Nova Scotia readies for possible launch of provincial election campaign

  • Canadian Press

Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston speaks to reporters at the Council of the Federation in Halifax on Tuesday, July 16, 2024. Nova Scotia residents could find themselves in the midst of a snap provincial election campaign as early as today. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darren Calabrese

HALIFAX -- Nova Scotia residents could find themselves in the midst of a snap provincial election campaign as early as today.

Premier Tim Houston is holding a rally in Halifax this afternoon amid swirling speculation he plans to dissolve the legislature and trigger a provincewide vote.

An election call would come months ahead of the province's fixed election date of July 15, 2025, but would not be a surprise.

Houston signalled back in June he was no longer committed to the date despite enshrining it in the first piece of legislation his government passed after taking power in 2021.

The Progressive Conservatives are looking for a second consecutive mandate after sweeping the Liberals from power that August -- a victory that was the result of a nearly single-minded focus on the need to fix the province's ailing health-care system.

This time around, the opposition Liberals and NDP -- led by Zach Churchill and Claudia Chender, respectively -- are expected to highlight what they say has been the government's failure to make good on its health-care promises.

They're also likely to go after the Tories for what they describe as the government's neglect of other pressing issues, such as the province's lack of affordable housing and the rising cost of living.

The Progressive Conservatives currently hold 34 seats in the 55-seat legislature.

The Liberals hold 14 seats, the NDP have six, and there is one Independent.