• October 8, 2004 -
Elizabeth Weir resigns as leader of the New Brunswick NDP after leading her party through four elections. • June 30, 2005 - The
Electoral Boundaries and Representation Act is passed in the
legislature, which sets forth a process under which the province will have new
electoral districts. • July 21, 2005 -
Environment & Local Government Minister Brenda Fowlie resigns from cabinet after the provincial
ombudsman finds she had violated the privacy act in revealing personal information about Liberal MLA
Stuart Jamieson. • September 25, 2005 - Allison Brewer is elected leader of the NDP at a
leadership convention. • October 13, 2005 - Elizabeth Weir resigns her seat in the legislature, a
by-election is called two days later for November 14. The Tories and Liberals both announce high-profile candidates and the media speculates that the winner of the by-election will have the momentum going into the general election. Weir's NDP, which was caught without notice of her resignation, is expected by pundits to finish third. • October 31, 2005 -
Family and Community Services Minister Tony Huntjens resigns after revealing the identity of an
autistic man who is a
ward of his department to the media. • November 14, 2005 - The Liberals win a by-election in a seat formerly held by NDP MLA Elizabeth Weir, defeating Conservative star candidate Michelle Hooton, who many considered the frontrunner, by a 2 to 1 margin. • January 7, 2006 - Over the course of his beginning of year interviews, Lord reveals that he will introduce legislation fixing election dates, beginning with a date in 2007. • February 14, 2006 - Lord announces a major cabinet shuffle moving over half of his ministers, changing several departments and dumping three of his most well-known ministers, two of whom say they are leaving as they will not be candidates in the next election. In the meantime, he adds former minister Brenda Fowlie back to cabinet and
Speaker Bev Harrison who will have to resign from his non-partisan post. • February 17, 2006 - Progressive Conservative
Member of the Legislative Assembly (MLA)
Michael Malley announces he will sit as an
independent making the government a
minority. • March 28, 2006 - • Independent MLA Michael Malley is elected Speaker of the legislature. This makes the standings of the ordinarily voting members of the legislature 27 Progressive Conservatives, 26 Liberals, 1 Independent. Malley, as Speaker, would only vote in the case of a tie and, by tradition, would normally vote in favour of
confidence motions. Thus an election at a time other than Lord's choosing is unlikely. •
Finance Minister Jeannot Volpe introduces what he calls a "super good
budget" in which the government provides tax credits for heating costs, eliminates the
Harmonized Sales Tax from heating costs, regulates the prices of gasoline and home heating oil, personal and small business tax cuts, investments in struggling forestry companies, hiring 240 more teachers for the public school system and no longer using the value of the homes of seniors as an offset to the level of support they can receive in a nursing home. • April 13, 2006 - Malley announces from the speaker's chair that he is rejoining the government caucus. Government House Leader
Bev Harrison argues that this restores the government majority and that therefore, the Liberals should honour a previous agreement to preserve a working majority on
committees of the whole. The Liberals argued that it is improper for a speaker to change his affiliation and refuse to recognize the government as a majority. The legislature becomes somewhat deadlocked as the government controls the primary debate of the chamber, but the opposition controls the votes at committees where legislation and budgetary estimates are approved. • May 1, 2006 - The Liberals offer to end the growing deadlock in the legislature by having Malley resign the speakership and placing one of their own members up for election as speaker. Under such an arrangement, the Conservatives would have 28 voting members, the Liberals 25 and the one independent
Frank Branch. In exchange for giving the government this working majority, they demand an election be held on September 25, 2006. Lord rejects this offer. • May 30, 2006 - A Liberal motion to remove Malley from the speakership is defeated 27–25. The Liberals therefore accept the legitimacy of the Speaker becoming a member of the Progressive Conservative caucus. • May 31, 2006 - Government House Leader
Bev Harrison and Opposition House Leader
Kelly Lamrock announce an agreement to end the stalemate in the House. The Liberals, again recognizing the government's majority, will pair with the Speaker in Committees of the Whole and will guarantee passage of the budget by June 16. In return, the government will allow the opposition to chair four committees, including a new committee on
literacy, pass several opposition bills and hold fall sittings of the legislature. • June 12, 2006 -
Corporate Research Associates, which conducts a quarterly opinion poll in New Brunswick, releases a survey conducted May 17 to June 6 showing that the Progressive Conservatives have taken a lead over the Liberals for the first time since August 2003. • June 20, 2006 - Lord announces he will introduce legislation fixing election dates on the third Monday of October beginning with an election on October 15, 2007. • August 1, 2006 - The
New Brunswick Telegraph-Journal reports that former minister
Peter Mesheau is set to resign from the legislature which would cause another minority government. Lord says he will not face another minority and will call an election if this happens. • August 8, 2006 - The
Fredericton Daily Gleaner reports that Lord will meet Mesheau on August 11 and an election call is expected later that day. • August 10, 2006 - Bernard Lord confirms that the election will be held on September 18, 2006, although an election call is not expected until August 19. • August 14, 2006 - The
Canadian Taxpayers Federation and the Liberals criticize Lord and his ministers for making election style announcements using government resources, something that would be forbidden after the election is formally called. • August 16, 2006 - The Liberal Party begins airing television and radio commercials and erecting billboards. • August 18, 2006 - Lord asks
Lieutenant-Governor Herménégilde Chiasson to dissolve the legislature, one day earlier than he originally suggested he would catching the other parties off guard, and sets the election date for September 18. • September 1, 2006 - Candidate nominations are due. The Liberals and Progressive Conservatives field full slates in all 55 ridings, while the NDP, with 48 candidates, fails to do so for the first time since 1982. • September 5, 2006 - It is announced that
Radio-Canada, the
French language arm of
CBC, will not provide simultaneous translation for NDP leader
Allison Brewer in their televised debate. As a result, Brewer announces she will not participate, leaving only Bernard Lord and Shawn Graham in the French leader's debate. All three leaders will participate in the English debate. The NDP late files a complaint with the Radio-Canada
ombudsman. • September 7, 2006: • The Liberals release their election platform entitled "Charter for Change" • The three leaders participate in an English leaders' debate on CBC and PC leader Bernard Lord and Liberal leader Shawn Graham participate in a French leaders' debate on Radio-Canada (the French arm of CBC). Both were pre-taped and air simultaneously. Most pundits say that the debates will not sway many voters as there was no clear winner but some suggest Lord won the English debate while Graham won the French. • September 9, 2006 - The first day of
advanced polls. • September 10, 2006 -
Rogers Communications airs English and French debates live. • September 11, 2006: • The NDP releases their platform "Clear Voice, Clear Choice". • The second and final day of advanced polls. It is later reported that there is a 50% increase in advanced voter turnout over 2003. • September 12, 2006 -
Corporate Research Associates releases a poll commissioned by
L'Acadie Nouvelle which shows the Liberals at 44%, the PCs at 42% and the NDP at 10%. • September 13, 2006 - The Progressive Conservatives release their platform "Getting Results Together". • September 14, 2006 -
Innovative Research Group releases a poll commissioned by
CTV which shows the Liberals at 45%, the PCs at 43% and the NDP at 11%. • September 15, 2006 -
Omnifacts Bristol releases a poll showing the PCs and Liberals tied at 46% with the NDP at 7%. • September 18, 2006 - Election Day, polls open at 10:00am local time and close at 8:00pm. • 8:51 PM:
CTV Atlantic projects a Liberal majority government. • 8:54 PM:
CBC projects a Liberal majority government. • September 20, 2006 - Premier-designate Shawn Graham meets with outgoing Premier Bernard Lord and appoints a transition team. The team will be chaired by
Doug Tyler and consist of Tyler,
Allan Maher and
Donald Savoie. • October 3, 2006 - Graham and his
cabinet are to be sworn in on this date. ==Political parties==