Cape Breton Post

NDP hope history is on its side as it grapples with key departures

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HALIFAX (CP) — In a province where voters have granted a second term or more to every government for the past 131 years, Nova Scotia’s New Democrats are hoping history will repeat itself when the election is held next week.

But the New Democrats, led by Premier Darrell Dexter, are trailing the Liberals in the polls and the NDP’s status as incumbent party has been shaken by a series of key departures before the Oct 8. election was called.

In the Halifax area, the party’s traditiona­l stronghold since the 1990s, five of the party’s most senior members are not seeking reelection.

“It’s got to be worrisome for the NDP,” says Jeff MacLeod, chairman of the political studies program at Mount Saint Vincent University in Halifax.

“That (stronghold) could come apart in one election, easily. It isn’t a long historical trend. It’s a relatively recent one if you look at the entire scope of Nova Scotia politics. The threads are thin.”

The NDP stalwarts not seeking re-election include three former cabinet ministers: Bill Estabrooks in Timberlea-Prospect, Marilyn More in Dartmouth South and Graham Steele in Fairview-Clayton Park.

Steele, the former finance minister and a Rhodes Scholar, was the NDP’s high-profile point man on a number of important files.

As well, NDP veterans Howard Epstein in Halifax Chebucto and Michele Raymond in Halifax Atlantic stepped down after serving their ridings for at least a decade.

When Nova Scotia became the first province east of Ontario to elect an NDP government, the party’s success in 2009 was largely attributed to breakthrou­gh wins in rural constituen­cies.

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