2002 New Brunswick Liberal Association leadership election

The New Brunswick Liberal Association held a leadership election in 2002 to replace former leader Camille Thériault with a new leader to lead the party into the 2003 election. Shawn Graham was elected over Jack MacDougall, after a number of high-profile candidates decided not to seek the leadership or had dropped out.

2002 New Brunswick Liberal Association leadership election
DateMay 12, 2002
ConventionFredericton
Resigning leaderCamille Thériault
Won byShawn Graham
Ballots1
Candidates2

Candidates

Withdrawn candidate

  • Paul Duffie, MLA from 1987 to 1999 and cabinet minister from 1991 to 1997. Duffie contested delegate selection meetings but withdrew before the convention.

Non candidates

The following candidates were rumoured to be considering runs but did not enter the race.[1]

  • Greg Byrne, MLA from 1995 to 1999, cabinet minister from 1997 to 1999 and 1998 leadership runner up.
  • Steve MacKinnon, former executive director of the party.
  • Francis McGuire, former aide to premier Frank McKenna and former deputy minister of economic development.
  • Mike Murphy, former president of the party.
  • Bernard Richard, MLA since 1991, cabinet minister from 1995 to 1998, 1998 leadership candidate and interim leader.

Results

The leadership contest was conducted in two-tiers. First, Liberal members voted in their ridings for their leadership candidate of choice, after which delegates from each riding were elected proportionally to the votes of their members. Second, delegates voted at the May convention.

Delegate selection meetings

Liberal delegate selection results[2]
Feb. to Mar., 2002
Candidate % of delegates
Shawn Graham 48.0
Paul Duffie 35.6
Jack MacDougall 8.4
uncommitted 7.1

Convention

2002 Liberal leadership convention results[3]
May 12, 2002
Candidate Votes %
Shawn Graham 1,349 74.5
Jack MacDougall 461 25.5

References

  1. Chisolm Pothier. "Backroom boys pin hopes on Graham," The Daily Gleaner, May 13, 2002.
  2. "The party's headquarters, which remain independent during the campaign, sent out the final delegate numbers yesterday. With Duffie still in the race, Graham was at 48 per cent, Duffie at 35.6 per cent, Jack MacDougall at 8.4 per cent and the undecided at 7.1 per cent." - Daniel McHardie. "Graham now has 54% of votes," Times & Transcript, March 29, 2002.
  3. The Canadian Press. "New Brunswick Liberal leader gets down to work on next election," May 12, 2002.
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