the right place at the right time,” said Alward. “I am confident that these changes to the senior ranks of the public service will allow us to continue moving toward our goal of rebuilding New Brunswick.”

Roger Clinch has been appointed chief of staff in the Office of the Premier. As a former mayor, member of Parliament and senior manager in the private sector, Clinch brings more than 25 years of leadership and public sector experience to the role.

The following changes at the deputy minister level are being made in support of government's key economic and resource development priorities:

●    Denis Caron, currently deputy minister of Environment and Local Government, becomes deputy minister of Economic Development.

●    Bill Levesque, currently deputy minister of Economic Development, becomes deputy minister of Natural Resources.

●    Phil Lepage, currently deputy minister of Natural Resources, becomes deputy minister of Environment and Local Government.
 
In addition to changes designed to strengthen job creation and strengthen the economy, further changes to the senior leadership team are being made to provide continuity and to advance major reform areas across government:

●    Nancy McKay, currently chief of staff in the Office of the Premier, becomes secretary to the Policy and Priorities committee of cabinet and deputy minister for Intergovernmental Affairs and the Women's Equality Branch.

●    Daniel Allain, currently president and chief executive officer of NB Liquor, becomes deputy minister, management and administration in the Office of the Premier, effective Oct. 18.  An executive search firm has been engaged to recruit a new president and chief executive officer for NB Liquor, as was recommended in the strategic review submitted to cabinet in 2012.

●    Darell Fowlie, currently deputy minister responsible for communications in the Office of the Premier, begins a one-year leave of absence to return to the private sector, effective Oct. 18. In his absence, Christianna Williston will serve as the premier's director of communications.

●    Judith Keating, currently deputy Attorney General and deputy minister of Justice, becomes chief legal advisor to the premier on aboriginal and intergovernmental affairs and related issues. Guy Daigle will act as deputy Attorney General and deputy minister of Justice until a permanent replacement is recruited through an external search process.

●    Greg Lutes, currently secretary to the Policy and Priorities committee of cabinet, becomes deputy minister of Tourism, Heritage and Culture.

●    Kelly Cain, currently deputy minister of Tourism, Heritage and Culture, becomes deputy minister of Human Resources.

●    Kim Daley, currently deputy minister of Human Resources, becomes deputy minister of Government Services, president of Service New Brunswick and president of the NB Internal Services Agency.

●    Sylvie Levesque-Finn, currently deputy minister of Government Services, president of Service New Brunswick and president of the NB Internal Services Agency, has decided to retire from the New Brunswick civil service at the end of the year and will take on a special assignment at the Executive Council Office until then.
 
Except where noted, all changes are effective in the month of September, 2013.
 
“I recognize the important contribution each of these dedicated public servants has made to rebuilding New Brunswick,” Alward said. “Our government is reinforcing our focus on creating jobs and strengthening the economy and these changes will further that commitment.”

BIOGRAPHY: Roger Clinch

Clinch has more than 25 years of leadership and public sector experience. He has worked at Xstrata Zinc in various leadership capacities including most recently as manager of its operations in Ireland. He has also served as a member of Parliament, the mayor of Bathurst, and as a community volunteer. He holds degrees from St. Thomas University and the Université de Moncton.

Following is the complete list of deputy ministers, deputy heads and presidents of Crown corporations (* denotes a change or addition):

Roger Clinch*
Chief of Staff, Office of the Premier

Byron James
Clerk of the Executive Council and Secretary to Cabinet

Nancy McKay*
Secretary to the Policy and Priorities committee of Cabinet, Executive Council Office and Deputy Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs and the Women's Equality Branch

Darell Fowlie (leave of absence)*
Deputy Minister, responsible for Communications, Office of the Premier

Dallas McCready
Deputy Minister responsible for Strategic Initiatives, Executive Council Office

Daniel Allain*    
Deputy Minister, Management and Administration, Office of the Premier

Guy Daigle*
Acting Deputy Attorney General and Deputy Minister of Justice

Dale Wilson
Deputy Minister of Public Safety

Jane Garbutt
Deputy Minister of Finance

Kelly Cain*
Deputy Minister of Human Resources

Kim Daley*
Deputy Minister of Government Services
President, Service New Brunswick
President, New Brunswick Internal Services Agency

Jean-Marc Dupuis
Deputy Minister of Transportation and Infrastructure

Bill Levesque*
Deputy Minister of Natural Resources

Jean Finn
Deputy Minister of Energy and Mines

Robert Rioux
Deputy Minister of Agriculture, Aquaculture and Fisheries

Marc Léger
Deputy Minister of Health

Edith Doucet
Deputy Minister of Social Development

Tom Mann
Deputy Minister of Post-Secondary Education, Training and Labour

Gérald Richard
Deputy Minister of Education and Early Childhood Development (francophone sector)

John McLaughlin
Deputy Minister of Education and Early Childhood Development (anglophone sector)

Phil Lepage*
Deputy Minister of Environment and Local Government

Margaret-Ann Blaney
President of Efficiency NB

Denis Caron*
Deputy Minister of Economic Development

Robert MacLeod
President, Invest NB

Greg Lutes*
Deputy Minister of Tourism, Heritage and Culture

Patrick Francis
Deputy Minister of Aboriginal Affairs

Carolyn MacKay
Deputy Minister of Healthy and Inclusive Communities

Media Contact(s)

Jesse Robichaud, communications, Office of the Premier, 506-453-2144.