Times Colonist

Island’s three Green MLAs poised to hold balance of power

Weaver says it’s too soon to make commitment­s with final outcome in doubt

- SARAH PETRESCU

The balance of power in the province could rest on the three Vancouver Island Green MLAs elected on May 9, two of them new to the job.

B.C. Green Party Leader Andrew Weaver (Oak Bay-Gordon Head incumbent), Adam Olsen (Saanich North and the Islands) and Sonia Furstenau (Cowichan Valley) could be in a position to side with the Liberals and keep them in power or vote against them in the legislatur­e and trigger another election.

At a press conference outside the legislatur­e May 10, Weaver said it was too soon make commitment­s and that he wanted to speak with the other two party leaders first.

“We want to ensure the values we brought to the legislatur­e, which were supported by a large number of British Columbians, actually flow over into any working arrangemen­t we have with the other political parties,” said Weaver, with Furstenau and Olsen at his side. He pointed to banning major corporate and union donations to political parties, and to proportion­al representa­tion.

The Greens would hold the balance of power if the number of elected seats stays as it is at 43 Liberal, 41 NDP and three Green; 44 seats are needed for a majority.

But the Liberals could still win a majority government because the votes are close in several ridings and absentee ballots haven’t been counted yet. For example, in Courtenay-Comox, the NDP have just a nine-vote lead over the Liberals.

Any riding with less than a 100-vote difference between the top candidates qualifies for a recount under the Elections Act.

Elections B.C. said there are 176,104 absentee ballots to count, which could trigger changes or recounts. The final count takes place May 22 to 24.

Christy Clark remains premier until that time, said Ron Cheffins, professor emeritus of law and political science at the University of Victoria and a former B.C. appeal court judge.

“She will continue as premier until she asks the lieutenant-governor to summon the legislativ­e assembly and makes her speech from the throne. There would be debate and a vote,” Cheffins said.

If the Greens and NDP vote not to accept the throne speech, Clark would likely ask to dissolve the legislativ­e assembly and this would trigger another election.

“Conceivabl­y, the Greens could prop up the government and vote for them in the speech from the throne. … This could go on for years,” Cheffins said.

“The Greens have to decide: Are they going to prop up the Liberals or take them down?”

Mona Brash, a Camosun College political science instructor, said this will be a tricky manoeuvre for the Greens, who will want to capitalize on their wins.

“They have to decide who they are going to support but also think very carefully about the long term,” she said, noting many people voted Green because of the party’s environmen­tal platform, especially young people. “If they disenfranc­hise the very people who voted for them, they might not do well again.”

Brash noted Olsen and Furstenau built support when they worked hard on local environmen­tal issues. Olsen was an outspoken critic of the Kinder Morgan pipeline expansion that would increase tanker traffic on the Salish Sea and the proposed liquefied natural gas facility in Saanich Inlet.

Furstenau spent four years fighting the Liberal government to protect the watershed in Shawnigan Lake from a contaminat­ed soil dump.

“Neither depended on Weaver to get their seats. He’ll have to keep that in mind as they work together,” Brash said.

Michael Prince, Lansdowne professor of social policy at UVic, said this election marked a shift for the Greens. “As the Green vote grows on the Island, they are not just a distant third or something. They had solid second and third place showings up and down the Island.”

 ??  ?? B.C. Green Party MLAs Adam Olsen, left, Sonia Furstenau and Andrew Weaver arrive at the legislatur­e for a news conference. The party held only one seat — that of Weaver, the party’s leader — before the election.
B.C. Green Party MLAs Adam Olsen, left, Sonia Furstenau and Andrew Weaver arrive at the legislatur­e for a news conference. The party held only one seat — that of Weaver, the party’s leader — before the election.

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