Quote:
Originally Posted by Marty_Mcfly
Unofficial results:
PC: 79%
LIB: 19%
NDP: 2%
Holy crap lol. Unexpected ass-kicking.
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Don’t know how you were so off the mark on this one and didn’t predict a 31 point jump in support for the PCs.
Voter turnout was at 56.49%, an increase from the 2021 election and a good turnout for a by-election.
This has traditionally been a PC seat but the size of the win should be worrying for the Liberals. I just looked back to the 2007 results when Tom Rideout was on the ballot and Danny Williams won his huge majority. Rideout won 75.5% of the vote and had around 900 fewer votes than what Paddock won in the by-election. That’s not to say Wakeham would win a majority government of that size, or even form government if an election were held, but after two by-elections it appears there is a large shift in voter intention in some rural areas.
The coming months should be interesting. Tom Osborne has announced that he’ll soon be retiring from provincial politics. Will Furey call a by-election in Waterford Valley or call a fall general election, which has been rumoured? You would have to think that last night’s by-election that the Liberals would be concerned about an early election.
St. John’s City Councillor and Olympian Jamie Korab has already announced he’s running for the Liberal nomination in Osborne’s Waterford Valley district. Osborne has been on the ballot in this area for almost 30 years so hard to know how him not running will impact voter turnout as he won big majorities as a PC and a Liberal. The fact that the Liberals have already attracted a prominent candidate for the district, he might still need to win a nomination, is a positive sign for them. With Fred Hutton’s win earlier the year, maybe it’s possible the Liberals are becoming the party of metro St. John’s?
I would think after last night’s win for the PCs that it would probably be best for Furey to call a by-election in Waterford Valley hoping that a win will show that the party can still attract good candidates and win.