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He previously ran as a Green Party candidate for the same district in the 2020 New Brunswick general election, [3] switching to the Liberals in 2024 due to his support of Liberal leader Susan Holt. He is the province's first out gay member of the Legislative Assembly, as Richard Hatfield was not out during his political career.
Hodges was a founding director of the First Bank of Brunswick, and later its CEO. [2] The bank was purchased by Ameris Bancorp in 2001. [1]Hodges announced his run for the Georgia State Senate in February 2022.
Tania Sodhi is a realtor and politician who resides in Moncton, New Brunswick. And was elected to the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick in the 2024 election. She was elected in the riding of Moncton Northwest. [1] Sodhi is originally from Patiala, a city in Punjab, India. [2]
New Brunswick, unlike most provinces, allows political party funding from non-residents. In January 2024, Liberal and Green leaders Holt and Coon both made a promise to forbid New Brunswick political party donations from out-of-province sources in response to Higgs going to Alberta and British Columbia on a fundraising trip for his party. [67]
Vickers resignation followed the outcome of the 2020 New Brunswick general election which saw the Progressive Conservative party, under Blaine Higgs, form a majority government and the Liberal Party lose three seats. The deadline for candidates to file their intention to run for the leadership was June 15, 2022.
The New Brunswick Liberal Association scheduled a leadership convention for June 22, 2019, in Saint John, New Brunswick, as a result of Brian Gallant's announcement on November 15, 2018, that he will be resigning as party leader. On December 28, 2018, he announced that he would be stepping down effective the next Liberal caucus meeting, in ...
Saint John West-Lancaster is a provincial electoral district for the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick, Canada. The riding was created prior to the 1995 election as Saint John Lancaster. It was renamed Saint John West-Lancaster following the 2023 redistribution. The riding name refers to Lancaster, New Brunswick.
In 2024, Libertarian Party fielded 18 candidates, winning 0.5% of the popular vote overall, behind the Liberals, Progressive Conservatives, Greens, NDP, and People's Alliance, and placed last in each riding contested by the party. Individual candidates received from 0.6% to 1.9% of the vote in their constituencies.