He first entered politics as a young man, running unsuccessfully in
Shediac for the
Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick as a
Parti Acadien candidate in the
1974 election. He became involved in municipal politics in the
village of Cap-Pélé. His second entry into provincial politics was in the
1991 election, this time as a
Liberal. He won. He was re-elected in
1995,
1999 and
2003. He was named to
cabinet in 1995 and left in 1998 to contest the leadership of the Liberal Party. He was unsuccessful in his leadership bid and was returned to the cabinet position by
Camille Thériault who was the victor in the contest. Richard managed to be re-election by the largest margin of any candidate in the 1999 election, despite the fact that his party suffering a massive defeat. When Thériault resigned as leader in 2001, Richard briefly considered another run but instead became
interim leader. When
Shawn Graham became leader in 2002, Richard was made
House Leader and finance critic, two key roles in the opposition. Richard maintained these roles after the 2003 election. The
Progressive Conservative government of
Bernard Lord had won a bare majority in 2003, winning 28 of 55 seats and were anxious to strengthen their position. After first attempting to convince a Liberal to sit as
speaker and then offering cabinet positions and other appointments to several Liberals, Richard accepted the post of provincial
ombudsman, thus resigning his seat and increasing the
Tory majority to 28/54 for the ensuing year before a
by-election was held. On November 6, 2007, New Brunswick news outlets reported that the Progressive Conservatives were encouraging Richard to leave his post as ombudsman and return to politics
as leader of their party. In 2024, he was appointed as a member of the
Order of Canada. He lives in
Cap-Pelé, New Brunswick. ==Notes==