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Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick

 
Wikipedia: Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick
Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick
Assemblée législative du Nouveau-Brunswick(French)
Type
Type Unicameral
Houses Legislative Assembly
Leadership
Speaker Roy Boudreau, Liberal Party
since 2007
Structure
Members 55
Meeting place
Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick.jpg
Legislative Building, Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada
Website
www.gnb.ca/legis/

The Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick is located in Fredericton. It was established de jure when the colony was created in 1784, but only came in to session in 1786 following the first elections in late 1785. Until 1891, it was the lower house in a bicameral legislature when its upper house counterpart, the Legislative Council of New Brunswick, was abolished. Its members are called "Members of the Legislative Assembly" commonly referred to as "MLAs".

Rendition of party representation in the current Legislative Assembly, as of March 20, 2009 when the by-election victor Burt Paulin takes his seat.      Liberals (33)      Progressive Conservatives (22)

The New Brunswick Legislative Building is the current building that houses the Assembly. It opened in 1882, having been constructed by J.C. Dumaresq, following the destruction of the original building, known as Province Hall, by fire in 1880. It is a Victorian building with a 41 metre wide dome.

The legislative chamber is designed to have four rows on the government side and three rows on the opposition side. This is because elections have traditionally yielded a strong government majority; in fact on occasion, even with many of the seats on one side of the House, the government has spilled over to the opposition side. Quite often the House is oriented to have only two rows on the opposition benches, in the event of a large opposition adding a third row makes the opposition benches rather crowded.

Members

Most of the current members were elected at the 56th general election held on September 18, 2006. The exceptions are Chris Collins, who was elected in a by-election on March 5, 2007 as a result of the resignation of Bernard Lord on January 31, 2007; Jack Carr, who was elected in a by-election on November 3, 2008 as a result of the resignation of Keith Ashfield; and Burt Paulin, who was a elected in a by-election on March 9, 2009 as a result of the resignature of Percy Mockler, Paul will took his seat on March 20, 2009. The standing of the legislature also changed when MLAs Joan MacAlpine-Stiles and Wally Stiles crossed the floor from the Progressive Conservatives to the Liberals on April 17, 2007.

     Hédard Albert Liberal Caraquet
     David Alward Progressive Conservative Woodstock
     Donald Arseneault Liberal Dalhousie-Restigouche East
     John Betts Progressive Conservative Moncton Crescent
     Margaret-Ann Blaney Progressive Conservative Rothesay
     Roy Boudreau Liberal Campbellton-Restigouche Centre
     Victor Boudreau Liberal Shediac-Cap-Pélé
     Rick Brewer Liberal Southwest Miramichi
     T. J. Burke Liberal Fredericton-Nashwaaksis
     Greg Byrne Liberal Fredericton-Lincoln
     Jack Carr Progressive Conservative New Maryland-Sunbury West
     Jody Carr Progressive Conservative Oromocto
     Chris Collins Liberal Moncton East
     Ed Doherty Liberal Saint John Harbour
     Rick Doucet Liberal Charlotte-The Isles
     Madeleine Dubé Progressive Conservative Edmundston-Saint Basile
     R. Bruce Fitch Progressive Conservative Riverview
     John Winston Foran Liberal Miramichi Centre
     Bill Fraser Liberal Miramichi-Bay du Vin
     Dale Graham Progressive Conservative Carleton
     Shawn Graham Liberal Kent
     Roland Haché Liberal Nigadoo-Chaleur
     Bev Harrison Progressive Conservative Hampton-Kings
     Trevor Holder Progressive Conservative Saint John Portland
     Tony Huntjens Progressive Conservative Charlotte-Campobello
     Stuart Jamieson Liberal Saint John-Fundy
     Jack Keir Liberal Fundy-River Valley
     Larry Kennedy Liberal Victoria-Tobique
     Brian Kenny Liberal Bathurst
     Kelly Lamrock Liberal Fredericton-Fort Nashwaak
     Claude Landry Progressive Conservative Tracadie-Sheila
     Denis Landry Liberal Centre-Péninsule-Saint-Saveur
     Cheryl Lavoie Liberal Nepisiguit
     Abel LeBlanc Liberal Saint John Lancaster
     Bernard LeBlanc Liberal Memramcook-Lakeville-Dieppe
     Cy LeBlanc Progressive Conservative Dieppe Centre-Lewisville
     Joan MacAlpine-Stiles Liberal Moncton West
     Kirk MacDonald Progressive Conservative York North
     Roly MacIntyre Liberal Saint John East
     Eugene McGinley Liberal Grand Lake-Gagetown
     Rick Miles Liberal Fredericton-Silverwood
     Mike Murphy Liberal Moncton North
     Bruce Northrup Progressive Conservative Kings East
     Mike Olscamp Progressive Conservative Tantramar
     Ronald Ouellette Liberal Grand Falls-Drummond-Saint-André
     Burt Paulin Liberal Restigouche-La-Vallée
     Rose-May Poirier Progressive Conservative Rogersville-Kouchibouguac
     Carmel Robichaud Liberal Miramichi Bay-Neguac
     Paul Robichaud Progressive Conservative Lamèque-Shippagan-Miscou
     Mary Schryer Liberal Quispamsis
     Wayne Steeves Progressive Conservative Albert
     Wally Stiles Liberal Petitcodiac
     Carl Urquhart Progressive Conservative York
     Jeannot Volpé Progressive Conservative Madawaska-les-Lacs
     Claude Williams Progressive Conservative Kent South

Party standings and seating plan

    Jack Carr Olscamp   C. Landry C. LeBlanc
    MacDonald Holder   Jody Carr D. Graham   Williams Betts   Northrup Urquhart
    Fitch Volpé   Alward P. Robichaud   Blaney Dubé   Steeves Poirier   Huntjens Harrison
 
R. Boudreau
 
    Schryer V. Boudreau   S. Graham Murphy   Byrne Burke   Jamieson Haché   D. Landry McGinley
    Doherty Stiles   Lamrock Arseneault   Keir Albert   MacIntyre Lavoie   C. Robichaud Fraser
    Ouellette Doucet   Foran Brewer   B. LeBlanc Kenny   MacAlpine-Stiles Miles   A. LeBlanc
    Collins Kennedy   Paulin
**** * **** **** * **** **** * **** **** * **** **** * **** ****
  • Pink-red represents members of cabinet, while red are backbench government members.
  • Large text represents party leaders.

The current party standings in the legislature are as follows:

Affiliation Members
     Liberal 33
  Progressive Conservative 22
  Vacant 0
Total 55
Government Majority 6

See also


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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick" Read more