Does
the NDP have a death wish or are they just more principled than the rest of us?
“Perceptions”
by Gerry Warner
You
gotta hand it to the NDP! When it comes to the art of snatching defeat from the
jaws of victory, no other political party can touch them. What better proof of
that could there be than the last BC election?
And now they’ve done it again.
Look no further than the riding of
Columbia River – Revelstoke. If ever there should be a safe seat for BC’s
socialists, it’s that one. The highly respected teacher and former mayor of
Golden, Norm Macdonald, won it three times beginning in 2005 and with
majorities of more than 50 percent in every victory, an outstanding record
indeed.
Known to everyone simply as “Norm,”
Macdonald taught school in Africa before becoming principal of a small
elementary school near Golden. He served one term as mayor of Golden and held
several cabinet critic portfolios for the NDP in the legislature and was a
cinch to become a full-fledged cabinet minister in 2013 if once again the NDP
hadn’t fallen on its sword and lost the election. As a result, it’s hard to
imagine a safer seat for the NDP in the 2017 election considering the legacy
Macdonald left for his successor. Not only this, there were two strong
candidates vying to succeed Macdonald, one the current mayor of Invermere and
the other a former city councillor.
Then all hell broke loose.
The BC NDP, you see, has something called an
“Equity Seeking Policy” that few people are aware of outside the party.
According to the policy, when a male NDP incumbent steps down, is defeated or
retires as was the case with Macdonald they are to be replaced by a candidate
that belongs to an identifiable equity-seeking group such as women, First
Nations or a LGBDT (lesbian, gay, bisexual, disabled, or trans-gendered) group.
(My apologies if I left any equity-seeking groups out such as redheads.)
The policy appears well-intentioned, but
between the policy itself and its execution, there’s an awful lot of room for things
to go sideways as, indeed, was the case when the NDP got around to picking
Macdonald’s successor for the hitherto safe NDP riding of Columbia
River-Revelstoke.
There were two candidates in the race;
Spring Hawes, a popular two-term councillor, who met the NDP equity-seeking
diktat on two grounds, being female and disabled. The other candidate was
current, three-term Invermere Mayor Gerry Taft, who first became a city
councillor at the tender age of 20 and has a female partner and a young son, as
perfectly normal as things could be for an ambitious, young politician. A
nomination meeting was held two weekends ago and Taft won handily, which should
have been the end of the story except for one small detail understandably
raised by Hawes and her supporters – how did Taft meet the NDP’s rigid equity
mandate for new candidates?
How indeed!
Well, it appears that prior to the
nomination vote Taft disclosed to the NDP’s Equity Search Committee that he was
a bisexual – no, I’m not making this up – and asked that his equity-seeking
status remain confidential. However, in the uproar that followed the nomination
vote, Taft felt he owed NDP members –
not to mention the general public – an explanation so he issued a statement
announcing he was a member of a discriminated against group, namely bisexuals.
That’s when the poop really hit the fan.
The obvious question in the minds of many
in the aftermath of Taft’s startling revelation is not hard to figure out. Is
the Invermere mayor a for-real, genuine, hitting from both sides of the plate
bisexual or is he a bisexual of convenience in order to gain candidate
nomination status with the oh so socially conscious NDP?
That one dear reader I’ll leave to you.
But this much I know. The hitherto “safe” NDP seat of Columbia River-Revelstoke
is now “in play” and may not be safe at all. But that’s hardly a big deal for
the BC NDP because they’ve been there many times before.
After all, the BC NDP has always been a
party that puts principle ahead of being elected.
Gerry
Warner is a retired journalist, who has principles, but has no wish to
legislate them.
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