Newfoundland and Labrador First Party

The Newfoundland and Labrador First Party was a Canadian political party registered at both the federal[2] and provincial[3] levels of government in the province of Newfoundland and Labrador.

Newfoundland and Labrador First Party
Former federal party
FoundedNovember 5, 2004 (provincial)
November 15, 2007 (federal)
DissolvedJanuary 31, 2011[1]
Headquarters10 Cole Place
St. John's, Newfoundland and Labrador
A1A 5G6
IdeologyAdvocation for Newfoundland and Labrador
ColoursGreen, white, pink

Election results

Election # of candidates # of votes % of popular vote % in ridings contested # of seats
2008 3 1801 0.01% 1.75% 0

Federal results

Riding Province Candidate Votes % Placement
Humber—St. Barbe—Baie Verte Newfoundland and Labrador Wayne Ronald Bennett 967 3.7% 4/4
St. John's East Newfoundland and Labrador Les Coultas 347 0.84% 6/6
St. John's South—Mount Pearl Newfoundland and Labrador Greg Byrne 402 1.16% 5/6

Provincial results

Newfoundland and Labrador provincial by-election, February 21, 2006: Placentia—St. Mary’s
Party Candidate Votes%
Progressive ConservativeFelix Collins2,24746.3
IndependentNick Careen1,64133.8
LiberalKevin Power93119.2
Newfoundland and Labrador FirstTom Hickey310.6
Total 4,850
By-election called upon the resignation of Fabian Manning

History

The provincial party was publicly launched on November 5, 2004 and officially registered in February 2006. It ran in its first election in a February 21, 2006 by-election in the Placentia and St. Mary's electoral district where the party's president Tom Hickey won 31 of 4,862 votes. After the provincial election, the party dissolved itself at the provincial level to focus on the federal platform which it felt was the most productive arena in which to advocate for fairness and equality for the province within Canada

The federal party, also led by Hickey, became eligible for registration by Elections Canada on November 15, 2007. It gained registered status in September 2008 as it entered three candidates in the 2008 federal election, where it attained 1.75% of the votes in those three districts.

Hickey was the founder of the First Party,[4] which was established as a party in November 2004.[5] Hickey (who ran unsuccessfully for the party in a Placentia—St. Mary's by-election held in 2006, winning only 31 votes[6]) led the party from 2004 until 2008, when he was succeeded as party leader by Wayne Bennett.[4][5]

Deregistration

The Party Executive was given official notification by registered letter to the Chief Agent of the party that as of January 31, 2011, the party would cease to exist and would be deregistered by Elections Canada. This deregistration was for failure to comply with the required submission of a minimum of 250 signed Declarations of Membership Forms in the allotted time period given.[7][8]

Wayne Bennett contested the riding of Humber—St. Barbe—Baie Verte in the 2011 federal election, as an Independent. He received 332 votes, 1.106 percent of the votes in the riding. Bennett would also go on to unsuccessfully seek the leadership of both the provincial Progressive Conservative and New Democratic parties.

gollark: Oh, plus it being significantly easier to just say "use wants as haves" instead of adding a have box.
gollark: It took lots of people complaining and several weeks to change the rules of the hub to something remotely sane, and they're still broken and you don't even get told why you're banned.
gollark: I suspect it was just accidentally mistyping a number.
gollark: I'd also like to note the fact that the original trade hub was the minimum viable product and didn't even have proper rules.
gollark: Caught a what?

See also

Notes

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