Provincial election all-candidates forum brings surprises
“Perceptions” by Gerry Warner
After Tuesday’s all-candidates forum at the Key City
Theatre we know at least one thing about the four candidates in the race – they
all favour the legalization of marijuana and don’t seem to have any qualms
about its commercialization either.
However, the candidates did differ on other issues in
a surprisingly upbeat forum attended by almost 200 local residents.
MSP health care premiums was one of the issues that provoked
some interesting debate, which wasn’t surprising considering that BC is the
only province left in Canada still charging the notorious tax which enriches
provincial coffers by more than $2 billion every year.
Libertarian candidate Keith Komar jumped into this one
with both feet, exclaiming “Ha, we’re the party of cutting taxes. That’s our
thing,” which was easy for him to say considering his party’s unlikely chances
of winning any seats in the upcoming election May 9.
Liberal candidate Tom Shypitka, who has to be considered
the frontrunner in the Kootenay East race, was a little more circumspect on
this issue which has a direct financial effect on every person in the
constituency. Shypitka said the Liberals will end the premiums eventually “if the
economy runs right.” Nothing like qualifying your promises.
NDP candidate Randal Macnair and Yvonne Prest of the
Greens were more forthright on this money-laden issue saying flat out they
would get rid of the hated tax that no other Canadians pay. Both said they
considered MSP premiums “regressive” but admitted other tax increases would
have to be considered to offset lost medical care premiums.
And so it went for two hours with all the candidates
empathizing how the ideologies of their particular parties would shape their
stands on the issues of the day. Shypitka spoke about the strong BC economy and
how the Christy Clark government recently brought down its fifth consecutive
balanced budget. Prest responded that was all fine and good but added “a healthy
economy yes, but at the cost of our environment, no.”
BC Liberal fund-raising practices, which are now being
investigated by the RCMP, also came up for discussion. Macnair said BC was
getting a bad reputation internationally from the millions in corporate donations
it was getting from companies inside and outside the province. “There’s no
place for corporate or union funding in politics,” Macnair said, adding the New
York Times recently called BC “the Wild West” of campaign donations.
Shypitka responded the NDP weren’t exactly blameless
in this regard and recently received a $672,000 donation from the Steelworkers
Union. Meanwhile the Liberals have started to list all their donations in “real
time” on their party website and are the only BC party doing this, he said.
At one point the candidates were asked to say
something “positive” about one of their opponents. Komar said the
Liberals “tried hard” in bringing down balanced
budgets. Shypitka said he loved the Green Party
“because they keep us in check.” Prest
said there are good values in every party “and that’s how things get done.”
Macnair commented “we’re truly all in this together and that’s what makes
politics work.”
At this point, the forum was almost starting to look
like a love-in, a rare event in BC politics which is often called a “blood
sport.” However, this quickly changed at the end when the candidates gave their
final summaries. All of them were moderate in their remarks except for
Shipitka, who launched into a Bill Bennett style rant claiming that when the
NDP were in power in the 1990s BC became “a have-not province” and the economy
was left in a mess. “We can’t afford to go back to that economy,” he said.
But Libertarian candidate Komar got in the final word
saying Premier Clark may have brought in balanced budgets, but the provincial
debt has soared to $65.3 billion under her leadership. “That kind of math doesn’t work for me,” he
said.
Gerry Warner is a retired journalist who has covered more BC elections
over the years than he would like to remember.
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