Close X
Monday, October 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Eby says B.C. Greens not yet ready for minority talks as Furstenau stays Green leader

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Oct, 2024 02:54 PM
  • Eby says B.C. Greens not yet ready for minority talks as Furstenau stays Green leader

Premier and NDP Leader David Eby says he's been told by the B.C. Green Party that it's too early to begin talks about a minority government agreement after the weekend's still-undecided provincial election.

Recounts in two ridings and a tally of 49,000 absentee and mail-in ballots that are set to begin this Saturday will hold the key to the outcome, with both the NDP and the B.C. Conservatives falling short of the 47 ridings needed to form a majority after the initial count ended on the weekend.

"It is very likely we would need the support of other MLAs to pass legislation, to do the work we need to do," Eby said Tuesday at his first news conference since Saturday's election.

The initial tally has the NDP elected or leading in 46 ridings, John Rustad's B.C. Conservatives elected or leading in 45, and the Greens winning two ridings in B.C.'s 93-seat legislature.

The closeness of the race raises the prospect of a minority government involving Green support.

"The Greens have advised us that they're not ready yet to engage in those conversations," Eby said. "But we're preparing right now to hit the ground running."

He said the preparation work being done by the NDP includes working out a minority arrangement.

"We'll see where the votes end up," he said.

In the ridings of Surrey City Centre and Juan de Fuca-Malahat, NDP candidates hold slim leads of less than 100 votes, forcing manual recounts that will begin this Saturday and could last until Monday. The absentee and mail-in votes will also be counted on the same days.

To win a majority, the Conservatives will likely need to win both recounts and all other ridings they currently lead. Failing that, the NDP would be in a position to attempt to form a minority government with Green support, assuming it doesn't snatch another riding where the Conservatives hold a lead.

A minority deal between the Greens and Conservatives could be less likely because of ideological differences.

The Greens said in a statement Tuesday before Eby's news conference that Furstenau would stay on as party leader, despite losing her seat in the legislature on Saturday.

The party's two newly elected MLAs, Jeremy Valeriote and Rob Botterell, support Furstenau's leadership as they "navigate the prospect of having the balance of power in the legislature," said the statement.

Eby said he had reached out to Furstenau on election night to congratulate her on the Greens' showing.

Rustad's B.C. Conservatives went from taking less than two per cent of the vote in 2020 to the brink of power, and on election night he said the party would look for the first opportunity to topple an NDP minority government and force another election.

Eby suggested the NDP would seek to return to the legislature as soon as possible once the official vote count is decided, but he did not offer a date.

The NDP went into the election with 55 ridings, a comfortable majority in what was previously an 87-seat legislature. The B.C. Conservatives went in with five, all of them having been previously elected under the BC Liberal banner, including Rustad.

His rise came after he was thrown out of the Liberals, joined the Conservatives, was acclaimed leader, and steered them to a level of popularity that led to the collapse of his old party, now called BC United — all in just two years.

On Monday night, Rustad took to social media to describe his origin story as leader of the party, describing how he was kicked out of the Liberals on his birthday in August 2022, over his support for a climate change skeptic.

He says he considered retiring, but his wife, Kim, convinced him to stay in politics and his friend Azim Jiwani suggested a meeting with the Conservatives' executive director, Angelo Isidorou, at a pub in Vancouver.

Rustad says they "shared a pint of Guinness" and discussed breathing life into a new party that would give "grassroots voters a new option for genuine change."

MORE National ARTICLES

Quebec premier defends new museum on Québécois nation after Indigenous criticism

Quebec premier defends new museum on Québécois nation after Indigenous criticism
Quebec Premier François Legault is defending his comments about a new history museum after he was accused by a prominent First Nations group of trying to erase their history.

Quebec premier defends new museum on Québécois nation after Indigenous criticism

London Drugs president says, no customer data taken

London Drugs president says, no customer data taken
The president of London Drugs has issued a letter apologizing for a cybersecurity incident that forced the company to close stores for more than a week, but he says there's no evidence customer databases were compromised.

London Drugs president says, no customer data taken

Another barge adrift in Vancouver prompts speedy coast guard response

Another barge adrift in Vancouver prompts speedy coast guard response
Another barge went adrift in Vancouver's English Bay, prompting a quick response from the Canadian Coast Guard.

Another barge adrift in Vancouver prompts speedy coast guard response

B.C.'s Columbia River watershed declared infected with fish-killing whirling disease

B.C.'s Columbia River watershed declared infected with fish-killing whirling disease
The Columbia River watershed in B.C. has been declared an infected area for whirling disease, a parasite that causes deformities in fish and has a high mortality rate.

B.C.'s Columbia River watershed declared infected with fish-killing whirling disease

B.C. drug deaths reach 192 in March; Ottawa approves request to prohibit public use

B.C. drug deaths reach 192 in March; Ottawa approves request to prohibit public use
On the same day the British Columbia government's approach to the overdose crisis faces a major shift, the provincial coroner announced another 192 people were killed by illicit drugs in March.

B.C. drug deaths reach 192 in March; Ottawa approves request to prohibit public use

Ottawa approves British Columbia's request to make public drug use illegal again

Ottawa approves British Columbia's request to make public drug use illegal again
Public drug use became illegal in British Columbia once again on Tuesday, after the federal government granted the province's request to scale back its drug decriminalization pilot.  The change represents a major policy climbdown for the provincial NDP government more than a year into the three-year pilot program with Ottawa that is aimed at tackling the deadly overdose crisis. 

Ottawa approves British Columbia's request to make public drug use illegal again