Premier Christy Clark - 9 MLAs gone.... and counting |
Retirement
Season for BC Liberals
Who's
likely next after Murray Coell, Dave Hayer, Kash Heed, etc?
Tuesday July 17, 2012
"Retirement may be looked upon either as a
prolonged holiday or as a rejection, a being thrown on to the scrap heap."
- Simone de Beauvoir, 1908-1986
BC Liberal MLAs are quickly lining up for a
retirement gold watch before time runs out on their party.
And as polls show Premier Christy Clark's government
has just half the support ex-premier Gordon Campbell achieved in the 2009
election, it's no wonder many would rather step down than be stomped on by
voters.
Last week Murray Coell became the eighth BC Liberal
MLA to announce they won't run again in next May's provincial election and it's
no wonder -- the ex-cabinet minister discarded to the back bench by Clark only
won his Saanich North and the Islands seat with 258 votes
more than the New Democratic Party.
So with the BC Liberals at just 23 per cent in last
week's Angus Reid Public Opinion poll,
which other seats are most likely turnovers to the NDP at 45 per cent or even
the BC Conservatives, who are threatening at 22 per cent?
Or will any join Abbotsford South MLA John van Dongen
and quit the BC Liberals
to join the BC Conservatives?
BC Liberal campaign director Mike McDonald told media
last week he expects about a third of the 46 BC Liberal MLAs will pack it in.
While some MLAs may just be tired after years in
office and others tired of Clark, an analysis of BC Liberal ridings shows many
will go NDP, barring a dramatic reversal of fortune.
Earthquake coming
The BC Liberals took 46 per cent of the vote in 2009
versus the BC New Democrats' 42 per cent, the Green Party's eight per cent and
the BC Conservatives' two per cent.
Even a substantial improvement boosting the BC Liberals
by 12 points to 35 per cent in the election would still mean a stunning loss of
seats, with any MLA who won by 10 per cent or less over their opponent likely
to be defeated.
Take the 1991 election,
when the NDP under Mike Harcourt took 41 per cent of the vote and 51 of 75
seats in the B.C. legislature, the fledgling BC Liberals had 33 per cent and 17
seats and the governing Social Credit held just 24 per cent and only seven
seats.
A political earthquake of similar or greater
magnitude approaches, unless voters dramatically change their opinion of Clark
and her party.
In the Lower Mainland, BC Liberal MLA Marc Dalton in
Maple Ridge-Mission has to be the most nervous of all.
Dalton won by 68 votes, or a razor-thin 45.7 per
cent to 45.4 per cent of the popular vote. [Note: an earlier version stated 532 votes in error - apologies.]
Burnaby North MLA Richard T. Lee's 548 vote margin --
or less than three per cent -- won't hold up, nor will Vancouver-Fairview MLA
and Labour Minister Margaret MacDiarmid's 1,153 ballot advantage -- or under
five per cent.
Tellingly, Burnaby-Lougheed MLA Harry Bloy already
announced his retirement in a riding where the politically accident-prone
ex-cabinet minister only won by 696 votes, or less than four per cent.
In Vancouver-Fraserview, controversial MLA Kash Heed
is cashing out, seeing his 748 vote margin, under four per cent, unlikely to
allow re-election -- not to mention his 2009 campaign being fined thousands for
overspending Elections BC limits.
Surrey-Tynehead MLA Dave Hayer also called it quits this month,
in a riding he held in 2009 by less than 10 per cent, with a 1,557 vote margin.
Cariboo-Chilcotin MLA Donna Barnett had the slimmest
victory margins of any B.C. Liberal in 2009 -- just 88 votes over the NDP. Her
chances of surviving the next election look equally slim.
Oak Bay-Gordon Head MLA Ida Chong won narrowly in
2009 by 561 votes or just over two per cent and then survived a recall campaign
as well in 2011, but with the BC Liberal tide going out, is unlikely to be
returned.
Kamloops-North Thompson is a classic weathervane
riding for B.C. elections, with the party that wins there triumphing in the
province for decades.
And the BC Liberals' Terry Lake did just that in 2009
by 510 votes or less than three per cent.
But Lake took 47 per cent of the ballots then while
the B.C. Liberals had 46 per cent support provincially -- if they are at 35 per
cent or less, Lake's chances will run dry.
Comox-Valley MLA Don McRae won his rookie campaign in
another frequent swing riding with a 1,378 vote margin over the NDP, a less
than five per cent gap with 47.3 per cent of the vote. Cut BC Liberal support
provincially and the swing goes against McRae.
Greens, Cons and vote splits
And which BC Liberal MLA has the most at stake in a close
race?
Premier Christy Clark herself, who narrowly eked out
a 594 vote win in the Vancouver-Point Grey by-election last May -- under four
per cent of the ballots cast.
Just one BC Liberal has gone in the other direction,
committing to run again in 2013 -- Vancouver-Langara MLA Moira Stilwell, who
enjoyed a 24 per cent margin of 4,275 votes.
But even Stilwell's strong position isn't enough to
deter former Vancouver city councillor George Chow from expressing
interest in running against her for the NDP.
The other big factor for BC Liberal MLAs undecided
about running again is what impact two other parties will have on the election
-- the BC Conservatives and the Green Party.
Most political observers tag the Green Party as
taking away more votes from the NDP than any other party -- and some New
Democrats blame their vote for twice re-electing the BC Liberals.
But while the Greens have been nearly invisible under
leader Jane Sterk, they still poll eight per cent in the Angus Reid survey --
the same tally they got in the 2009 election.
The BC Conservatives, on the other hand, are clearly
taking away many former BC Liberal votes and unlike 2009, they will likely be
running far more than the 24 candidates who contested the election out of 85
possible ridings.
BC Conservative Leader John Cummins is hoping his
party will actually leapfrog past Clark's team into second place just as
unelected former BC Liberal leader Gordon Wilson did in 1991 over another
fading woman premier -- Social Credit's Rita Johnson, who replaced Bill Vander
Zalm.
(In an ironic footnote, Johnson is now a big
supporter of the BC Conservatives and attended
their annual general meeting in 2010.)
Cummins should not be underestimated, having
re-energized a nearly dormant party into one consistently polling in the 20 per
cent range, and within spitting distance of the flagging BC Liberals.
Should Clark make yet more fumbles along the way to
the election, a decent campaign from the BC Conservatives could indeed let them
vault past the governing party and might also take seats the BC NDP now hopes
to win.
Regardless of Cummins' chances, his party has
rejected all overtures from the BC Liberals and their big business funders like
Canaccord Capital's Peter Brown to fold their tent
into one big happy "free enterprise" family.
The political mood of the province seems increasingly
clearly set against the BC Liberals having any hope of a fourth term of office.
And that means Premier Christy Clark will be
attending a lot of MLA retirement parties soon -- including possibly her own.
.
19 comments:
It does appear that Adrian Dix's moderate and prudent approach has paid dividends. I admit I was one who thought Dix would be a disaster as Leader but Bill was right and I was wrong. I recall Mike Smyth of the Province ranting on about how Christy and the Libs would be popping champagne corks now that Dix was the Leader. Smyth and others were practically proclaiming him the Castro of BC. Nice to see them eating crow right about now.
Gord
Victoria
Cole was called "useless Murray" by a lot of folks. He hung around for the pension, besides he didn't do that well last election. My gosh, why do people vote for characters who's main output is close to zero.
I'll move back to BC if those scumbag liberals are finally gone.
Pack your bags and be ready to move
Just curious - is there a $$$ advantage to "retiring" now rather than just waiting it out and being unelected?
It will be so nice to see the back end of them all.
They haven't done anything but plunge the province into debt & given us the dubious ranking as No. 1 in child poverty for 8 consecutive yrs.
the party which replaces the lieberals will have problems because c.c. is running around making promises, the province has no money, is running a huge debt, & most of B.C. assets are being sold off to "friends".
Of course a new government may give us a look into how our money was spent & how all the "deals" went down. Of course investigations will take time & money which will be needed to put the province on an even footing again.
it may well be the next government is going to need two teams when it takes office. One team which is elected, to run the government, a second team of people to run the investigations. The investigations could be run by retired fraud squad members, retired investigators, outside auditors along with inside auditors & outside province leaders.
I feel sorry for whoever wins the next BC election. The Campbell/Clark BC Liberals and Harper, have made BC a financial ruin. Everything of value in BC has been thieved and sold, by the Campbell/Clark BC Liberals.
What is there left for this province to recover with? BC has a huge debt, because of Campbell's lies, deceit, thefts and corruption. Christy has carried on with Campbell's evil governing style, which is exactly like Harper's.
The BC Liberals are at just 23 per cent in last week's Angus Reid Public Opinion po...but, y' all don't read the Angus Reid polls anymore.
Nothing new here except for what party it is.
The NDP lost all except 2 seats in 2001. The BC Liberals will be lucky to hold onto 5 or 6.
An absolute NDP majority (let's say more than 60 seats with 3 to 4 Liberals and the balance Conservative?
Umm, no thanks. Huge majorites make for poor govermment. I'd rather see an NDP bare majority may +10 seats. Not much more than that.
The BC Liberals are at just 23 per cent in last week's Angus Reid Public Opinion po...but, y' all don't read the Angus Reid polls anymore.
What's the point?
and don't expect too much from an NDP government. They aren't going to say "yes" to everything.
Unless of course they smoke money like a zonked out pot punk.
Hey Bill,
You don't seem to be taking on, and digging deep into issues .. I mean there are many fiasco's as of late within the governing BC Liberals that you could be running with, like you used to.
While a number of other bloggers are going for the gusto on some important issues, you seem to have moved to almost fluff lately .. not that there isn't a component to the Sh-- that's going on in the government, but it just hasn't seemed to be the same lately.
It would be nice if next Tuesday in 24 hrs or Tyee you dig for some dirt and take on a really big issue within the governing BC Libs that knocks our socks off.
Good luck.
What's the point?
No point. Just a little levity at Clark's expense. She's done it to herself.
I don't expect the BC NDP to say yes to everything, but I do expect them to govern openly, honestly, and with integrity, somethings that have been missing under the BC Liberal's decade of deceit and malfeasance.
I doubt that many BC Liberals would agree with you Anonymous 5:32 Saturday, but as always your opinion is welcome. But you are really not going to like my next column Tuesday, in which I actually praise the BC Liberals! Stay tuned.
Bill praising the BC Liberals??
Bill, I'd go easy on that Baby Duck. Just one glass every 5 months. No more.
Not looking for Bill to praise or bash the BC Liberals. There's been enough bashing of the BC Liberals that they look as dented as an old
cheap Hyundai.
Want to see him tear the BC NDP apart. And I don't mean a "bad NDP, bad bad" light tap on the wrist either.
Potobably praising the BC liberals on the bring your own wine to the restaurant. Not exactly s big volume of jobs created there.
You got some of the anons thinking, Bill. They will be waiting for your post of tomorrow
Not much to wait for. Predictable easy to figure out
It appears that Christy and her meeting with the Alberta premier did not go over well. She seems to believe that everyone supports any idle though that jumps into her head. Nice to see the media are not cutting her any slack either.( Nice change for sure) Maybe she will catch on and decide she needs to spend more time with her kid.Election time is coming up even if she stays.yrnsels
So what else is new? She won't be staying DPL.
The end result of the next election? She's out as Premier.
Even many BC Liberals know that.
Maybe Geoff Meggs will do the right thing and stick with doing what he was elected to do, and that is finish his term on council.
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