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Claudia Chender (born July 29, 1976) [2] is a Canadian politician and lawyer who has been serving as the leader of the Nova Scotia New Democratic Party since June 25, 2022. She was first elected to the Nova Scotia House of Assembly in the 2017 general election, representing the electoral district of Dartmouth South. [3]
Claudia Chender, the leader of the Nova Scotia New Democratic Party, is the current leader of the opposition. [1] Since 1928, when its upper house, the Legislative Council of Nova Scotia was abolished, the province has had a unicameral parliamentary government. From Confederation, however, Nova Scotia has exclusively followed the modern ...
65th General Assembly of Nova Scotia; Majority parliament: 10 December 2024 – present: Parliament leaders; Premier: Tim Houston since August 31, 2021: Leader of the Opposition: Claudia Chender since December 10, 2024: Party caucuses; Government: Progressive Conservative Party: Opposition: New Democratic Party: Recognized: Liberal Party: House ...
The 2022 Nova Scotia New Democratic Party leadership election took place on June 25, 2022 [1] to elect a leader to replace Gary Burrill, who announced his intention to resign on November 9, 2021 [4] after leading the party since 2016 and following the party's defeat in the 2021 Nova Scotia general election.
The Nova Scotia New Democratic Party (Nova Scotia NDP) is a social democratic political party in Nova Scotia, Canada. It is the provincial section for the province of the federal New Democratic Party. It was founded as the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) in 1932, and became the New Democratic Party in 1961.
Nova Scotia New Democratic Party: 1961 Social democracy: Claudia Chender: 2 Other registered parties. Name Founded Ideology Leader MLAs Green Party of Nova Scotia:
A growing property insurance crisis may make it hard to get a mortgage in parts of the country in the coming decades, Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said Tuesday in testimony before Congress.
The Canadian province of Nova Scotia was a British colony with a system of responsible government since 1848, before it joined Canadian Confederation in 1867. Since Confederation, the province has been a part of the Canadian federation and has kept its own legislature to deal with provincial matters.