Close X
Saturday, November 30, 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

Dix 'delighted' premiers will meet PM on health

Dix 'delighted' premiers will meet PM on health
Adrian Dix says the premiers had long been asking to meet Justin Trudeau as they call on Ottawa to boost its contributions through the Canada Health Transfer. Dix says a "major impediment" has been overcome simply by agreeing to sitting down at the Feb. 7 talks in Ottawa, as the premiers had been asking to meet for two years.

Dix 'delighted' premiers will meet PM on health

129 cattle seized from B.C. property: SPCA

129 cattle seized from B.C. property: SPCA
They were also suffering from a range of medical issues, including untreated eye infections, lameness, inflamed udders, overgrown hoofs and diarrhea. The statement says "numerous carcasses" of dead cows were also discovered on the property.

129 cattle seized from B.C. property: SPCA

FortisBC Holdings to collaborate with First Nation

FortisBC Holdings to collaborate with First Nation
FortisBC Holdings says it respects Snuneymuxw's rights in relation to the potential effects of the project and is committed to sharing project benefits with the First Nation. It says Snuneymuxw has committed to supporting the projects and participating in the required regulatory processes.

FortisBC Holdings to collaborate with First Nation

Is COVID-19 still a global health emergency?

Is COVID-19 still a global health emergency?
WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus will make the final call based on the advice the committee gives him. He warned earlier this week that he remains concerned about the impact of the virus, noting there were 170,000 deaths from COVID-19 reported around the world in the last two months.

Is COVID-19 still a global health emergency?

Trudeau tells Liberal caucus to 'meet the moment'

Trudeau tells Liberal caucus to 'meet the moment'
Trudeau says his party will push for improvements in public health-care, build a green economy and continue to support Ukraine following Russia's invasion. He encouraged his caucus to build an economy that works for the middle class, and that will benefit future generations.

Trudeau tells Liberal caucus to 'meet the moment'

Another B.C. mill affected by forestry downturn

Another B.C. mill affected by forestry downturn
Western Forest Products announced Thursday that the mill will not restart "in its current configuration" and says a group, including the United Steelworkers and Indigenous partners, will spend the next 90 days seeking viable solutions for the operation.    

Another B.C. mill affected by forestry downturn