Close X
Friday, November 8, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Premier Calls Byelections To Replace 2 Metro Vancouver MLAs

The Canadian Press, 06 Jan, 2016 10:38 AM
    VANCOUVER — Battles focusing on economic and social issues have broken out in two Vancouver-area ridings in advance of byelections that could serve as a barometer for Premier Christy Clark's government.
     
    Feb. 2 votes were called Tuesday by Clark for Vancouver-Mount Pleasant and Coquitlam-Burke Mountain, ridings left vacant last summer when Jenny Kwan and Doug Horne decided to run in the federal election.
     
    Kwan won for the New Democrats, while Horne lost for the Conservatives in the October vote.
     
    Under provincial law, a byelection must be called within six months after the Chief Electoral Officer has been notified that the seat is vacant.
     
    Hamish Telford, associate professor of political science at the University of the Fraser Valley, said byelections can allow voters to express their approval or disapproval of the government and raise issues of concern.
     
    "There can be an opportunity for voters to have sort of a mini referendum on the government, and, therefore, to sort of express their displeasure if they're unhappy with government, or express approval if they're happy with the government," he said.
     
     
    Transportation, Kinder Morgan's proposed pipeline expansion and housing-and-rental costs could become factors in both races, he said.
     
    Clark was quick to frame the campaign, focusing on the economy and investments in infrastructure.
     
    "Today, B.C. is a leader in Canada, with a growing and diverse economy, a balanced budget, a triple-A credit rating, and globally recognized plan to fight climate change," she said in a statement.
     
    "We have achieved this because of the hard work of British Columbians, and because we have a plan to control spending, create opportunity today and for future generations, and return dividends to British Columbians through investment in infrastructure, health care, education and more."
     
    Liberal candidate Joan Isaacs, who is running in Coquitlam-Burke Mountain and has worked for three decades in the financial-services industry, said she wants to build a sharing economy and welcome technologies like Airbnb, Uber, Lyft and Rover.
     
    Gavin Dew, who is running for the Liberals in Vancouver-Mount-Pleasant, called his riding a "unique economic hub," as it is home to Port Metro Vancouver, a growing technology sector and a "thriving" hospitality industry.
     
     
    Dew, who completed an MBA at Oxford, studied crisis-management at Harvard and now runs a communications' business, said he wants to see better transit across Metro Vancouver and is committed to building a new St. Paul's Hospital in his riding.
     
    NDP Leader John Horgan was unavailable for comment, but Melanie Mark, who is running for the NDP in Vancouver-Mount Pleasant, said she wants to do something about the affordable-housing crisis in her riding "so that people don't get squeezed out."
     
    She said the issue is "top of mind for everyone," but she also wants to focus on poverty reduction, support for students and teachers and the environment.
     
    "I've got lots of gas in this tank to do some work for the next 40 years," said Mark, 40, who is of First Nations' heritage and worked previously for B.C.'s representative of children and families.
     
    Jodie Wickens, who is the executive director of the Autism Support Network and will run for the NDP in Coquitlam-Burke Mountain, said in a news release that Clark's government has failed local families.
     
    "I'm running to ensure residents have a strong voice who will fight for better transit services, more funding for education and improved health-care services," she said.
     
     
    The B.C. Liberal Party holds 48 seats currently in the legislature, the NDP has 33 seats, and an independent and Green Party member each hold one seat.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    New Daily Aeromexico Flights To Vancouver Seen As Boon For Tourism And Business

    New Daily Aeromexico Flights To Vancouver Seen As Boon For Tourism And Business
    Richmond said the non-stop service "opens up" the Latin American market with the airline's "great onward network connections."

    New Daily Aeromexico Flights To Vancouver Seen As Boon For Tourism And Business

    B.C. Judge Sides With Trinity Western University Saying Law Society Erred

     An evangelical Christian university under fire across the country for forbidding sexual intimacy outside of heterosexual marriage has secured a decisive legal victory in its effort to open a law school in British Columbia.

    B.C. Judge Sides With Trinity Western University Saying Law Society Erred

    Wife Of Saudi Blogger Raif Badawi Says He Is On Hunger Strike In Prison

    Wife Of Saudi Blogger Raif Badawi Says He Is On Hunger Strike In Prison
    Ensaf Haidar tells Amnesty International her husband began it on Tuesday to protest the move.

    Wife Of Saudi Blogger Raif Badawi Says He Is On Hunger Strike In Prison

    Canada's Environment Minister Catherine McKenna Worried About Rights Of Indigenous Peoples

    Canada's Environment Minister Catherine McKenna Worried About Rights Of Indigenous Peoples
    PARIS — Federal Environment Minister Catherine McKenna has expressed deep concerns about opposition at the international climate conference to what she called a "critically important" issue — the rights of Aboriginal Peoples.

    Canada's Environment Minister Catherine McKenna Worried About Rights Of Indigenous Peoples

    Chilliwack Woman Driving In Wrong Direction Dies After Head-On Collision On Highway 1

    Chilliwack Woman Driving In Wrong Direction Dies After Head-On Collision On Highway 1
    RCMP say the truck was travelling westbound in an eastbound lane when it collided head-on with a semi-truck just before midnight on Tuesday.

    Chilliwack Woman Driving In Wrong Direction Dies After Head-On Collision On Highway 1

    Sea Otter That Recovered From Gunshot Wounds Dies At Vancouver Aquarium

    Sea Otter That Recovered From Gunshot Wounds Dies At Vancouver Aquarium
    Walter, also affectionately known as Wally, was rescued from a Tofino, B.C., shoreline on Oct. 19, 2013, after locals reported a sea otter that appeared lethargic.

    Sea Otter That Recovered From Gunshot Wounds Dies At Vancouver Aquarium