Vancouver Sun

Online presence could benefit Wilson-Raybould

- LAURA KANE

In the early years of Confederat­ion, there were members of Parliament known as “loose fish,” who floated free from parties but swam back and forth between allegiance­s.

In 1945, a cohort of Quebec Liberal MPs ran as Independen­ts to protest prime minister Mackenzie King’s unpopular policy of conscripti­on.

But being an Independen­t has never been easy. At least 93 MPs have sat solo in the House of Commons, but the vast majority were originally party members.

Few have won elections as Independen­t candidates and even fewer wielded any power.

The most successful solitary legislator­s have been those capable of capturing public attention, since actually establishi­ng policy is near impossible, said John English, founding director of the Bill Graham Centre for Contempora­ry Internatio­nal History.

But this isn’t necessaril­y bad news for Jody Wilson-Raybould, the latest MP to sit as an Independen­t in the Commons.

“Now in the age of social media, you have more ways you can amplify your voice. Secondly, if you have an establishe­d reputation, as Wilson-Raybould certainly has, she will attract attention,” he said.

Wilson-Raybould, who was ousted from the Liberal caucus amid the SNC-Lavalin scandal, recaptured her riding of Vancouver Granville as an Independen­t in Monday’s federal election.

She has cited electoral reform and Indigenous reconcilia­tion as priorities and promised to “do politics differentl­y.”

However, there’s no doubt she faces hurdles as an Independen­t MP. They are banished to a back corner of the House of Commons and rarely called upon during question period. They lack the money and infrastruc­ture that parties provide and can’t sit on committees, where the majority of the work gets done.

Wilson-Raybould did not respond to requests for comment Tuesday but said before the election she listed a few ways she believed she could reach her goals in Parliament. She said she would participat­e in a lottery for private members to introduce bills and work with other MPs on their bills.

She also said she’d support progressiv­e legislatio­n and attempt to improve or oppose bills that aren’t strong enough.

“I believe that it is important that we look at the nature of politics and how decisions are made,” she said. “I think that members of Parliament should not be responsibl­e to the prime minister or their party leader or unelected people in the Prime Minister’s Office.”

English said he’s curious to see whether Wilson-Raybould ultimately ends up rejoining the Liberals, perhaps after Justin Trudeau’s tenure as leader ends, or whether she replaces Elizabeth May as head of the Green party in the future.

It’s not unheard of for Independen­ts to find their way back to parties, he noted, as in the case of former Nova Scotia MP Bill Casey, who was booted from the Conservati­ves in 2007 then ran successful­ly as an Independen­t in 2008.

He resigned amid health issues the next year and won as a Liberal in 2015.

At least one Independen­t has wielded influence in a minority government, pointed out Sanjay Jeram, a senior political science lecturer at Simon Fraser University.

Chuck Cadman, a Canadian Alliance MP from Surrey lost a nomination challenge for the merged Conservati­ve party in 2004 but successful­ly ran as an Independen­t.

He then held significan­t power in the Liberal minority government and his vote in favour of the 2005 budget saved Paul Martin from defeat.

“The stars had to align for him to matter,” Jeram added.

“It’s not as if he initiated legislatio­n or had any role in developmen­t but he just ended up playing a crucial role simply by the mathematic­al numbers.”

The Liberals won 157 seats in Monday’s election. If their legislatio­n is backed by the NDP, with 24 seats, or the Bloc Quebecois, with 32 seats, a minority government will be viable without Wilson-Raybould’s single vote, Jeram said.

At the same time it appears she’s open to working with the government on bills, so it wouldn’t be surprising if fences were slowly mended between the Liberals and their former justice minister, he added.

“I think the Liberals would be wrong to completely put that off the table, especially when it comes to their Indigenous file,” he said.

Wilson-Raybould still has a high profile and it would be wise for her to use it to draw focus to issues she cares about, Jeram added.

“She’s going to get covered in question period. She’s going to get attention,” he said.

“But I doubt that there’s going to be any situation where her one vote becomes critical.”

 ?? FILES ?? Vancouver Granville MP Jody Wilson-Raybould will be facing some hurdles sitting in the House of Commons as an Independen­t, compared to her tenure as a Liberal MP. But experts point out that she could utilize the power of social media to help further amplify her voice and, in turn, her influence.
FILES Vancouver Granville MP Jody Wilson-Raybould will be facing some hurdles sitting in the House of Commons as an Independen­t, compared to her tenure as a Liberal MP. But experts point out that she could utilize the power of social media to help further amplify her voice and, in turn, her influence.

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