Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Premier Sticking To Rules, Isn't Going Anywhere; NDP Wants To Get To Work

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 08 Jun, 2017 05:48 PM
    VICTORIA — The New Democrats were singing, the Liberals were solemn.
     
    The contrasts in mood between British Columbia's main political parties was unmistakable Thursday when their members were sworn in to a divided legislature.
     
    The differences didn't end there as Premier Christy Clark promised to stick to parliamentary rules until her minority government's likely defeat in a confidence vote, while NDP Leader John Horgan said the delays must end because the province needs a working government.
     
    "I'm anxious, as all British Columbians are, to have a government that's going to be here for the long term," Horgan said after the NDP's swearing in ceremony.
     
    He said the province needs action on the opioid crisis that has killed hundreds of people, leadership on softwood as new U.S. tariffs represent "a looming crisis," and preparation for the next school year under new rules from the Supreme Court of Canada on class sizes.
     
    The election on May 9 did not produce a clear winner. Clark's Liberals won 43 seats, the NDP 41 and the Greens three, meaning no party won a majority in the 87-seat legislature.
     
    B.C. hasn't had a minority government in 65 years.
     
    The NDP and the Greens signed a political manifesto to work together in the legislature that would allow the NDP to form a government after bringing down the Liberals.
     
     
    Asked why she doesn't concede and hold an immediate confidence vote when the legislature returns on June 22, Clark said times of uncertainty demand order.
     
    "When we are in a period like this, something we haven't experienced since 1952, we should make sure that we are going back to the rules that have governed these institutions for centuries," she said. "That really is what provides our democracy with stability."
     
    Clark added that she doesn't know if a change in government is inevitable. The Liberals have been in power for 16 years.
     
    "It's an unusual situation when the party that gets the most seats doesn't form government, if that's what happens."
     
    Whatever the outcome, Clark said she plans to remain as leader of the B.C. Liberals.
     
    "Whatever job voters give me and the house gives me in this parliament, I'm going to take it," she told a news conference after a swearing in ceremony.
     
    Clark's Liberals appeared dispirited entering the legislature, though Clark and Finance Minister Mike de Jong lightened the mood with a few dance steps in the chamber.
     
    The New Democrats' ceremony was joyous. Beaming and laughing NDP members walked into the chamber as musicians outside sang the counter-culture anthem "All You Need Is Love" by The Beatles.
     
    Horgan said he wants to get back to the legislature to test Clark's hold on power.
     
     
    "We need a government in place as quickly as possible," he said. "I believe we've been delaying unduly. We want to roll up our sleeves and get to work."
     
    De Jong, who is also the Liberal house leader, said the legislature will elect a Speaker on June 22, but he wouldn't say who is in line for the pivotal position in the minority government. He suggested political traditions generally mean the Speaker is a member of the current government.
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Toronto Police To Offer $50k Reward In 2016 Fatal Shooting Of Pregnant Woman

    Toronto Police To Offer $50k Reward In 2016 Fatal Shooting Of Pregnant Woman
    TORONTO — A year after shots fired at a car killed a 33-year-old pregnant woman, Toronto police are offering a reward of up to $50,000 for information leading to the conviction of those responsible.

    Toronto Police To Offer $50k Reward In 2016 Fatal Shooting Of Pregnant Woman

    Air Canada Plane Diverted After Ontario Man Allegedly Tries To Open Door

    TORONTO — An Ontario man is in federal custody in the United States after allegedly assaulting members of an Air Canada flight crew and trying to open the door of a plane while it was in flight.

    Air Canada Plane Diverted After Ontario Man Allegedly Tries To Open Door

    Andrew Weaver Says Greens Will Fight Pipeline; Calls Clark's Liberals 'Reckless'

    Andrew Weaver Says Greens Will Fight Pipeline; Calls Clark's Liberals 'Reckless'
    British Columbia's Green party leader says they plan to use their increased political clout in the provincial legislature to fight Kinder Morgan's Trans Mountain pipeline expansion project

    Andrew Weaver Says Greens Will Fight Pipeline; Calls Clark's Liberals 'Reckless'

    Trudeau To Promote Canadian Tech, Lure Foreign Investment At Microsoft Summit

    Trudeau To Promote Canadian Tech, Lure Foreign Investment At Microsoft Summit
    VANCOUVER — Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is expected to pitch major multinational companies on investing in Canada's technology sector on Wednesday, joining top business leaders inside the closed-door Microsoft CEO Summit in Redmond, Wash.

    Trudeau To Promote Canadian Tech, Lure Foreign Investment At Microsoft Summit

    Daredevil Nik Wallenda's Wife To Dangle By Her Teeth Over Niagara Falls

    Daredevil Nik Wallenda's Wife To Dangle By Her Teeth Over Niagara Falls
    The trapeze-artist wife of daredevil Nik Wallenda is planning her own stunt high above Niagara Falls

    Daredevil Nik Wallenda's Wife To Dangle By Her Teeth Over Niagara Falls

    Winnipeg Police Arrest, Charge Men With Killing Tina Fontaine's Cousin

    Winnipeg Police Arrest, Charge Men With Killing Tina Fontaine's Cousin
    WINNIPEG — Police have charged three men in the killing of a cousin of Tina Fontaine, a teenager whose death fuelled calls for a national inquiry into missing and murdered indigenous women.

    Winnipeg Police Arrest, Charge Men With Killing Tina Fontaine's Cousin