Retired AF Guy
Army.ca Veteran
- Reaction score
- 925
- Points
- 1,160
In the latest news, Liberals win in Labrador byelection. Reproduced under the Fair Dealings section of the Copyright Act.
Article Link
This of course will give the Young Dauphin's standings a big boost; many Hallelujahs to follow.
Liberals take Labrador, as Jones wins big over Penashue
Former Conservative cabinet minister defeated by Liberal
By Rob Antle, CBC News
Posted: May 13, 2013 7:33 PM NT
Last Updated: May 13, 2013 9:52 PM NT
Yvonne Jones, seen campaigning last month with federal Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau, has won the Labrador byelection, defeating Conservative Peter Penashue. Yvonne Jones, seen campaigning last month with federal Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau, has won the Labrador byelection, defeating Conservative Peter Penashue. (CBC)
Yvonne Jones recaptured what has traditionally been safe Liberal ground, rolling up a big victory over Conservative Peter Penashue in Labrador’s federal byelection.
With two-thirds of the polls reporting, Jones has built an unassailable lead of more than 1,500 votes.
The Liberal candidate’s share of the vote was 51 per cent, compared with 30 per cent for Penashue and 19 per cent for the NDP’s Harry Borlase.
The CBC Decision Desk called the election for Jones just over an hour after the polls closed.
Elections Canada reported lineups at some polling stations when they opened at 8 a.m., and turnout was steady throughout the day in Happy Valley-Goose Bay.
Monday’s Labrador byelection was complicated by a spring snowstorm that hit the north coast near Natuashish.
Elections Canada permitted the use of transfer certificates, allowing voters stranded by weather to cast their ballots at other polling stations.
National implications of vote
The Labrador byelection has been widely viewed as a crucial first test for new Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau. The Official Opposition New Democrats were also hoping for a strong showing.
And the stakes were high for the governing party. Since taking power in 2006, the ruling Conservatives had never lost a byelection in a seat they held prior to the vote.
Conservative cabinet minister Peter Penashue resigned his seat in the House of Commons in March to run again in a byelection.Conservative cabinet minister Peter Penashue resigned his seat in the House of Commons in March to run again in a byelection. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)
Penashue quit as MP in March after repaying $30,000 in compensation for “ineligible contributions” he accepted during the 2011 election. He immediately announced he would run in the ensuing byelection.
The Liberal candidate, Yvonne Jones, represented the coastal Labrador district of Cartwright-L’Anse au Clair in the provincial legislature for 17 years before stepping down to run federally. She also served as provincial Liberal leader before a successful treatment for cancer.
The New Democrats are pinning their hopes on Harry Borlase, an analyst with the cold-ocean research organization C-CORE.
Longtime Liberal riding
Labrador has traditionally been a Liberal stronghold.
Penashue — a prominent Innu leader — wrested the riding away for the Conservatives in 2011, eking out a 79-vote win. He garnered less than 40 per cent of the ballots cast, and was helped by a stronger than expected NDP showing that siphoned off Liberal support.
Up until that surprise victory two years ago, the region had only once gone Conservative blue since Newfoundland and Labrador joined Canada in 1949.
From 1968 to 1972, Ambrose Peddle represented Labrador in Ottawa, as part of a near Tory sweep of federal seats in the province.
Article Link
This of course will give the Young Dauphin's standings a big boost; many Hallelujahs to follow.