Penticton Herald

Inside story of Liberal revolt

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Sharp contrasts between what was being portrayed publicly and what was really going on run through the pages of a new book by two of my colleagues.

“A Matter of Confidence,” by legislativ­e reporters Rob Shaw of the Vancouver Sun and Richard Zussman of Global TV, organizes all the political chaos of the last year into one coherent narrative.

Starting with the HST debacle that forced former premier Gordon Campbell to resign, it tracks Christy Clark’s decision to replace him, her stunning 2013 election win and the erosion of popularity over her term.

The 2017 election and its aftermath is the centrepiec­e of the book, as the dead-heat results prompted weeks of scheming that eventually drove Clark out of office.

The duo pulls back the curtains on one particular chapter after the change of government that has bearing on what’s going on today. A low-profile Liberal MLA from Abbotsford — Darryl Plecas — drove Clark out of office faster than she’d have liked and wound up Speaker of the legislatur­e.

It’s a lesson in how much pressure is always percolatin­g behind the scenes.

The chapter covers the July caucus meeting in Penticton a week after the Liberal government fell. Clark had surrendere­d, but gave every indication she was going to carry on fighting the good fight as Opposition leader.

As the authors make clear, there wasn’t much chance of that happening. She had no intention of stepping into the legislatur­e as Opposition leader.

Her private inclinatio­n to walk away crystalliz­ed at that private caucus meeting.

The B.C. Liberals were miserable with their new lot in life, but mostly still supportive of Clark.

She spoke about their new role and got a standing ovation, but Plecas sat still.

The authors say he later threatened point-blank to go public with his resignatio­n from caucus soon if she stayed. He closed with two points — he would never disclose what he said publicly and Clark should never claim she had unanimous support.

Clark stayed impassive and left the room to give caucus time to discuss his issues.

At the end, they had a show of hands and everyone supported her. She told reporters she had unanimous support “from everyone in the room.”

But Plecas had left the room. That exceedingl­y fine point was typical of Clark.

He quit the Liberal caucus anyway later, after weeks of a cat-andmouse game with his colleagues about whether he was interested in becoming Speaker.

He resigned from the caucus moments before the new NDP government reconvened the legislatur­e and had to call an election for Speaker.

Then he allowed his name to stand for Speaker, changing the arithmetic in the NDP’s favour by one crucial vote.

It earned him some Liberal enmity that will last at least the length of this parliament.

Even during times of calm quiet in politics, there are moments of private tension.

When the high drama develops, as it did last year, the book shows how high the pressures can get.

Les Leyne covers the B.C. Legislatur­e for the Victoria Times Colonist. Emial: lleyne@timescolon­ist.com

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