N.S. election: a look at re-elected Nova Scotia Premier Tim Houston
HALIFAX — Tim Houston gambled that Nova Scotia voters would re-elect the Progressive Conservatives with another majority — even though he ignored his government’s fixed-election-date legislation.
It was the first law his government passed in 2021, setting the next election for July 2025. Instead, he called voters to the polls on Tuesday, and he won his bet: Nova Scotians gave his party an expanded majority.
Since first being elected to the provincial legislature in 2013 representing the riding of Pictou East, the 54-year-old Houston has largely come across as a combative politician. Rising to prominence as a fierce critic of former Liberal premier Stephen McNeil, Houston seemed to relish the role of being a thorn in McNeil’s side during debates in the legislature.
Elected party leader in 2018, Houston became premier three years later when the Tories won a majority. He has since cemented his public image as a partisan defender of his government’s record.