Close X
Friday, November 29, 2024
ADVT 
National

Tight B.C. Election Puts Vote Splitting On Agenda In Campaign's Final Days

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 06 May, 2017 01:18 PM
    NANAIMO, B.C. — British Columbia's political party leaders have been frantically crisscrossing the province, making their final appeals to voters who might still be swayed before casting their ballots Tuesday.
     
    New Democrat Leader John Horgan reached out to prospective Green party voters, and in at least one riding campaign workers said a split vote would actually help the NDP.
     
    Horgan, campaigning on Vancouver Island Friday where the NDP holds 11 of 14 seats, said undecided and Green voters should support the New Democrats in a strategic move to keep Christy Clark's Liberals from a fifth consecutive election win.
     
    "I'm appealing to those who are contemplating voting Green that we have a lot of concerns in common," he said. "I think we can all agree we can't afford four more years of Christy Clark."
     
    Horgan, who battled with Green Leader Andrew Weaver during the campaign's televised debate, made the appeal at each of his campaign events, starting in Nanaimo.
     
    He said the NDP and Greens share similar positions on electoral reform, climate change and opposition to the Kinder Morgan pipeline expansion project.
     
    "We can defeat Christy Clark and the B.C. Liberals but we have to come together to make it happen," Horgan said, adding a warning that vote splits benefit the Liberals.
     
    Weaver also campaigned on the Island Friday, and was unequivocal in his rejection of Horgan's invitation, denouncing the NDP offer as a form of voter suppression built on fear.
     
    Weaver said the Greens are looking to inspire voters, not scare them away from supporting a political party.
     
     
    The Greens hold just one seat in the legislature, but are believed to be challenging the NDP for several seats on Vancouver Island.
     
    Despite Horgan's appeals to Green voters, some New Democrats in Parksville-Qualicum said local NDP candidate Sue Powell was looking to move between the Liberal and Green votes and take the seat from incumbent Michelle Stilwell, who is a member of Clark's cabinet.
     
    "I strongly believe that Sue Powell is going to win this election because the disenfranchised Liberal voters are defecting and she's picking up some of those votes and the Greens are picking up the other ones, but our base is very very strong," said NDP supporter Scott DeLong.
     
    Clark also made a stop on Vancouver Island during a whirlwind of campaigning on Friday that included events in Campbell River, Richmond, Terrace, Smithers and Prince George.
     
    She again warned supporters of the negative impact she insisted an NDP government would have on jobs.
     
    Clark accused Horgan of having more than 100,000 jobs on his "hit list," citing his opposition to resource projects including Pacific NorthWest LNG and Trans Mountain, along with his plan to hike the minimum wage.
     
    She promoted her party as the only one that can create and protect jobs, particularly in natural resources, from the protectionist influence of U.S. President Donald Trump.
     
    "We are going to stand strong to make sure that we support jobs in British Columbia. We are going to fight and we are going to fight hard to make sure that we preserve what we have in the face of U.S. protectionism," Clark said at an event in Campbell River.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Maldivian Model Raudha Athif's Father Accuses Kashmiri Friend Of Her Murde

    Maldivian Model Raudha Athif's Father Accuses Kashmiri Friend Of Her Murde
    Muhammad Atif, father of Raudha Atif, lodged a case with the court of Chief Metropolitan Magistrate on Monday afternoon accusing her daughter's classmate Sirat Parveen Mahmud, 21, who hails from Kashmir

    Maldivian Model Raudha Athif's Father Accuses Kashmiri Friend Of Her Murde

    Coach Put Troublemaking Teen John Horgan On Track To B.C.'s New Democrat Leader

    Coach Put Troublemaking Teen John Horgan On Track To B.C.'s New Democrat Leader
    VANCOUVER — As a teenager, John Horgan was as far away from becoming a political leader in British Columbia as you could get.

    Coach Put Troublemaking Teen John Horgan On Track To B.C.'s New Democrat Leader

    Sister Of Wrongly Fired Health Worker Harshly Critical Of B.C.'s Christy Clark

    VICTORIA — The sister of a B.C. government health worker who took his own life after being falsely accused of wrongdoing calls Premier Christy Clark's response to a report on the issue callous and cynical.

    Sister Of Wrongly Fired Health Worker Harshly Critical Of B.C.'s Christy Clark

    Man Charged After Honda Civic Clocked At 200 Km/h Crashes Off N.S. Highway

    Man Charged After Honda Civic Clocked At 200 Km/h Crashes Off N.S. Highway
      Mounties say the car was spotted late Sunday afternoon on Highway 104 in Marshy Hope, passing vehicles at high speed in a no-passing zone.

    Man Charged After Honda Civic Clocked At 200 Km/h Crashes Off N.S. Highway

    Mountie Rescues Infant From Car Seat After Vehicle Hits Watery Ditch

    Mountie Rescues Infant From Car Seat After Vehicle Hits Watery Ditch
    PORTAGE LA PRAIRIE, Man. — A woman is facing impaired driving charges in Manitoba after a vehicle rolled into a watery ditch and trapped a toddler in his car seat.

    Mountie Rescues Infant From Car Seat After Vehicle Hits Watery Ditch

    Police Discover Impaired Man With Son On Lap Riding Lawn Tractor In Manitoba

    Police Discover Impaired Man With Son On Lap Riding Lawn Tractor In Manitoba
    Police in Winkler, Man., said they got a call Saturday around 9 p.m. about a man with a young boy on his lap driving a tractor on and off the road.

    Police Discover Impaired Man With Son On Lap Riding Lawn Tractor In Manitoba