National Post (National Edition)

Whip key to survival of minority government

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B.C. LEGISLATUR­E

GEORDON OMAND VANCOUVER • Gerard Janssen remembers the day then-premier Glen Clark was left pounding on a locked door after arriving late for a vote in the British Columbia legislatur­e.

Clark’s blunder in May, 1997, nearly lost the government the vote. Janssen, the party whip, punished the New Democrat premier with four nights of House duty and a cancelled trip to New York.

Not even the most powerful person in provincial politics was above sanction by Janssen, who as whip ensured politician­s were in the House when they needed to be.

“Members are members,” Janssen said in a recent interview. “It doesn’t matter if you’re a cabinet member or if you’re a premier. You’re an MLA. You have a responsibi­lity to the caucus and you have a responsibi­lity to British Columbians.”

The whip organizes a party’s legislatur­e members for votes on legislatio­n and enforces party discipline when they don’t attend.

The job is straightfo­rward when a government has a strong majority. But the position becomes crucial when the seat count is tight, such as in B.C. following last month’s election.

The Liberals won 43 seats, the NDP 41 and the Greens three. The Green party has agreed to support a New Democrat minority government by voting with them on confidence matters.

Constituti­onal scholar Ned Franks said the situation in B.C. will be challengin­g for the NDP whip.

“It’s the difference between a comfortabl­e, soft seat you can doze on and sitting on an electric fire,” he said, laughing.

Franks compared the whip’s role to “herding cats,” and said a good whip can use both flattery and threats.

In the United Kingdom, where the position originated, the chief whip traditiona­lly has an official residence at 12 Downing Street, just down from the prime minister’s. The name comes from fox hunting, where the “whipper-in” would prevent the hounds from straying.

Jeff Leal was government whip in Ontario in both majority and minority situations.

“My hair got a lot greyer while I was the whip during the minority government,” he said. “During that period of time I wasn’t popular with some members because, virtually, I had to force them to be at the House at all times.”

While in a minority, Leal said he would use “pairing,” where a government and an Opposition member would be allowed to leave at the same time to keep the numbers even.

Leal predicts the NDP minority government in B.C. will fall within 18 months, but the incoming New Democrat whip thinks otherwise.

“Right from the beginning you need to drum into people’s psyche that this is a very, very narrow margin that we have here, and there

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