Times Colonist

Clark might hope to return as premier

- LAWRIE McFARLANE

Some people believe Christy Clark’s determinat­ion to stay on as leader of the B.C. Liberal Party stems from the danger of a snap election. In that eventualit­y, so goes the argument, her party could be left leaderless at a critical moment.

But I think we can discount this line of thought. First off, Clark doesn’t have to resign immediatel­y. She can stay on until someone else is chosen. If an election does occur within that window, she remains leader and fights the contest.

Second, though, the chances of a snap election are small. Neither the NDP nor the Greens have any interest in letting that happen. Polls show voters are strongly opposed to another election any time soon; instead, they want to see if the NDP/Green alliance can govern effectivel­y.

It would be a huge black eye for both parties if they fell out before giving their arrangemen­t a chance. That means staying together until at least next February’s budget, and, more realistica­lly, until the referendum on electoral reform, promised for October 2018.

But that’s easily time enough for the Liberals to organize a leadership convention and emerge united behind a new standard-bearer.

The real reason Clark hasn’t quit, I suspect, is that she thinks she can become premier again. If so, though, she’s facing formidable odds.

On only one occasion in our history has a premier of B.C. lost an election and gone on to win again. And that was 135 years ago. George Anthony Walkem, first elected in 1874, was defeated in 1876, then re-elected in 1882. But since then, nothing. Indeed, since the Second World War, only one Canadian premier has been re-elected after suffering a defeat — Quebec’s Robert Bourassa, who made a comeback in 1985 after losing to René Lévesque.

Similarly, only one prime minister during that period has come back from the dead — Pierre Trudeau, who lost to Joe Clark in 1979, and promptly returned in 1980 after Clark’s minority administra­tion collapsed.

This latter, I suppose, would have to be Christy Clark’s model, but the circumstan­ces are different. Joe Clark was laughably inept; B.C. NDP leader John Horgan is not.

And Horgan has an outright majority (albeit the slimmest possible) as long as the Greens stick around. Joe Clark had no such helpful bedmates.

One of the realities of governing is that parties — and party leaders — who hang on too long become trapped by their previous stances on the issues of the day. Attempting to unsay what you spent the last umpteen years saying strikes voters as hollow and disingenuo­us. Either you were lying then, or you’re lying now.

We saw a good example of this when Clark tried to reverse several of her party’s longstandi­ng positions in her deathbed throne speech. No one bought it. Indeed, all she accomplish­ed was alienating her base, who saw policies they believed in discarded by a premier grasping at straws.

There is also the harsh reality that the half-life of politician­s declined sharply with the advent of the 24-hour news cycle. Gone are the days of W.A.C. Bennett, in office 20 years, Ontario’s Bill Davis, premier for 14 years, and Joey Smallwood, premier of Newfoundla­nd for a stunning quarter-century.

Yes, Clark herself served only six years, but she represents a dynasty that has ruled since 2001.

Even the most emollient of leaders, and our ex-premier is anything but that, can’t hope to remake herself after so much water has flowed under the bridge.

It’s understand­able that her caucus colleagues shrink from the deed. But if the Liberals don’t find a Brutus, green-painted eco-warriors are poised at the gates.

 ??  ?? Then-prime minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau and his son Justin, then 8, had an audience with Pope John Paul II in June 1980, a few months after Trudeau was returned to power. He is one of the few Canadian premiers and prime ministers to win an election after being defeated in a previous one. It’s such a rare feat that B.C. Liberal Leader Christy Clark shouldn’t count on emulating it, writes Lawrie McFarlane.
Then-prime minister Pierre Elliot Trudeau and his son Justin, then 8, had an audience with Pope John Paul II in June 1980, a few months after Trudeau was returned to power. He is one of the few Canadian premiers and prime ministers to win an election after being defeated in a previous one. It’s such a rare feat that B.C. Liberal Leader Christy Clark shouldn’t count on emulating it, writes Lawrie McFarlane.
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