Serge Rousselle

Serge Rousselle is a Canadian politician, who was elected to the Legislative Assembly of New Brunswick in the 2014 provincial election.[1] He represented the electoral district of Tracadie-Sheila as a member of the Liberal Party until 2018, when he did not run for reelection and was succeeded by his former constituency assistant Keith Chiasson.

Serge Rousselle
Minister of Government Services
In office
September 5, 2017  May 11, 2018
PremierBrian Gallant
Preceded byEd Doherty
Succeeded byBenoit Bourque
Minister of Environment and Local Government
In office
June 6, 2016  May 11, 2018
PremierBrian Gallant
Preceded byBrian Kenny
Succeeded byAndrew Harvey
Attorney General of New Brunswick
In office
October 7, 2014  May 11, 2018
PremierBrian Gallant
Preceded byTed Flemming
Succeeded byBrian Gallant
Minister of Education and Early Childhood Development
In office
October 7, 2014  June 6, 2016
PremierBrian Gallant
Preceded byMarie-Claude Blais
Succeeded byBrian Kenny
Member of the
New Brunswick Legislative Assembly
for Tracadie-Sheila
In office
September 22, 2014  2018
Preceded byClaude Landry
Succeeded byKeith Chiasson
Personal details
Political partyLiberal

On October 7, 2014, Rousselle was appointed to the Executive Council of New Brunswick as Minister of Education and Early Childhood Development, and Attorney General.[2]

He holds undergraduate degrees in political science and law from the University of Ottawa as well as a Master of Law from the University of Cambridge and a Doctor of Law from McGill University. After being abroad for his studies, he returned to Tracadie, New Brunswick, and was a professor at the Université de Moncton law faculty from 1992 to 2014. He served as dean from 2000 to 2004.[3]

Rousselle has also held various positions in organizations at the provincial, federal, and international level. Among other positions, he was head of the Bureau des Amériques of the Agence universitaire de la Francophonie, was President of the Council of Canadian Law Deans as well as President of the Association des juristes d’expression française du Nouveau-Brunswick.[4]

Rousselle is the co-author of the book entitled "Éducation et droits collectifs : au-delà de l'article 23 de la Charte" (2003, Editions de la francophonie), which was awarded the 2003 France-Acadie award.[5]

Election results

2014 New Brunswick general election
Party Candidate Votes%±%
LiberalSerge Rousselle5,91664.61+45.65
Progressive ConservativeClaude Landry2,19523.97-24.86
New DemocraticFrançois Rousselle8619.40-22.81
GreenNancy Benoit1211.32
IndependentDonald Thomas640.70
Total valid votes 9,157100.0  
Total rejected ballots 300.33
Turnout 9,18776.92
Eligible voters 11,943
Liberal notional gain from Progressive Conservative Swing +35.26
[6]
2006 New Brunswick general election: Tracadie-Sheila
Party Candidate Votes%±%
Progressive ConservativeClaude Landry4,04353.38-2.94
LiberalSerge Rousselle3,28143.32+7.76
IndependentStéphane Richardson2503.30
Total valid votes 7,574
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots 1351.75-0.39
Turnout 7,70984.87-0.24
Progressive Conservative hold Swing -5.35
Independent candidate Stéphane Richardson earned 4.82% fewer votes than when he ran for the New Democratic Party in 2003. Changes are not based on redistributed results.[7]
2004 Canadian federal election: Acadie—Bathurst
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
New DemocraticYvon Godin23,85753.93+7.26$61,745.98
LiberalSerge Rousselle14,45232.67-7.75$60,252.15
ConservativeJoel Bernard4,84110.94-1.97$51,943.73
GreenMario Lanteigne1,0852.45$7,040.66
Total valid votes/Expense limit 44,235100.0   $71,582
Total rejected, unmarked and declined ballots 5271.18-0.04
Turnout 44,76270.38-4.99
Eligible voters 63,603
New Democratic notional hold Swing +7.50
Changes from 2000 are based on redistributed results. Conservative Party change is based on the combination of Canadian Alliance and Progressive Conservative Party totals.
1999 New Brunswick general election: Tracadie-Sheila
Party Candidate Votes%±%
Progressive ConservativeElvy Robichaud5,45362.94+11.48
LiberalSerge Rousselle2,92633.77-12.67
New DemocraticClaudette Duguay2853.29+1.19
Total valid votes 8,664
Progressive Conservative hold Swing +12.08

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.