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New Brunswick

Thousands of votes left to count in Memramcook-Tantramar

As a judicial recount in Memramcook-Tantramar continued into a second evening Thursday, lawyers agreed to a new process to count the votes in hopes of speeding things up.

A judicial recount in Memramcook-Tantramar will continue Friday with thousands of votes left to count

A court sheriff and Elections NB official outside the Moncton Law Courts, with boxes containing special ballots. (Shane Magee/CBC News)

A judicial recount in Memramcook-Tantramar will continue Friday morning.

Lawyers agreed to a new process to count the votes Thursday evening in hopes of speeding up the counting and notstaying through the long weekend.

About 2,700 votes remained to be be checked when court adjourned for the evening around 6 p.m.

There were 8,213 ballots cast in the riding during the provincial election last week. Green Party candidate Megan Mitton won by 11 votes over Liberal Bernard LeBlanc.

One spoiled ballot has been contested,said Jean-Daniel Comeau, the lawyer representing LeBlanc.

What to do about that ballot will only be discussed once the rest of the votes are counted.

There have been several "irregularities" discovered that haven't affected the vote results.

It's annoying to think that that type of mistake by people who were very well-trained happened.- Brigitte Robichaud, Court of Queen's Bench

Each tabulator machine spit out a printed "tape" of results once polls closed Sept. 24.

Those tapes are supposed to be signed by election officials, though a number of them were not. Another box containing ballots was not properly labelled.

As well, six so-called training ballots were found in a box where they were not supposed to be.

Elections officials speculated the ballots may have been left in the box by mistake after training but before actual voting.

"Why they're there, I can't answer that," Don Duff, returning officer for the Memramcook-Tantramar riding, said.

"It's an irregularity ... but no harm has been done," said Anastacia Merrigan, the lawyer for Mitton.

"It is an irregularity, it's annoying to think that that type of mistake by people who were very well-trained happened," said Court of Queen's Bench Justice Brigitte Robichaud.

A loss for Liberal who held seat

Liberal Bernard LeBlanc, who held the seat before the election campaign, wanted to make sure the votes were counted properly. (Shane Magee/CBC News)

Mitton received 3,148 votes andLeBlanc, the incumbent in the riding, received 3,137.Progressive Conservative candidate Etienne Gaudet received 1,518 votes, and NDP candidate Hlne Boudreau 410.

LeBlanc and his brother said they requested the recount to ensure the votes were correctly counted.Ballots began to be countedWednesday around11 a.m.and continued until9 p.m.

Counting resumed around 9:30 a.m.Thursdaywith special ballots delivered after they were examined as part of a recount in Saint John Harbour.

LeBlanc was the only one of the four candidates present for the recountWednesdaymorning andThursdayafternoon.
The lawyers agreed to change the counting method late around 5 p.m. Thursday when there were still about 6,000 votes left to count.

Under the first method, once a box was opened a ballot would be pulled out by an election official andhanded to a second person read out who received the vote.

Faster system

Megan Mitton of the Green Party, who won Memramcook-Tantramar by 11 votes was not present for the recounting of votes Thursday. (Tori Weldon/CBC News)

The ballot was then passed to the judge, who also read the name, flipped the ballot around and showed it to the lawyers seated in front of her.

The new method saw elections officials open a box and separate ballots into piles based on which candidate received the vote. Thelawyers then counted those piles.

Several boxes had already been counted by5:40 p.m.

"So much faster," said Merrigan, Mitton's lawyer.