More women heading to the legislature, but diverse candidates remain shut out - Action News
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New Brunswick

More women heading to the legislature, but diverse candidates remain shut out

More women are headed to New Brunswick's legislature after Monday night's election, but no candidates of colour, members of a First Nations or people who identify as LGBTQwill be heading to Fredericton this fall.

14 women won their ridings during Monday night's election, up from 11 in 2018

close up shot of middle-aged woman with red hair
PC candidate Jill Green is helping grow the number of women in the PC caucus after winning the riding of Fredericton North. (CBC News/Jacques Poitras)

New Brunswick voters are sending more women to New Brunswick's legislature, but no candidates of colour, members of a First Nations or people who identify as LGBTQwill be heading to Fredericton this fall.

Fourteen women won their ridings during Monday night's election, compared to 11 back in 2018.

Nine of those women will form part of the Progressive Conservative's caucus,a boost from the four they had after the last election.

"It's a new PC record," Premier BlaineHiggs said in his victory speech fromQuispamsis, where he watched his party gain seven seats to a form a majority government.

The Liberals, whose overall numbers slipped from 20 to 17, elected three women compared to the five they had in 2018.

Michelle Conroy, the People's Alliance's lone women in the house, will keep her Miramichi seat, this time defending it from Liberal Leader Kevin Vickers.

The People's Alliance of New Brunswick lost seats this time around, but Michelle Conroy successfully defended her riding. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)

Despite running agender-balanced slate, the Greens also didn't see an increase of women to their caucus this time around. Memramcook-Tantramar's Megan Mitton won back her seat and willrejoin the party's two other male MLAs.

Few diverse candidates in the running

New Brunswickers didn't have many options when it came to voting for non-white candidates. While227 candidates registered by the nomination deadline, just a smattering of candidates were persons of colour, Indigenous or identified as part of the LGBTQ community.

The Liberals had a Black man, a self-identified Indigenous woman and a transgender woman on their slate, but they didn't win in their ridings.

Vickers had said the party wanted to promote diversity as much as possible, but there wasn't much time to tap new candidates during a snap election and said women in particular were challenged by the prospect of having to "drop everything" to run.

NDP candidate Cyprien Okana unsuccessfully ran in the riding of Moncton Northwest. He described himself as an advocate for diversity and social justice. (Cyprien Okana/Facebook)

The Green Party boasted the most diverse slate with two Indigenous candidates, two women of colour and a candidate who self-identifies as queer but they won't be joining the party's three MLAs in the house.

While the PCs grew the number of women in their caucus, they didn't run anyIndigenous candidates or have any person of colour on their roster.

Two PC candidates publicly identified as gay, including Kevin Hach, the candidate in Caraquet, who is alawyer and the current mayor of Caraquet, and Mathieu Caissie, the candidate for Shediac Bay-Dieppe. Neither won.

The NDP registered one candidate of colour and another candidate who identifies as non-binary,but the party failed to elect a single candidate and secured less than two per cent of the vote.

Alice McKim, one of three diversity candidates on the Liberal slate, said it meant a lot to be asked to run for the party in Saint John Harbour. (Roger Cosman/CBC)

The People's Alliance campaign chair Sterling Wright said diversity targets are notpart of the party's equation.

"Gender, sexual orientation, age, race or religion, those are not things we consider to be of most importance," said Wright during the campaign.

"What we're interested in, is people of good character, who have a sincere interest in serving the people of their constituency, and who have a good work ethic. That's far more important to us than the colour of somebody's skin or their gender.

With files from Rachel Cave