Close X
Monday, September 23, 2024
ADVT 
National

Christy Clark Rallies B.C. Liberals Months Ahead Of 2017 Election

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Nov, 2016 11:40 AM
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's premier is calling on her party's volunteers and supporters to come together ahead of what she promises will be a very difficult election next spring.
     
    Christy Clark spoke at the B.C. Liberal party's convention Sunday, saying members must prove to the province that the party is one residents can believe in.
     
    "We are going to have to fight to succeed in 2017 like we have never fought before," she said. "And we are going to make sure that we earn every single vote that's out there. We're going to have to work our hearts out."
     
    The government has had many successes in recent years, the premier said, including balanced budgets, job creation and funding social programs, such as those for single moms and kids looking to be adopted.
     
    Running a surplus has given the government an opportunity to invest in people, Clark said.
     
    The B.C. government has also come under fire during its mandate for several issues, including possible conflicts of interest, the handling of a teachers' strike in 2014, and sky-rocketing housing costs across the province.
     
    Clark told her supporters that opponents will criticize them leading up to the provincial election on May 9, 2017. Some of the negative comments, she said, will focus on the fact that she is not perfect.
     
    The premier doled out criticism of her own at the convention, calling the opposition NDP a party of "quitters."
     
    "Those guys, they're a party of ideologues. We're a party of ideas. They're a bunch of guys who want to go back into the past. We're a party who bust forward into a bright new future," she said.
     
    The broad-ranging speech also criticized the federal government for a lack of spending on helping to prepare B.C. to respond to tanker spills along the West Coast.
     
    "We have been cheated by a federal government for a long time while resources have gone to the East," Clark said. "It is our time to make sure our coast is properly protected. And this prime minister has the chance to change it."
     
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau can right the "historical wrong," she added.
     
    "He has the chance to change it and I believe he is going to be the one who does it," Clark said.
     
    Trudeau will be in Vancouver Monday to make an announcement with Transportation Minister Marc Garneau at a navy base in Stanley Park.
     
    There has been speculation that the announcement will be about a West Coast spill response system.
     
    Speaking to reporters after her speech, Clark said she doesn't know "for a fact" that Trudeau will bring in a new spill response, but said that she is hopeful.
     
    Nor would the premier give any concrete information on what promises will be made leading up to next spring's election. The party is currently working on the campaign budget and platform, she said.
     
    "What I've heard over the last few months are some really great ideas and people will see those over the next few months," Clark said.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Ontario Couple Who Confined Nephew To A Squalid Room For 2 Years Sentenced To 18 Months

    Ontario Couple Who Confined Nephew To A Squalid Room For 2 Years Sentenced To 18 Months
    The 45-year-old man and 51-year-old woman, who cannot be named to protect the identity of the victim, pleaded guilty in May to failing to provide the necessaries of life

    Ontario Couple Who Confined Nephew To A Squalid Room For 2 Years Sentenced To 18 Months

    PM Commitment On Child Welfare Welcome, But Just Talk Without Action: Blackstock

    OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau admits more needs to be done to improve the outcomes and opportunities for young people in First Nations communities.

    PM Commitment On Child Welfare Welcome, But Just Talk Without Action: Blackstock

    Spectre Of Chinese 'Fox Hunt' Looms Over Li's Visit To Ottawa With Trudeau

    Spectre Of Chinese 'Fox Hunt' Looms Over Li's Visit To Ottawa With Trudeau
    Trudeau is under fire from opposition parties for pursuing the treaty, which is a feature of a new high-level security dialogue he established with Beijing on his recent visit.

    Spectre Of Chinese 'Fox Hunt' Looms Over Li's Visit To Ottawa With Trudeau

    Friends And Colleagues Of Canadian Professor Jailed In Iran Rally In Montreal

    Friends And Colleagues Of Canadian Professor Jailed In Iran Rally In Montreal
      Many of them gathered at a rally in Montreal today to call for Homa Hoodfar to be freed.

    Friends And Colleagues Of Canadian Professor Jailed In Iran Rally In Montreal

    Missing Indigenous Sex-Trade Worker Found Dead In Surrey, B.C.

    Missing Indigenous Sex-Trade Worker Found Dead In Surrey, B.C.
    Deanna Desjarlais of Saskatoon, who was a sex-trade worker with addiction problems, was twice reported missing earlier this year to police in Vancouver.

    Missing Indigenous Sex-Trade Worker Found Dead In Surrey, B.C.

    Edmonton Police Lay 'Paper Terrorism' Charge Against Self-Proclaimed Freeman

    Police in Edmonton have charged a self-proclaimed Freeman on the Land with what they are calling a paper terrorism campaign against a peace officer.

    Edmonton Police Lay 'Paper Terrorism' Charge Against Self-Proclaimed Freeman