Ottawa Citizen

Liberals take Nova Scotia

Voters turf NDP after just one term, elect Grits for first time in 14 years

- MELANIE PATTEN

HALIFAX Voters in Nova Scotia dumped the NDP on Tuesday after giving Darrell Dexter a historic election victory four years ago, turning this time to Liberal Stephen McNeil, who swept to power on promises to bring soaring electricit­y rates under control while putting an end to corporate handouts.

It’s been 14 years since the Liberals were in government and McNeil returns the party to its glory years of the 1990s with a majority.

Dexter lost his seat in Cole Harbour-Portland Valley by 31 votes in the Halifax-area riding, an area he represente­d in the legislatur­e for 15 years.

Several of his top cabinet ministers also went down in defeat, as the NDP tumbled to third place..

McNeil, 48, overcame a barrage of attacks ads from the NDP who questioned whether he had what it takes to be premier with the tag line: “Stephen McNeil, Not Worth the Risk.”

The former owner of an appliance repair business, who was easily re-elected in his riding of Annapolis, led the Liberals to victory after falling well short in 2009, when the party won 11 seats as the NDP swept the province.

Progressiv­e Conservati­ve Leader Jamie Baillie, who won his riding of Cumberland South, made tax cuts and frozen power rates the central commitment­s of his campaign. This was the first election as leader for Baillie, a 47-year-old chartered accountant

Darrell Dexter’s New Democratic Party had the misfortune of becoming the first government in 131 years to be denied a second term in Nova Scotia.

who was once chief of staff to former Tory premier John Hamm.

McNeil ran a safe campaign, offering no great spending initiative­s in a platform that promised to chop the number of health districts, cap classroom sizes and reduce spending, except for health and education, by one per cent annually.

Roughly at the midpoint of the 31-day campaign, McNeil made whistlesto­p visits to ridings in the Halifax area with Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau, the only federal leader to help his provincial counterpar­t during the race.

For Dexter, the defeat marked a reversal of fortunes since he became the first NDP premier to govern a province in Atlantic Canada. Instead, Dexter’s party had the misfortune of becoming the first government in 131 years to be denied a second term in Nova Scotia.

When Dexter, 56, came to power, he inherited a fragile economy and a massive deficit, which he blamed for breaking a key promise when he hiked the harmonized sales tax by two percentage points. The unpopular move was the one of several that tested the electorate’s patience, including the NDP’s failure to balance the budget as they promised four years ago.

His party was also stung by the departures of several key cabinet ministers who decided not to run again, particular­ly in Halifax, the party’s traditiona­l base of support.

 ?? MIKE DEMBECK/THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? Nova Scotia Liberal Leader Stephen McNeil raises his hand in victory at his campaign headquarte­rs in Bridgetown. The Liberals won a majority, defeating Darrell Dexter and the ruling NDP party, which finished third behind the PCs.
MIKE DEMBECK/THE CANADIAN PRESS Nova Scotia Liberal Leader Stephen McNeil raises his hand in victory at his campaign headquarte­rs in Bridgetown. The Liberals won a majority, defeating Darrell Dexter and the ruling NDP party, which finished third behind the PCs.

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