Medicine Hat News

Green Party could play big role in a B.C. minority gov’t

Liberals and NDP sat neck and neck with just a few seats left to call; Green’s three seats could be meaningful

-

As of press time...

VANCOUVER The Liberals and the NDP were locked in a tight race in British Columbia’s election on Tuesday with a handful of ridings in the province’s 87seat legislatur­e still to be determined.

Forty Liberals were elected to the legislatur­e compared with 38 New Democrats, with the NDP gaining ground in the seat-rich Lower Mainland where it had focused its campaign. The Greens achieved a historic breakthrou­gh by electing two members to the legislatur­e: Leader Andrew Weaver, who kept his seat in Oak Bay-Gordon Head, and Adam Olsen, elected to Saanich North and the Islands.

The chance of the Green party holding the balance of power in a minority government situation was a possibilit­y. The last time there was a minority government in the province was 1952.

The election campaign began four weeks ago with Liberal Leader Christy Clark and the NDP’s John Horgan facing what was predicted to be a close battle to become B.C.’s next premier, and Weaver looking to make gains for his third-place party.

Attorney General Suzanne Anton lost her Vancouver riding in one of the first upsets of the night for the Liberals as election results were still rolling in. Peter Fassbender, another cabinet minister, also lost his seat in Surrey-Fleetwood.

The NDP nearly swept the city of Vancouver and won a handful of battlegrou­nd ridings in the suburbs of Metro Vancouver, including seats in Burnaby, Surrey, Coquitlam and Delta.

The Liberals were trying to win a fifth successive majority government after holding power for 16 years.

Horgan won his seat in Langford-Juan de Fuca, while Christy Clark won Kelowna West.

There was plenty of smiles and laughter early on at Liberal headquarte­rs as the party took an early lead in the polls. But the mood became more tense as the evening progressed, and faces became more serious as the NDP began to catch up.

Supporters applauded as Liberal candidates were declared elected, especially when news came in that Clark had retained her seat. Silence greeted news that the NDP had taken the lead in several swing ridings in Burnaby and Surrey in the Vancouver area.

Inside the Green headquarte­rs in Victoria, the room was filled with applause and cheering as the party appeared close to electing a third candidate, Sonia Furstenau in Cowichan Valley.

Clark’s campaign strategy marked a return to the Liberals’ winning approach in 2013, when she promoted her party as the only one that could create and protect jobs while portraying the NDP as disastrous managers of the economy.

 ?? CP PHOTO CHAD HIPOLITO ?? Green party supporters watch as results come in from election night at the Delta Ocean Pointe on election night in Victoria, B.C., on Tuesday.
CP PHOTO CHAD HIPOLITO Green party supporters watch as results come in from election night at the Delta Ocean Pointe on election night in Victoria, B.C., on Tuesday.
 ??  ?? John Horgan
John Horgan
 ??  ?? Christy Clark
Christy Clark

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada