1958 New Brunswick Liberal Association leadership election explained

Party:New Brunswick Liberal Association
Year:1958
Date:October 11, 1958
Location:Fredericton, New Brunswick
Ballots:3
Numcands:7

The New Brunswick Liberal Association held a leadership election on October 11, 1958, in Fredericton, New Brunswick, to elect a new leader for the party. The position was left vacant following former leader Austin Claude Taylor's appointment to the Senate of Canada in early 1957.

The leadership election saw seven total candidates in three ballots; during the first ballot, one was eliminated and three withdrew. Louis Robichaud won the overall election with 517 votes during the third ballot.

Background

On January 4, 1957, then-New Brunswick Liberal Association leader Austin Claude Taylor was appointed to the Senate of Canada by Louis St. Laurent, representing Westmorland County; as a result, his provincial leadership position, which he had held since 1954, was made vacant.[1] [2] Joseph E. Connolly, a Liberal legislative member representing Gloucester, took on the role as house leader for the time being.[3]

Leadership convention

On September 14, 1958, the party called for a leadership convention to be held between October 10–11, 1958. It had already been determined that T. E. Duffie, a barrister from Victoria County, as well as George T. Urquhart, a defeated 1956 provincial election candidate from Saint John, were candidates. Other Liberal figures were also mentioned as potential candidates such as Connolly, Louis Robichaud,[3] a legislative member for Kent and then-financial critic for the final legislative session,[4] Henry Murphy, as well as party secretary David M. Dickson.[3] Lester B. Pearson, the leader of the federal Liberal party, was to 'address the convention.'[5]

Election results

The leadership election began on October 11, 1958. It was held in Fredericton[6] for 883 Liberal delegates throughout the province[4] to vote between seven candidates: Connolly, Duffie, Murphy, Robichaud, Urquhart, as well as Howard Hicks, a schoolteacher from Minto,[6] [7] as well as A. Wesley Stuart, a former parliamentarian for Charlotte who made a last-minute candidacy declaration.[8]

The election results were publicized by newspapers on October 14, 1958. Robichaud emerged as the front-runner following the first ballot, which saw him receiving 239 votes. Stuart came in second place with 206, and Connolly received 176.[9] Hicks was eliminated after receiving one vote; Murphy, Duffie, and Urquhart all withdrew after receiving 53, 61, and 87 votes, respectively. Robichaud led the second ballot with 403 votes, Stuart received 278, and Connolly was eliminated with 151 votes. Robichaud received the most votes again in the third and final ballot, receiving 517 votes versus Stuart's 304 votes.[10] [11] Robichaud secured the overall majority vote and was elected as the new party leader,[4] of which he was considered as likely being "the youngest provincial party leader in Canada" at the time.[12]

1958 NBLA leadership ballot (votes)
CandidateFirst BallotSecond BallotThird Ballot
Louis Robichaud239403517
A. Wesley Stuart206278304
Joseph E. Connolly176151Eliminated
George T. Urquhart87Withdrawn
T. E. Duffie61Withdrawn
Henry J. Murphy53Withdrawn
Howard Hicks1Eliminated

Notes and References

  1. News: PM Appoints 4 Liberals To Senate . June 17, 2024 . . . January 4, 1957 . 1.
  2. News: Hume . J. A. . Four New Senators Appointed By PM . June 17, 2024 . . January 4, 1957 . 1.
  3. News: Liberals To Choose N.B. Chief . June 17, 2024 . . . September 15, 1958 . 13.
  4. News: Robichaud Leads N.B. Liberals . June 17, 2024 . . October 25, 1958 . 59.
  5. News: East Liberals To Name Leader . June 17, 2024 . . . September 15, 1958 . 22.
  6. News: Liberals In N.B. Name Chief Today . June 17, 2024 . . . October 11, 1958 . 55.
  7. News: New Brunswick Liberal Party To Choose New Leader . June 17, 2024 . . . October 11, 1958 . 32.
  8. News: N.B. Liberals Choose Leader . June 17, 2024 . . . October 14, 1958 . 55.
  9. News: Louis Robichaud élu chef libéral du N.B. . June 17, 2024 . . . October 14, 1958 . 2 . Google News Archive.
  10. News: L. J. Robichaud New Leader NB Liberals . June 17, 2024 . . . October 14, 1958 . 7.
  11. News: Youthful lawyer heads New Brunswick Liberals . June 17, 2024 . . . October 14, 1958 . 11.
  12. News: New Leader - Louis J. Robichaud . June 17, 2024 . . October 22, 1958 . 16.