The Province

Byelection reflects rising frustratio­n

NPA: Several candidates agree political landscape could become more diverse after October 2018

- DAN FUMANO dfumano@postmedia.com

Vancouver’s first civic byelection in 25 years revealed a rising sense of frustratio­n among the public, according to both upstart politician­s and longtime rivals who gained ground on the reigning Vision Vancouver party — as well as Vision’s own mayor.

It may be hard to draw too many conclusion­s about what the weekend’s results mean for next year’s general municipal election, considerin­g the byelection drew only a 10.99 per cent voter turnout to fill one council seat and nine school board positions. But on Sunday, several candidates agreed the results suggest Vancouver’s political landscape, largely dominated by two parties over the last decade, could become more diverse after October 2018, when voters will elect a city council, park board, school board and mayor.

The Non-Partisan Associatio­n, the long-establishe­d party that’s been Vision’s main opposition in recent years, succeeded Saturday in getting candidate Hector Bremner elected to fill the council seat vacated by former Vision councillor Geoff Meggs.

The byelection showed the public’s frustratio­n with Vision after almost a decade of “inaction” on issues like housing affordabil­ity, Bremner said Sunday.

Political observers talked, both before and after the council byelection, about the city’s left-leaning vote being split between three progressiv­e candidates: the Green party’s Pete Fry, OneCity’s Judy Graves and Jean Swanson, an independen­t.

But each of those three earned more votes than Vision candidate Diego Cardona, who finished fifth.

Vision was establishe­d 12 years ago and has been the city’s governing party for most of the last decade, with the last three municipal elections bringing victories for Vision’s mayoral candidate Gregor Robertson and three Vision-majority councils. The support earned by Graves, Fry and particular­ly Swanson was noteworthy. Swanson, a longtime anti-poverty activist from well outside the world of mainstream big-party politics, finished second, with her 10,263 votes trailing Bremner’s 13,372, but enough to make it a respectabl­y close race and roughly double the votes cast for Vision’s Cardona.

Though disappoint­ed she didn’t win, Swanson said she was pleased to see Vancouveri­tes are ready to vote for an activist candidate, “in the direction of justice. Not just any old change, but a revolution at city hall.”

OneCity, a party establishe­d in 2014, reached a milestone with the byelection, seeing a candidate elected to office for the first time. New OneCity school board trustee Carrie Bercic said the party will carry the momentum of her win into 2018.

The school board byelection, which was required after the entire school board was fired last year for failing to pass a balanced budget, resulted in a mixed group with OneCity’s Bercic joined by two trustees from the NPA, three from Vision, and three Greens.

The three Green school board candidates, Judy Zaichkowsk­y, Janet Fraser, and Estrellita Gonzalez, finished first, second and third in the byelection. Zaichkowsk­y said the Greens’ success on the school board combined with the support shown to OneCity, the independen­t Swanson, and the Green party’s Fry, who finished third in the council race, send “a huge signal that it is no longer a two-party system.”

 ?? — POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES ?? NPA Hector Bremner celebrates at his election night party in Vancouver on Saturday.
— POSTMEDIA NEWS FILES NPA Hector Bremner celebrates at his election night party in Vancouver on Saturday.

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