Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 2024
ADVT 
National

The Ball Is In B.C. Premier Christy Clark's Court, Political Scientists Say

The Canadian Press, 30 May, 2017 12:44 PM
    VANCOUVER — All eyes are on Premier Christy Clark after Monday's announcement that British Columbia's New Democrats have reached an agreement with the Green party to form a minority government, experts say.
     
    NDP Leader John Horgan and Andrew Weaver of the Greens appeared outside the legislative chamber in Victoria to share the news. They said details of the agreement would be released Tuesday after the NDP caucus has had a chance to ratify the deal, which is expected to last four years.
     
    "The ball is really in Christy Clark's court at this point," said Max Cameron, a political scientist at the University of British Columbia.
     
    "The question will be, does she do the elegant thing, which would be to resign and let John Horgan and the NDP form the government ... or does she attempt to go it alone."
     
    In a statement, Clark said her party has a responsibility to carefully consider its next steps and that she would have more to say Tuesday after consulting her caucus colleagues.
     
    Weaver has been negotiating with both parties since his party held the balance of power in the legislature after the provincial election on May 9.
     
    The Liberals won a plurality of seats with 43 compared to the NDP's 41 and three for the Greens, so parliamentary tradition gives Clark the first chance to form a government.
     
     
    Prof. Hamish Telford, who teaches political science at the University of the Fraser Valley, explained that the NDP-Green collaboration was far from a done deal.
     
    "Just because they have an agreement today to govern doesn't mean they will actually form a government," he said.
     
    Telford pointed out how in 2008 the federal Liberals failed to form a government after approaching the governor general with a coalition agreement signed by the NDP, Bloc Quebecois and Green party to overthrow the Conservatives led by then-prime minister Stephen Harper.
     
    Telford said he expects Clark to test her luck in the legislature with a throne speech rather than admit defeat, given the NDP and Greens only have one more seat between them than the Liberals.
     
    "I don't think ... the NDP-Green majority is sufficiently great to cause her to concede," Telford said
     
     
    After all, he said it would only take one New Demcocrat to miss the ferry to Vancouver Island for the vote in the legislature in Victoria and "the Liberals could survive a confidence vote on the throne speech."
     
    Clark would likely be defeated, Telford added. He predicted she would then approach Lt.-Gov. Judith Guichon to ask for another election, at which point it would be up to Guichon to decide whether to send voters back to the polls or ask Horgan to form a government.
     
    "I don't know what she would do in those circumstances," Telford said.
     
    A minority NDP government propped up by the Greens would have "the narrowest of majorities," said Kathryn Harrison, a political scientist at the University of British Columbia.
     
    "There is no room for error. There is no room for backbenchers to bolt. There's no room for sickness," she said, adding that governments can lose a single vote any number of ways.
     
     
    "People misbehave. They get thrown out of caucus. They get sick or resign. Rebellious backbenchers threaten to vote against legislation and break party discipline," Harrison said. "It would be a challenge to govern for very long."
     
    Minority governments have only occurred three times in B.C. history, most recently in 1952.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Cops Can Fix Small Errors On Tickets After Issuing Them, Appeal Court Rules

    Cops Can Fix Small Errors On Tickets After Issuing Them, Appeal Court Rules
    TORONTO — An officer who fixes minor mistakes after issuing a ticket does not affect its validity, the Ontario Court of Appeal ruled Thursday.

    Cops Can Fix Small Errors On Tickets After Issuing Them, Appeal Court Rules

    Loonie Loses More Than A Cent After Poloz Says Rate Cut Still 'On The Table'

      The loonie lost 1.16 U.S. cents to 75.42 cents US, as it also felt the weight of falling crude prices and a strengthening greenback.

    Loonie Loses More Than A Cent After Poloz Says Rate Cut Still 'On The Table'

    Sukhbir Badal Branding NRIs As Terrorists, We Condemn It: AAP

    Sukhbir Badal Branding NRIs As Terrorists, We Condemn It: AAP
    The AAP on Thursday condemned Punjab's Deputy Chief Minister Sukhbir Badal for what a party leader said were "remarks branding the whole Punjabi community settled abroad as terrorists and accusing the AAP of getting funds from radicals".

    Sukhbir Badal Branding NRIs As Terrorists, We Condemn It: AAP

    Moscow Nightclub Hosts Early Inauguration Party For Donald Trump

    Moscow Nightclub Hosts Early Inauguration Party For Donald Trump
    MOSCOW — Twenty-four hours before Donald Trump is to be sworn in as president of the United States, several dozen people packed a Moscow nightclub to celebrate his inauguration early.

    Moscow Nightclub Hosts Early Inauguration Party For Donald Trump

    It's 'An Important Time For Women' Around The World, Says Maryam Monsef

    It's 'An Important Time For Women' Around The World, Says Maryam Monsef
    OTTAWA — Maryam Monsef, like all her Liberal cabinet colleagues, was careful to step around a direct question about U.S. president-elect Donald Trump.

    It's 'An Important Time For Women' Around The World, Says Maryam Monsef

    Calgary Zoo Unable To Find Cause Of 'Extraordinary And Tragic' Penguin Deaths

    Calgary Zoo Unable To Find Cause Of 'Extraordinary And Tragic' Penguin Deaths
     A Calgary Zoo investigation was unable to find out what caused the deaths of seven Humboldt penguins last month.

    Calgary Zoo Unable To Find Cause Of 'Extraordinary And Tragic' Penguin Deaths