Penticton Herald

Former NDP premier dies

Dave Barrett dead at 87 after long struggle with Alzheimer’s

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VICTORIA — Former British Columbia premier Dave Barrett, the scrappy but always smiling leader of the province’s first New Democrat government, has died in Victoria. He was 87 years old.

Barrett died Friday morning after a long struggle with Alzheimer’s disease, a statement from Premier John Horgan’s office said.

“He cared deeply about his province and devoted much of his life to trying to make it a better and fairer place to live. His love of the province was surpassed only by his devotion to his family. He will be sorely missed,” said the statement, issued on behalf of Barrett’s family.

First elected to the B.C. legislatur­e in 1960, the former social worker from Vancouver who became known as the champion of the little guy would be elected to the assembly eight times.

He was also elected as a federal New Democrat MP in 1988 in the former Victoria-area riding of Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca.

Barrett made political history when his left-leaning New Democrats defeated the five-term Social Credit juggernaut government­s of W.A.C. Bennett in 1972. His three-year government from 1972 to 1975 was short-lived but enduring for its political accomplish­ments and fireworks.

Barron’s magazine dubbed Barrett “Allende of the North,” after the elected socialist Chilean leader Salvador Allende was deposed in a military coup in 1973.

Barrett’s government passed a record 357 bills, including protecting agricultur­al land, introducin­g public automobile insurance, providing affordable prescripti­on drugs and creating a provincewi­de ambulance service.

He introduced welfare reforms and created B.C.’s Labour Relations Board, which allowed workers and employers to attempt to resolve their issues without resorting to the courts. He also stopped the practice of mining in parks.

The NDP government also oversaw the amalgamati­on of Kelowna and several outlying districts, including Rutland and Okanagan Mission, in 1973.

Many of Barrett’s reforms have stood the test of time, including the Agricultur­al Land Reserve and Pharmacare.

“What he was able to accomplish in a three-year mandate was extraordin­ary,” Horgan once said in an interview.

Horgan said he was working in Ottawa when Barrett was elected as a federal New Democrat in the late 1980s. Barrett ran to lead the federal NDP in 1989, but lost to Audrey McLaughlin.

“When he came to Ottawa it was like nobody had ever seen anything quite like him before,” said Horgan. “He came to Ottawa with a B.C. swagger. He was so brash and so out there, and holding court.”

But it was Barrett’s political rivalry with the Bennett family, former premiers W.A.C. Bennett and Bill Bennett, that provided the ingredient­s for B.C.’s left-right, noholds-barred politics, said Horgan.

Barrett dethroned the elder Bennett in the 1972 election, but lost to the younger Bennett in 1975, 1979 and 1983.

“In the day, from the late 1960s to the middle of the 1980s, there was a battle between not just two perspectiv­es, but two powerful people that became iconic in B.C. history,” said Horgan. “They shaped the B.C. battles, the politics the rest of the country looked at. It was the clash of these two giants that held sway over two political dynasties, the Socreds and the NDP.”

Brian Smith, a former Social Credit attorney general, said Barrett and Bennett would stare each other down during long debates in the legislatur­e.

“Barrett and Bennett personally disliked each other,” said Smith. “It was palpable. Barrett would sit there and stare at Bennett and try and put the whammy on him.”

The B.C. Federation of Labour said Barrett’s accomplish­ments include making it possible for government employees to unionize.

Barrett received the Order of Canada in 2005.

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