Wednesday, December 24, 2025
ADVT 
National

Second ballot in Newfoundland and Labrador

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 13 Sep, 2014 01:20 PM
    ST. JOHN'S, N.L. - The leadership of the Progressive Conservative party in Newfoundland and Labrador is going to a second ballot as former cabinet minister John Ottenheimer took the top spot Saturday in the first round of voting.
     
    Ottenheimer, 61, faces Paul Davis on the second ballot as Steve Kent was knocked out of the race but announced from the stage that he was supporting Davis in the next round of voting.
     
    After his announcement, Kent said he believes Davis, 53, can govern immediately because he has a seat in the legislature while Ottenheimer would have to find a riding to run in.
     
    The convention hung on whether Kent's decision will sway enough of his delegates to back Davis, a former cabinet minister who stepped down to seek the leadership.
     
    "I would suspect a chunk of my delegates will follow me," he said.
     
    The winner will soon be sworn in as the province's 12th premier and must call an election within 12 months of taking office.
     
    The first ballot saw Ottenheimer take a 36 vote lead over Davis.
     
    Ottenheimer had 289 votes, Davis 253 and Kent 141.
     
    Desmond Whalen, president of the provincial Young Progressive Conservatives, said he thinks the race could go either way.
     
    "I think Davis has a good shot at it," said Whalen, who as a member of the convention committee is not publicly endorsing either candidate. "That said, John Ottenheimer did his work and has a good shot too."
     
    Natural Resources Minister Derrick Dalley, a Davis supporter, said whoever wins the party must emerge united.
     
    The Tories have held majority power since 2003 and were a potent force under former premier Danny Williams, but they are hoping Saturday's old-style leadership convention will help revive the party from a slump in its popularity.
     
    Former premier Kathy Dunderdale won re-election in 2011 after Williams retired from politics but she quit in January amid questions about her leadership and after Newfoundland-wide power blackouts.
     
    The party has lost four straight byelections — three of them in districts that were held by senior cabinet ministers, including the one held by Dunderdale.
     
    Ottenheimer is a veteran of several cabinet portfolios and was health minister in 2005 amidst a scandal over botched breast cancer tests. He apologized for his role at that time during the second of three leadership debates.
     
    He left politics in 2007 due to health issues and later served as chairman of Newfoundland and Labrador Hydro. But he cast himself Saturday as "the candidate of change and the candidate of renewal."
     
    "To the naysayers who delight in our perceived demise I serve you notice," he said to cheers from his supporters.
     
    Davis, a former police officer, is also promising to rejuvenate the party.
     
    "Don't count us out," he told delegates to roars and chants of "Davis!" from his camp before the first ballot.
     
    Pundits who've written the party's death warrant aren't always right, he said. Pollsters wrongly predicted election results in B.C., Alberta, Quebec and Ontario, he said.
     
    "And mark my words, they'll be proven wrong again right here in Newfoundland and Labrador."
     
    Davis was diagnosed in 2011 with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma but has since recovered.
     
    He said as premier he would work to ensure offshore oil wealth — $19 billion in royalties since 1997 — is better shared around the province, including a revamped fishery.
     
    Kent, 36, is a career politician who was first elected to Mount Pearl city council near St. John's at 19. He was the municipal affairs minister before stepping aside to run for the leadership.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Campers Evicted as Bears Treat Site Near Squamish Like 5-star Hotel

    Campers Evicted as Bears Treat Site Near Squamish Like 5-star Hotel
    SQUAMISH, B.C. - Camping has been banned along a stretch of the Squamish River in southern B.C. now that several bears are treating the area like a five-star hotel.

    Campers Evicted as Bears Treat Site Near Squamish Like 5-star Hotel

    B.C. Teachers, Employer Plan More Face Time After Renewed Negotiations

    B.C. Teachers, Employer Plan More Face Time After Renewed Negotiations
    VANCOUVER - B.C.'s unionized teachers and their employer will return to the bargaining table this week after restarting negotiations just weeks before the new school year.

    B.C. Teachers, Employer Plan More Face Time After Renewed Negotiations

    Health Canada OKs GSK's plan to fix Quebec flu vaccine plant problems

    Health Canada OKs GSK's plan to fix Quebec flu vaccine plant problems
    TORONTO - Health Canada says it has approved a plan by GlaxoSmithKline to fix contamination problems it has been experiencing at its Ste. Foy, Que., flu vaccine production plant.

    Health Canada OKs GSK's plan to fix Quebec flu vaccine plant problems

    Co-owner of Quebec Seniors' Residence where 32 Died Wants Inquiry into Fire

    Co-owner of Quebec Seniors' Residence where 32 Died Wants Inquiry into Fire
    QUEBEC - The owners of a seniors' home where 32 residents died in a tragic fire are calling for a public inquiry into the disaster.

    Co-owner of Quebec Seniors' Residence where 32 Died Wants Inquiry into Fire

    First Nations alliance launches court challenge of B.C. Treaty process

    First Nations alliance launches court challenge of B.C. Treaty process
    VANCOUVER - A seven-member Okanagan Nation Alliance has launched legal action against the provincial government over the First Nations treaty process in connection to overlapping claims by neighbouring aboriginal bands.

    First Nations alliance launches court challenge of B.C. Treaty process

    Homicide Team Makes Arrest in one of Two Separate Deaths in Metro Vancouver

    Homicide Team Makes Arrest in one of Two Separate Deaths in Metro Vancouver
    VANCOUVER - Metro Vancouver's Integrated Homicide Investigation Team says it has one person under arrest in a death in White Rock, B.C., but it's still looking for a suspect in the killing of a man in Burnaby.

    Homicide Team Makes Arrest in one of Two Separate Deaths in Metro Vancouver