Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. New Democrat MLA to resign her Vancouver seat

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Feb, 2023 06:31 PM
  • B.C. New Democrat MLA to resign her Vancouver seat

VICTORIA - Melanie Mark, a former New Democrat cabinet minister, wiped away tears Wednesday as she gave what was likely her final speech in the British Columbia legislature.

She held an eagle feather and wore her grandfather's beaded, buckskin jacket as she looked back on a political career but forward to her life ahead.

The Vancouver-Mount Pleasant member of the legislature, who recently returned from a six-month medical leave, says she is leaving and expects her last day to be the end of March.

She says she wasn't quitting but is standing up for herself and putting herself and her two daughters first.

Mark, who says she has been diagnosed with attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder, is the first First Nations woman elected to B.C.’s legislative assembly, and the first to serve as a cabinet minister.

She resigned her tourism, arts, culture and sports cabinet portfolio last September and took a leave, citing health reasons.

"I have no regrets," Mark says. "I have made mistakes, but I can't turn back time. In many ways I have done what I came here to change."

Mark says her proudest moment in the legislature came as advanced education minister when she helped drive government policy that waived tuition fees for youth in care, "so young kids like me could have a chance."

Mark says she is the first person in her family to graduate from high school and the first to receive a post-secondary education.

She says she entered politics to stand up for society's underdogs and speak up for the voiceless and those who don't vote.

"People need to know their lives matter," Mark says. "We need to be less partisan and have the guts to do the right things."

First elected in 2016, Mark says her work in the legislature helped create the first Indigenous law school in the world at the University of Victoria and introduce Indigenous language courses at B.C. universities.

But Mark says she will not miss the often-adversarial political environment at the legislature.

"The place felt like a torture chamber," she says. "I will not miss the character assassination. The fact is the political environment is cutthroat and dysfunctional."

Former premier John Horgan announced earlier this month he is speeding up his retirement by choosing to leave his Langford-Juan de Fuca seat next month rather than his previous plan of staying until the fall 2024 election.

No byelections have been called in either Horgan's Victoria-area riding or Mark's Vancouver-Mount Pleasant riding.

MORE National ARTICLES

Big grocery store CEOs called to testify in Ottawa

Big grocery store CEOs called to testify in Ottawa
The proposal to hear from the grocery leaders came from NDP MP Alistair MacGregor, and it received unanimous support from Liberal, Conservative and Bloc Québécois MPs. Executives from all three companies, as well as Save-On-Foods, have testified at past committee meetings focused on the rising cost of food — but not their CEOs.

Big grocery store CEOs called to testify in Ottawa

Photojournalist, news outlet sue RCMP over arrest

Photojournalist, news outlet sue RCMP over arrest
The claim filed in B.C. Supreme Court on Monday argues Bracken didn't breach the injunction because she was there as a journalist and the RCMP were notified that she was a member of the media before, during and after her arrest.

Photojournalist, news outlet sue RCMP over arrest

Provinces to accept new federal health deal

Provinces to accept new federal health deal
The deal amounts to an additional $46 billion from Ottawa over a decade, as long as the provinces meet some conditions on how the money is spent and report data to demonstrate whether and how the money is making a difference in the health-care system.

Provinces to accept new federal health deal

Federal money to come for Vancouver's Chinatown

Federal money to come for Vancouver's Chinatown
The Vancouver Chinatown Foundation says more than $1.3 million of the funding will be used modernize buildings, including the Chinese Cultural Centre, Chinatown Storytelling Centre and Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Classical Gardens, with new lighting, signage and awnings.    

Federal money to come for Vancouver's Chinatown

Repatriation ceremony at B.C. museum for totem

Repatriation ceremony at B.C. museum for totem
Drummers and singers from the Nuxalk Nation participated in a ceremony today with the goal to reawaken the spirit of the totem by Louie Snow, an Indigenous carver who lost many works to the Royal B.C. Museum and other institutions.

Repatriation ceremony at B.C. museum for totem

Police seek info regarding missing female Kamaljit Tiwana

Police seek info regarding missing female Kamaljit Tiwana
Kamaljit Tiwana was believed to be driving a grey 2006 Nissan Pathfinder, which was located abandoned by Delta Police in a northbound lane on the Alex Fraser Bridge early Sunday morning. Kamaljit Tiwana is described as a 42-year-old South Asian woman, 5’5, 99 lbs. with brown eyes and black hair.

Police seek info regarding missing female Kamaljit Tiwana