New Brunswick

For Elections N.B., Monday's vote is like 'Stanley Cup final'

Voters across the province can visit most polling stations until 8 p.m. today to cast ballots for the MLAs they want to lead the province for the next four years. Elections N.B.'s chief electoral officer Kim Poffenroth, describes it as "our game seven of the Stanley Cup final."

2 polling stations were late to open so are late to close

Kim Poffenroth
Kim Poffenroth is chief electoral officer with Elections N.B. (Jacques Poitras/CBC)

How big a deal is election day for staff at the agency tasked with overseeing it?

"This is our game seven of the Stanley Cup final and the finale of the Eras Tour all wrapped into one," said Elections N.B.'s chief electoral officer Kim Poffenroth.

Most polling stations will be open until 8 p.m. Monday to allow voters across the province to cast ballots for the MLAs they want to lead the province through the next four years.

Two locations opened a bit late, however, due to "some logistical assembly issues," and will remain open for the corresponding amount of time past 8 p.m. to ensure they're open the full 10 hours, said Poffenroth.

The Dennis Morris polling station in Saint John West-Lancaster opened 25 minutes behind schedule because the team was "struggling with assembling the ballot box," she said.

WATCH | Poffenroth doesn't expect late openings will affect reporting of results:

Polling stations that opened late will close late, Elections N.B. says

1 month ago
Duration 1:16
Chief Electoral Officer Kim Poffenroth of Elections N.B. explains why two polling stations didn't open on time on Monday morning.

Similarly, the Club De L'Age D'Or polling station in Saint Jacques, in the riding of Madawaska Les Lacs-Edmundston, opened 10 minutes late, as the team struggled to "fix the tabulation machine to the ballot box," she said.

Poffenroth doesn't expect these "hiccups" will have an impact on the reporting of results, but spotty cellphone coverage at about 16 sites means those results will have to be called in, with the digital information transferred later in the day.

"We will start seeing initial results fairly shortly after 8 p.m., as all of the returning officers have the advanced poll tabulation machines in their office, and those should be the first results you start to see this evening."

About 150,000 ballots were cast during the province's two days of advanced voting at returning offices and at special polls at universities, hospitals and care homes, said Poffenroth.

Hopes for a good turnout

She doesn't like to compare the numbers to 2020, since that election was affected by the pandemic, but the numbers are a "significant increase" over 2018, she said. Voter turnout that year was about 66 per cent.

By 4 p.m. Monday, an additional 113,400 people had voted, said Elections N.B. spokesperson Paul Harpelle.

The largest volume of votes are cast between 4 p.m. and 8 p.m., according to Poffenroth.

She's optimistic participation will be up, based on what she's been hearing from staff at returning offices around the province.

A yellow and black 'Vote here' Elections NB sign in the foreground and a person entering a door holding a piece of paper in the background.
More than 113,000 New Brunswickers had cast ballots on Monday as of 4 p.m., according to Elections N.B. (Patrick Morrell/CBC News)

"They've all anecdotally talked about all of the new Canadians, new New Brunswickers and young New Brunswickers coming in to register to vote. And it's actually been quite inspirational hearing … the stories of all of these new voters."

More than 6,300 people had been added to the voter rolls before Monday, and that number is set to go up as people can still register to vote at the polls.

People entering and exiting the Crossman Community Centre/Kay Arena in Moncton, a polling station in the New Brunswick election.
Poffenroth said the busiest time of day at the polls tends to be between 4 p.m. and 8 p.m., but this polling station at the Crossman Community Centre/Kay Arena in Moncton saw a steady stream of people earlier in the day too. (Rhythm Rathi/CBC)

Poffenroth urged everyone to exercise their "most fundamental and cherished democratic right."

Every vote counts, she stressed.

"If you have a significant proportion of people who think their single vote doesn't count, that adds up to hundreds of thousands of votes."

Talking to voters in Fredericton

Beck Dunham voted for the first time on Monday, in the Fredericton-Lincoln riding.

He was "pretty excited" but also found it "scary," he said. "It's a big thing to kind of contribute to what might change around us in the coming years."

A young man with red hair, talking in a parking lot with trees in the background.
Beck Dunham, who is from the Fredericton area, said he decided to vote for the first time because he felt it was important to make his voice heard. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

Lorraine Macleod made sure she cast her ballot Monday at Église catholique Ste-Anne-des-Pays-Bas voting station in Fredericton.

"Soldiers fought and died for my freedom to vote. It is very important to me, and every vote counts," she said.

"If we want change, we have to vote for change. So I'm here to do that and I hope that change will come. But if not, I will know I've done the right thing and I'm happy to vote and exercise my right."

Macleod said others should vote too if they "don't like what's happening — otherwise, don't complain."

A man with short grey hair, in a parking lot, with trees behind him.
Neil Livingstone said he was used to voting at a school in his riding of Fredericton-Lincoln and was a bit surprised to find he had to vote at a nearby church instead. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

Fredericton resident Neil Livingstone said he couldn't imagine not voting. 

"I believe in democracy, You know, I think we all have a choice."

Although Livingstone admits he didn't pay much attention to the campaign because he was "so distracted by the American election," he said he knew he planned to vote for Green Party Leader David Coon.

"I am voting for my favourite colour, army green. Did 28 years in the military, so the green is in my blood."

Gene Campbell said he has alway been interested in politics, and paid close attention to the campaign in his riding of Fredericton-Lincoln. Rent control and the cost of living were key issues for him, he said.

Moncton voters talk industry, economy and health care

In Moncton, Roy MacMullin said he always votes, but "sometimes one issue drives people to vote."

He believes there's "one major issue" that will drive voters in his riding this election — the American Iron and Metal scrapyard.

Sydney Sexton thinks citizens are "more well informed now than they've ever been," and believes the "struggling" economy will be on a lot of people's minds.

"We've seen the rising costs of things and I think people are concerned — both the older and younger generations. We're all feeling the pinch," she said.

WATCH | People across the province cast their ballots in the 41st general election:

New Brunswick voters head to the polls

1 month ago
Duration 2:11
Polling stations are open until 8 p.m., and as one voter told CBC New Brunswick: ‘you don’t have a right to complain if you don’t vote.’

Joyce Bussey said the health-care system is a key issue in her social circle.

"I have friends that are way up there in age and they don't have a doctor and it's hard. I'm lucky I have a doctor, but there's a lot of other people that hasn't and it's the long waits at the hospital."

For Anne-Marie Arsenault, who worries about the state of democracy around the world, voting is the one way everyone can do their part.

"We have our voice and we have to take advantage of the opportunity we have," she said outside the Crossman Community Centre-Kay Arena polling station.

A woman with long, dark, wavy hair, wearing a black shirt, speaking into a microphone.
Claudia MacLean said about 20 people were ahead of her in line at the Crossman Community Centre/Kay Arena polling station in Moncton, but it only took about 15 minutes for her to cast her ballot. (Rhythm Rathi/CBC)

Claudia MacLean agrees. She was "a little too eager" to vote and showed up at 9:30 a.m., only to be told to come back at 10 a.m., she said.

"I think it's very important for us to show … who we want to represent us as New Brunswickers," she said. The more people who express their opinions through voting, the better off we will be as a democratic society.

Tyson Boudreau, who has children, said voting is important because "it's kind of what affects us, long run."

"If we're going to complain about what happens, we should at least put the effort in to go help decide who's making those decisions. And if we don't do that, we shouldn't complain."

Website delays due to 'high number of visitors'

On Monday morning, the "Where Do I Vote?" feature on Election N.B.'s website was experiencing delays "due to the high number of visitors," according to the agency, which said it was aiming to increase network capacity.

Elections N.B. has also been fielding calls from concerned voters who discovered their riding recently changed due to redrawn boundaries.

A man with grey hair and goatee, wearing a grey blazer, grey and black diagonally striped tie, and burgundy dress shirt, holding a cane, outside a polling station.
Greg Whelan, a polling official with Elections N.B., was greeting voters at the Admiral Beatty Complex in Saint John Monday afternoon. (Graham Thompson/CBC)

Poffenroth said it's been difficult for returning officers to find places to put polls this year.

"In some cases … there's been one available space, just because of the large development in some of the urban areas," she said.

Good to know

If people have a voter information card, they should bring it to the polls to make things go smoothly, Poffenroth said. But if they don't, or aren't yet registered, they can bring a combination of identification that include their name, address and signature.

If you're in line at a regular polling station by 8 p.m., you will be allowed to vote, no matter how many people are in front of you or how long it takes.

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Poffenroth said if people have a voter information card, they should bring it with them to the polls. If they don’t, or aren’t yet registered, bring a combination of identification that includes their name, address and signature. (CBC)

While you can still vote at a returning office until 8 p.m., that's a hard cut-off. If you haven't voted by 8 p.m., you won't get to.

"If you're planning on waiting till the last minute to vote or you get caught up at something, don't go to your returning office," said Poffenroth.

CBC News will have coverage of the results starting at 7:30 p.m. on radio, television, our website, the CBC Listen app, CBC Gem and Youtube.

With files from Information Morning Saint John, Shane Fowler and Rhythm Rathi