Impressive number of candidates gearing up for municipal byelections, says Elections N.B. - Action News
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New Brunswick

Impressive number of candidates gearing up for municipal byelections, says Elections N.B.

Ten municipalities in New Brunswick will hold byelections in December an unusually high number. Most of the municipalities have at least three candidates running, while Saint John has 11.

Voters in 10 municipalities will go to the polls on Dec. 9

A man walking into a building with yellow Vote Here signs
Byelections will be held in 10 municipalities on Dec. 9. (Andrew Vaughan/Canadian Press)

Ten municipalities will be looking to fill mayor and councillor vacancies in the province's nextset of byelections in December, and the list of candidates is surprisinglylong,according to Elections New Brunswick.

"It's not unusual for us to see very few candidates actually put their name forward at byelections," said Chief Electoral OfficerKim Poffenroth."To have 10, four or even threecandidates for a single positionit's impressive."

Saint John, where a city council vacancy opened in Octoberwhen David Hickey was elected MLA, has 11 candidates running to represent the city's Ward 3.Poffenroth described that as"a significant number."

A woman with blond hair with a CBC-branded microphone in front of her
Kim Poffenroth, New Brunswick's chief electoral officer, says the 'unusual' increase in candidates for the municipalities is 'impressive.' (Roger Cosman/CBC)

The responsibilities of an elected municipal government official include deciding the budget and determining the level of services needed, such as recreation, fire, police, snow-clearing and garbage collection.

In Beausoleil, fivecandidates are vying to become the next mayor.

The majority ofmunicipalitiesholding byelectionson Dec. 9have at least threecandidates running.

Only two council vacancieshave nocandidates. Four municipalities that had vacancies only had one candidate, so they were elected byacclamation, according to Elections N.B.

WATCH | N.B. chief electoral officer says high interest in byelections is 'impressive':

N.B. municipal byelections seeing unusually high number of candidates

7 hours ago
Duration 2:22
Byelections are due to be held in more than a dozen municipalities next month, and more candidates than normal are running to fill mayor and councillor vacancies.

"To me,it shows that people are interested in serving their communities,"Poffenroth said."There may be some burning issues in those particular communities that have made people particularly interested in giving back."

Turnout for local byelections held last fallwas 19 per cent, whichPoffenroth described at the time as "typical."

Community members stepping up

The high number of candidates running for thevacancy in Saint John's Ward 3 may make it difficult for voters to choose a representative, especially in such a short time, saidRandy Hatfield, executive director of the Human Development Council.

Buthe thinks the amount of interest speaks to the willingness of community members to step forwardand"come up with possibilities for change" in what he says isa ward with significant challenges.

"What makes Ward 3 particular is that it is under-performing by most socioeconomic measures, whether it's the prevalence of lone parent families, the high levels of income poverty, the number of renters as opposed to property owners,"Hatfield said. "There's lots to chew on."

According to a recent report by the group, the child poverty rate in Ward 3 is about double New Brunswick's average rate of child poverty.The report also says that Ward 3's child, senior and overall poverty rates are the highest of the city's four wards.

Man in blue shirt and glasses.
Randy Hatfield, the executive director of Saint Johns Human Development Council, says Ward 3 underperforms on most socioeconomic measures, such as high poverty levels. (Roger Cosman/CBC)

The organization held a forum on Monday in which Hatfield, as moderator, asked what candidates considered the ward's top prioritiesand how they would address them. Itwas also a reminder to the community, Hatfield said, that an election is happening there.

Poffenroth saidSaint John has a history of drawing high interest in running for council,with relatively highnumbers of byelection candidates in the 1990s and the early 2000s, although they were all councillor-at-large positions at that time.

Saint John also doesn't often have municipal byelection vacancies, she said.

"So I would say this is somewhat reflective of past history in Saint John."

Fewer municipalities, demographicspossible factors

Tom Bateman, aSt. Thomas University political science professor,attributes some of the upsurge in candidacies across the province to municipalchanges made in 2023, when the former Blaine Higgs-led government merged several municipalities in New Brunswick.

That may haveled to fewervacancies to run for, he said, though there areother factors to consider as well.

"It may be people animated by very particular issues that have arisen in their local areas. It might be an increasingly older population in New Brunswick with time on its hands to turn to some public service," he said.

Man looking at camera with neutral expression in Zoom call.
Political science professor Tom Bateman says the upsurge may be due to the reduced number of municipalities in the province. (Zoom)

Bateman saidthere have been similar increases incandidate numbers inelections for other levels of government.

"For example, the federal byelections in this country in 2024 have had bizarre numbers of candidates," he said. "There were about 50 candidates for the seat in the Winnipeg federal byelection earlier this year and in Toronto the number was about 100 or so candidates."

He saidthat "anti-system resentments" may play a role in these increases at the federal level but may not necessarily be a large contributor on the municipal level. He also saidthe low level of participation that's typical in local races can be appealing to some who are looking to run.

Corrections

  • A previous version of this story incorrectly stated the number of municipalities that would be holding byelections on Dec. 9.
    Nov 21, 2024 8:03 AM AT