Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Green Candidate Joins Forces With Liberals As Way To Defeat Conservative MP

The Canadian Press, 17 Jul, 2015 12:17 PM
    KELOWNA, B.C. — The battle to unseat a Conservative party member of Parliament in Kelowna, B.C., has begun with a tag-team match between the Green party and Liberal candidates.
     
    Gary Adams won the Green nomination in Kelowna-Lake Country on Thursday, only to announce he planned to resign as part of a co-nomination process with his Liberal opponent.
     
    “Our common goals on climate change, restoring our democracy and diversifying our economy have been dramatically undermined in the last 10 years under (Prime Minister Stephen) Harper,” Adams said in a news release.
     
    Now, Stephen Fuhr will represent both the Greens and the Liberals to unite centre-left voters and beat incumbent Conservative MP Ron Cannan.
     
    “We both want to see democratic reform, a transition to a more energy efficient and low-carbon emissions economy and a return to governing with evidence-based policy,” Fuhr said. “None of that is going to happen if Harper stays in power.”
     
    Alan Monk and Gary Blidook were also Green candidates for the Kelowna-Lake Country riding. Blidook said he wouldn't co-operate with the Liberals.
     
    “The election is still three months away and that is plenty of time for things to change on the political scene,” he said in a letter to the editor of the Kelowna Daily Courier. “There will be no throwing in of the towel to join up with the Liberals or anyone else.”
     
    Liberal and Green party representatives in Kelowna said in the release that they hope their grassroots efforts at inter-party co-operation will inspire other riding associations to do the same.
     
    Dan Ryder, the Green party member who proposed the co-operation idea locally said, "It's Green party policy to co-operate with other parties, but implementing that is easier said than done. But our efforts here show that it is possible.”
     
    Fuhr's team said they welcomed the proposal to co-operate with local Greens when approached with the idea several months ago.
     
    Now, Fuhr has committed to a partnership that would incorporate key planks of the Green platform in both his campaign and his activities in parliament.
     
    As the MP for Kelowna-Lake Country, he would work with both Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau and Green Leader Elizabeth May, as well as with both parties' local riding associations.
     
    Fuhr's intention to co-operate had been given the go-ahead from the Liberal leadership prior to the local Green vote on the issue, and the partnership details will now go forward to the national Green party office for approval.
     
    The national office has been following the local process, according to a release from the Liberal party.
     
    May's position has been that she would support the decision reached by the local Green riding association, the Liberal riding association in Kelowna said.
     
    Both parties to the co-operation agreement point out that it does not constitute Green support for the Liberal platform, or Liberal support for the Green platform.
     
    Instead, they say, its purpose is to achieve the common goals that Fuhr and Green party members share.
     
    The new low-whipping policy from the Liberals — there will be more free votes — gives Fuhr flexibility to support Green policies, he says.
     
    “In case of platform conflicts, I’ll often be in a position to consult both my Liberal and Green partners, receive input from my constituency, and come to an evidence-based decision," Fuhr said.
     
    The NDP in Kelowna have already rejected the idea. They are represented by Okanagan College Prof. Norah Bowman. (Kelowna Daily Courier)

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Let The Games Begin: Thousands Gather For Pan Am Games Opening Ceremony

    Let The Games Begin: Thousands Gather For Pan Am Games Opening Ceremony
    Hordes of people carrying — and often wearing — flags from more than a dozen countries packed into the Rogers Centre, temporarily renamed the Pan Am Ceremonies Venue, for the sold-out show.

    Let The Games Begin: Thousands Gather For Pan Am Games Opening Ceremony

    Prime Minister Stephen Harper announces expansion of Rouge National Urban Park

    Prime Minister Stephen Harper announces expansion of Rouge National Urban Park
    PICKERING, Ont. — Prime Minister Stephen Harper says the federal government will more than double its initial contribution to Rouge National Urban Park.

    Prime Minister Stephen Harper announces expansion of Rouge National Urban Park

    RCMP Charge B.C. Man Othman Ayed Hamdan With Terrorism Offences For Posting ISIS Propaganda Online

    RCMP Charge B.C. Man Othman Ayed Hamdan With Terrorism Offences For Posting ISIS Propaganda Online
    VANCOUVER — A man from northern British Columbia has been charged with three terrorism-related counts, accused of posting Islamic State propaganda online.

    RCMP Charge B.C. Man Othman Ayed Hamdan With Terrorism Offences For Posting ISIS Propaganda Online

    Pilot Battling Wildfires In B.C. Interior Escapes Injuries After Single-Engine Water Bomber Crashes

    Pilot Battling Wildfires In B.C. Interior Escapes Injuries After Single-Engine Water Bomber Crashes
    VANCOUVER — A pilot battling wildfires in British Columbia's Interior escaped serious injury after crashing his single-engine plane into a lake while scooping water, says a spokesman for the Transportation Safety Board.

    Pilot Battling Wildfires In B.C. Interior Escapes Injuries After Single-Engine Water Bomber Crashes

    Coroner Identifies James Butters As The Man Shot ByPort Hardy RCMP; Police Watchdog Seeks Witnesses

    Coroner Identifies James Butters As The Man Shot ByPort Hardy RCMP; Police Watchdog Seeks Witnesses
    James Butters, who was also known as James Hayward, died Wednesday morning near the intersection of Highway 19 and Granville Street in Port Hardy.

    Coroner Identifies James Butters As The Man Shot ByPort Hardy RCMP; Police Watchdog Seeks Witnesses

    Conservation Officer Called Killing Bear Cubs 'Needless,' Says Leaked Documents

    Conservation Officer Called Killing Bear Cubs 'Needless,' Says Leaked Documents
    VICTORIA — A conservation officer in British Columbia credited with sparing the lives of two orphaned bear cubs apparently told his superiors that his duties don't include the needless killing of a baby animal.

    Conservation Officer Called Killing Bear Cubs 'Needless,' Says Leaked Documents