Will history repeat itself in the next BC election?
“Perceptions,’ by Gerry Warner
The mists are beginning to lift and an image is
starting to come into focus. What can it be? Oh, oh! It looks tumultuous and
kind of ugly with a lot of rhetoric that can’t be trusted. Of course, it can
only be one thing and it can’t be avoided. It’s the May 9, 1917 BC election in
a province where politics is often called a blood sport.
I can hardly wait.
So once again pert and popular Christy Clark will dip
into the electoral well and see what she can come up with. A larger majority?
(By no means impossible.) Fewer members, but still government? (A more likely
scenario.) But there’s one thing our telegenic Premier is very unlikely to come
up with try as she might. And that, of course, is a brand, spanking, new LNG
plant for the province.
Didn’t she promise at least a dozen of these giant,
job-producing and polluting mega-projects during the last election? I believe
the number got as high as 18 at one point and the “boom” they were suppose to
create – along with a pipeline or two – was going to pay off the provincial
debt and put us all on the gravy train as former Toronto Mayor Rob Ford was so
fond of saying.
But all Christy could do on that preposterous,
political promise was produce a big fat zero and it will be interesting to see
how she tries to spin that embarrassing shutout in the next electoral
go-around.
But in spite of that fairy tale political promise that
was never likely in the first place one would be very foolish to count Christy
and her merry gang of Socreds out. For starters, Clark is a hell of a
campaigner. Just ask Adrian Dix. Secondly, you’ve got to consider the most
important dictum of BC politics that has stood the test of time going as far
back as W.A.C. (“Wacky”) Bennett. Considering that Clark’s liberals are really hard-line
conservatives (Socreds) in drag there’s an iron law of BC politics that’s never
been broken. The NDP can never defeat the BC Socreds, but the Socreds can
defeat themselves as they’ve done on a very few occasions.
Don’t believe me? Let’s look at BC electoral history.
In 1972, the Socreds under W.A.C. Bennett had been in
power for 20 years and were looking to cruise to another easy election victory
when they were upset by Dave Barrett’s idealistic band of socialists. What
happened? Bennett was getting long in the tooth and had lost his populist touch
and his right-hand man and logical successor, “Flying Phil” Gaglardi
antagonized a lot of voters with remarks in favour of greed and the role it
played in building the BC boom and calling the pulp mill stench that hung over several
BC mill towns the “smell of money.” Environmentalism was just beginning to
become a major movement in BC and it was obvious the Socreds were out of touch.
However, the Socreds won four consecutive elections
after defeating Barrett in 1975 and only lost again in 1991 when the
controversial and scandal-plagued Bill Vander Zalm government fell hard in the
1991 election. In 1996, the NDP got lucky, winning a narrow, majority victory
under Glen Clark even though their total of the popular vote was less than the
Liberals, which the Socreds were now mischievously calling themselves. It also
didn’t help when the NDP did, as the left so often does, ate one of their own
when they forced former Premier Mike Harcourt from power even though he won a
huge victory for them in 1991.
So now it’s John Horgan’s turn to try to win one for
the gipper even though he leads a party that has a sheer genius for snatching
defeat from the jaws of victory as they showed so dramatically in the 2013
election debacle. But fortunately for the NDP, Horgan is personable and can
give a good stump speech unlike Dix who was barely coherent in the last
campaign.
With no LNG plants in the immediate offing and the
Liberals clumsy and expedient handling of the school closure crisis in the province,
Horgan may have a fighting chance to reverse NDP fortunes. But don’t bet the
farm on it. Unlike Alberta, the right is united in BC while the Greens tend to
steal precious votes from the NDP.
United we stand; divided . . . well you know the rest.
Gerry Warner is a retired journalist, whose political predictions
haven’t been too accurate lately, but he’s not trying to jinx the Socreds,
oops, the Liberals.
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