Women win mayoral races in N.B.'s 3 biggest cities - Action News
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New Brunswick

Women win mayoral races in N.B.'s 3 biggest cities

Women have won the mayoral races in Saint John, Fredericton and Moncton, as Elections NB releases its delayed results from the New Brunswick municipal election.

First Black mayor also elected in northeastern town

Kate Rogers, left, was elected mayor of Fredericton, Donna Reardon, centre, was elected mayor of Saint John, and Dawn Arnold, right, was re-elected mayor of Moncton. (Facebook)

Women have been elected mayor for New Brunswick's three biggest cities in this municipal election.

In the unofficialresults, which started coming shortly after 8 p.m. Tuesday,Kate Rogers was elected mayor forFredericton, Dawn Arnold forMoncton and Donna ReardonforSaint John.

"It's just a mix of feelings," said Rogers, who'd won with 9,050votes as of 11 p.m., unseating the incumbent Mike O'Brien, who garnered 5,040, and becoming the city's first female mayor.

"I feel so grateful to the residents of Fredericton for putting their faith in me. I feel humbled. I feel really proud."

Arnold, who was the first woman elected mayor of Moncton in 2016,said she felt "fantastic" finding out she won following "a very, very strange campaign."

"It was really challenging not being able to go door to door, and there was a lot of online hate," she said.

As of about 11 p.m., she'd garnered9,998votes to beat her only competitor, Erik Gingles, who earned 7,016.

Reardon, who served as a Saint John councillor the past two terms,said it was a "euphoric" feeling to find out she won, following the eight-week campaign and then the two-week delay between casting ballots andlearning the results.

She won with 10,089votes as of 11 p.m., followed by Mel Vincent Jr. with 5,895.

The results began showing up on Elections NB's website shortly after 8 p.m., when polls in the Edmundston region closed.

Residents in that region were forced to vote 15 days later than people in other parts of the province due to lockdowns caused by COVID-19.

While elections in most of the province were held on May 10, the results couldn't be released until polls closed in the Edmundston region Tuesday.

In an email at around 11:12 p.m., Paul Harpelle, spokesperson for Elections NB, said the agency still had to process votes from Victoria and Carleton counties, and that winners likely wouldn't be declared until after midnight.

Results for health and school board elections were also released Tuesday evening.

N.B.'s first Black mayor

Peoplein one New Brunswick town elected the province's first Black mayor.

KassimDoumbiawas elected mayor of Shippagan, on the Acadian Peninsula, after getting 705 votes, compared to Nathalie Blaquiere, the first runner up, with 410.

Kassim Doumbia is being recognized as the first Black mayor in New Brunswick's history. (Submitted by Kassim Doumbia)

"I'm very overwhelmed. I'm just very happy to see that the people from Shippagan decided to choose me forthe mayor. So it's like a dream. So a dream come true for me," he said.

Originally from the Ivory Coast, Doumbia moved to Moncton21 years ago for university, and has been living in Shippagan for the last 14, servingas a councillor for the past nine.

Ralph Thomas, co-ordinator for the New Brunswick Black History Society, said Doumbia would be the first Black mayor he knows of in the province's history.

"I think it's special," Thomas said, who's 82 years old.

"I think it tells us now exactly if you qualify for a position or if the people in your community feel that you're going to do a good job, it doesn't matter anymore whether you're Black, whether you are a newcomer or whatever it is, that people are now realizing that Black people can be a mayor just like anybody else."

Results at a glance

The three big cities weren't the only places to elect a womanas mayor.

Kim Chamberlain won the race for mayor of the northeastern city of Bathurst, with 2,825 votes.

Other New Brunswick communitiesvoted the following people for mayor:

  • Campbellton Ian Comeau
  • Dieppe Yvon Lapierre (acclamation)
  • Edmundston Eric Marquis
  • Miramichi Adam Lordon (acclamation)

An election planned amid a pandemic

This year's municipal election presented challenges, with a two-week voting delay between regions, but Kim Poffenroth, the province's chief electoral officer,saidthe elections agency was prepared after lessons learned from the initial COVID-19 lockdownin March 2020.

"Being prepared ahead of time makes things run much more smoothly," she said.

A woman with blond hair with a CBC-branded microphone in front of her
Kim Poffenroth is New Brunswick's chief electoral officer. She says most people understood the rationale behind delaying the election. (Roger Cosman/CBC)

"There was a plan in place. If a lockdown occurred, we knew exactly what the steps were going to be sowe weren't left scrambling, trying to figure things out on the fly."

Poffenroth said Elections New Brunswick spoke with local government and MLAsabout what it needed to be successful should a lockdown happen.

She said it was unfortunate New Brunswickers weren't able to access election results on May 10 as planned, but she was pleasantly surprised there wasn't an outburst from the public.

"There weren't as many complaints as I thought there might have [been] and once we explained to people the rationale behind it, people understood," said Poffenroth.

With files from Lauren Bird and CBC's Information Morning Fredericton