In the end, it was Bernard Lord who made it happen in New Brunswick.
Before Mr. Th riault,
The Quebec-born Mr. Lord will now become New Brunswick's 30th premier, and the youngest in the province's history . He is the third-youngest premier in Canadian history.
Mr. Lord is fluently bilingual. He was brought up speaking both languages -- his father's first language is English and his mother's first language is French.
"We will lead a government that is honest and truthful every day. We will work hard for the people of New Brunswick every single day of our mandate."
"The people of New Brunswick are never wrong," he said. "Tonight the people of New Brunswick made a choice."
Joining the Liberals on the opposition side will be Ms. Weir, assuming her familiar role as the sole NDP member. Appearing upbeat, Ms. Weir said it will be important to maintain a strong opposition in the Legislative Assembly.
"I think New Brunswick needs every single opposition member it can get," said Ms. Weir from her headquarters in Saint John's. "I've lived in this province when there were no opposition members and it was not good government."
Along with bringing in a new government, New Brunswick voters also elected a set of young faces. Fourteen of the Conservatives elected last night are under 40 and of those, four are under 30.
Kirk MacDonald in Mactaquac and Jody Carr in Oromocto-Gagetown, both 23 years of age, were the youngest MLAs elected. Other Generation Xers elected were Trevor Holder, 27, in Saint John-Portland and Louis-Philippe McGraw, 27, in Centre-P ninsule.
2. What was led by Frank McKenna?