Close X
Sunday, October 13, 2024
ADVT 
National

Voting underway to elect new B.C. Liberal leader

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Feb, 2022 06:16 PM
  • Voting underway to elect new B.C. Liberal leader

VANCOUVER - Voting to elect the next leader of British Columbia's Liberals is underway as the party is expected to be in court Friday to face a challenge that asks a judge to delay the scheduled release of Saturday's results for 15 days.

Online and telephone voting started Thursday for the next party leader, replacing former leader Andrew Wilkinson who announced his resignation following the Liberals' defeat in the October 2020 election.

Seven candidates are running for the leadership, including legislature members Michael Lee, Ellis Ross and Renee Merrifield; business leaders Gavin Dew, Val Litwin and Stan Sipos; and Kevin Falcon, a former B.C. cabinet minister.

Vikram Bajwa, a longtime Liberal party member, has petitioned the B.C. Supreme Court to delay the scheduled release of the leadership results while the party provides details of its audit of new memberships signed up during the campaign.

Kamloops Liberal member of the legislature Peter Milobar, the Opposition's house leader, said the court action and concerns about party memberships have created tensions during the campaign, but he's hoping they ease once a new leader is chosen.

"Everyone's well aware leadership races, they ebb and flow, and they get a little bit more what feels like personal and testy at times," he said.

He said these races can generate friction near the end because "everybody is within the same political family trying to achieve the leadership."

Such campaign wounds "tend to heal fairly quickly," Milobar said.

Bajwa's petition seeks several orders by the court on top of the 15-day delay. They include a declaration that the party's membership audit is incomplete and an order that the party reveal its conclusions on whether any co-ordinated voter fraud took place in the leadership race.

Party spokesman David Wasyluk said the party will be in court to respond to the petition, arguing it has taken reasonable steps to determine that new members are eligible to vote.

He said the court challenge will not impact the ongoing vote, which concludes Saturday afternoon.

The party gained more than 20,000 members during the leadership process.

Wasyluk said 1,140 of those were found not to be in compliance, while another 1,423 memberships were still being confirmed.

Concerns about new party memberships were also raised by several leadership candidates during the campaign.

Candidate Val Litwin said he sent a letter to the party last December outlining his doubts after his campaign reviewed data that included people giving an address on their membership applications in areas where there are no homes.

Representatives of the leadership campaigns for candidates Lee and Dew confirmed they sent a joint letter about membership misgivings to the party last month.

The letter said a preliminary analysis "suggests a significant portion of the membership should be flagged for audit in the range of 33 per cent to 50 per cent."

Milobar, who remained neutral during the campaign, said the party is looking forward to a new leader and focusing on building a strong, united party ahead of the 2024 provincial election.

"We certainly know we have a hill to climb," he said. "We have to make inroads in the Metro (Vancouver) area, and that's no secret."

The Liberals lost 13 seats in the 2020 election, including key ridings it held in the Vancouver area and suffered defeats in several Fraser Valley ridings, once considered Liberal strongholds.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

29 per cent of those surveyed broke COVID-19 rules

29 per cent of those surveyed broke COVID-19 rules
Almost 30 per cent of respondents in a newly released Canada-wide survey admitted to breaking COVID-19 rules — and felt justified doing so.

29 per cent of those surveyed broke COVID-19 rules

Record B.C. heat cancels classes, threatens crops

Record B.C. heat cancels classes, threatens crops
Heat warnings remain posted across B.C. and Alberta, large parts of Saskatchewan, Northwest Territories and a section of Yukon as the weather office forecasts temperatures reaching 40 C in some areas.

Record B.C. heat cancels classes, threatens crops

Lytton, B.C., breaks 1937 Canadian heat record

Lytton, B.C., breaks 1937 Canadian heat record
The temperature in a village in British Columbia's southern Interior reached a scorching 46.1 C Sunday afternoon, marking a new all-time high recorded in Canada. The reading from Environment Canada in Lytton showed the mercury surpassed the previous record of 45 C set in Saskatchewan in 1937.

Lytton, B.C., breaks 1937 Canadian heat record

Officer no longer working for defence minister

Officer no longer working for defence minister
A reserve military officer who was ordered suspended from the Vancouver police three years ago for an inappropriate relationship with a subordinate is no longer working for Defence Minister Harjit Sajjan.

Officer no longer working for defence minister

Canadians 'may be affected' by condo collapse

Canadians 'may be affected' by condo collapse
The department says Canadian consular officials in Miami are in contact with local authorities to gather additional information and they are also in touch with the affected families.

Canadians 'may be affected' by condo collapse

Trudeau resists calls to fire Carolyn Bennett

Trudeau resists calls to fire Carolyn Bennett
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is resisting calls to fire Crown-Indigenous Relations Minister Carolyn Bennett over a text message he acknowledges was "wrong" and "hurtful" and harmed his government's progress on reconciliation.

Trudeau resists calls to fire Carolyn Bennett