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Nova Scotia Progressive Conservatives win second consecutive majority government

HALIFAX — Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston has led the Progressive Conservatives to a decisive majority win, having told voters he needed a new mandate to send a strong message to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.
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Nova Scotia Liberal Leader Zach Churchill, NDP Leader Claudia Chender and Progressive Conservative Leader Tim Houston attend the provincial election debate in Halifax on Nov. 14, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darren Calabrese

HALIFAX — Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston has led the Progressive Conservatives to a decisive majority win, having told voters he needed a new mandate to send a strong message to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

As the returns rolled in on Tuesday night, the Tories were leading or elected in 38 of the legislature's 55 ridings. The New Democrats were at 10 and the Liberals had 2.

With the latest results, it appeared the New Democrats were poised to form the official Opposition, replacing the Liberals, who appeared to be in an electoral free fall.

With the Tories riding high in the polls, Houston called a snap election on Oct. 27, saying he needed to strengthen his bargaining position with the leader of the country’s unpopular federal Liberal government, especially when it came to securing a new deal on carbon pricing.

What followed was a low-key election campaign that saw Houston offering a no-frills, stay-the-course platform.

But the premier faced withering criticism from Liberal Leader Zach Churchill and NDP Leader Claudia Chender, both of whom accused Houston of ignoring the first law his government passed in 2021, setting July 15, 2025, as the date for the next election.

In 2021, Houston said the law would "limit any perceived advantage by the government."

Chender and Churchill — both contesting their first election as a party leader — accused the premier of breaking his promise for a fixed-date election on the first day of the fall campaign.

At dissolution, Houston’s Tories held 34 seats, the Liberals had 14 seats, the NDP six and there was one Independent. In the past year, two Liberals crossed the floor to join the Tories.

On Monday, the last day of the campaign, Chender challenged Houston’s justification for calling an early election.

“The idea that this government needs a mandate to bicker with Ottawa is absurd,” said the 48-year-old lawyer and mother of three. “This government called an election because they want more power.”

The New Democrats had languished in third place since the province’s first NDP government, elected in 2009 with Darrell Dexter at the helm, lost to the Liberals in 2013.

The Tory win breaks a recent trend that has seen other provincial governments getting roughed up by the electorate or thrown out of office.

Last month, B.C. NDP Premier David Eby barely held on to power when voters outside Vancouver Island and the Lower Mainland threw their support behind the Conservative Party of BC, a party that barely existed 18 months ago.

Less than a week later in New Brunswick, Progressive Conservative premier Blaine Higgs lost his bid for a second term after adopting a series of socially conservative measures and alienating much of his caucus. And on Oct. 28, Saskatchewan Premier Scott Moe won a substantially reduced majority as his Saskatchewan Party was almost shut out of the province's big cities.

Houston, a 54-year-old chartered accountant, also told voters he wanted their approval for his plans to deal with a stubborn affordability crisis and a desperate housing shortage that has seen the province’s homeless population soar.

But the telegenic, silver-haired premier repeatedly returned to his complaints about Trudeau. Houston also took aim at Ottawa's refusal to pay the entire cost of shoring up the Chignecto Isthmus, the strip of land between New Brunswick and Nova Scotia that is increasingly at risk of severe flooding.

During a televised leaders debate, Churchill took aim at Houston’s bid to capitalize on Trudeau’s slumping popularity.

"Mr. Houston would rather kick and scream and whine than actually do his job and negotiate a better deal for you," said Churchill a 40-year-old career politician with experience as a policy analyst.

When the Tories released their election platform Nov. 8, Houston said the slim, 28-page document represented a "continuation of a plan that is already working."

By contrast, the hefty platform Houston released in 2021 was 130 pages, and the focus of that campaign was almost entirely on his promise to "fix" a health-care system beset by a shortage of doctors, long wait-times for ambulances and recurring horror stories about people failing to receive proper treatment.

Last week, during another televised leaders debate, Chender and Churchill reminded the premier that the registry for Nova Scotians seeking a family doctor had doubled under his watch to reach more than 140,000.

Houston responded by saying Nova Scotians had to be patient. "The job is not done, for sure, but there has been incredible progress," he said, emphasizing the need for more time rather than big changes.

The premier repeatedly told voters that the province’s economy was growing, and there were hundreds more doctors and thousands more nurses in the province than in 2021. "I was clear with Nova Scotians in 2021 that things would probably get worse before they get better, and they did get worse," he said in the introduction to his party’s platform. "But we're on the right path."

As for affordability, the Tories’ signature promise is to lower the harmonized sales tax by one percentage point to 14 per cent. They also pledged to cap electricity rate increases so that they won't exceed the national average. And they pledged to raise the minimum wage to $16.50 an hour by next year.

On the housing front, Houston promised to follow through on his 2023 promise to build 40,000 homes in four years. During the campaign, the premier said he would press on with that plan, saying, "We're on a good path. We have a plan. The plan is working."

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Nov. 26, 2024.

— With files from Lyndsay Armstrong in New Glasgow, N.S., and Cassidy McMackon in Halifax.

Michael MacDonald, The Canadian Press

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