1995 New Brunswick general election

1995 New Brunswick general election

← 1991 September 11, 1995 1999 →

55 seats of the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick
28 seats needed for a majority
  First party Second party
 
PC
Leader Frank McKenna Bernard Valcourt
Party Liberal Progressive Conservative
Leader since 1985 1995
Leader's seat Miramichi-Bay du Vin Edmundston
Last election 46 3
Seats won 48 6
Seat change Increase2 Increase3
Popular vote 201,150 120,247
Percentage 51.63% 30.87%
Swing Increase4.52% Increase10.17%

  Third party Fourth party
 
NDP
CoR
Leader Elizabeth Weir Greg Hargrove
Party New Democratic Confederation of Regions
Leader since 1988 1995
Leader's seat Saint John Harbour Mactaquac (lost re-election)
Last election 1 8
Seats won 1 0
Seat change Steady Decrease8
Popular vote 37,579 27,684
Percentage 9.65% 7.11%
Swing Decrease1.13% Decrease14.09%

Map of New Brunswick's ridings coloured in based on the winning parties and their popular vote

Premier before election

Frank McKenna
Liberal

Premier after election

Frank McKenna
Liberal

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Rendition of party representation in the 53rd New Brunswick Legislative Assembly decided by this election.
  Liberals (48)
  Progressive Conservatives (6)
  New Democrats (1)

The 1995 New Brunswick general election was held on September 11, 1995, to elect 55 members to the 53rd New Brunswick Legislative Assembly, the governing house of the province of New Brunswick, Canada.

The Liberals were again victorious. McKenna's personal popularity allowed the Liberals to maintain a large majority while the Tories managed only 6 seats, while the CoR lost all theirs. The combined PC-CoR vote exceeded that of the Liberals in an additional 10 ridings (Albert, Fundy Isles, Kings East, Mactaquac, Petitcodiac, Saint John-Fundy, Southwest Miramichi, Victoria-Tobique, Western Charlotte and Woodstock).

Also of note, there were 55 ridings in this election, as opposed to 58 in previous elections. It was the first time boundaries were redrawn in New Brunswick since 1974.