Ottawa Citizen

Recount confirms B.C. minority government

- DIRK MEISSNER

VICTORIA • British Columbia entered a new stage of political uncertaint­y Wednesday as the final vote count from the May 9 election confirmed the province’s first minority government in 65 years.

The Liberals finished one seat short of a majority, with 43 seats in the 87-seat legislatur­e.

The NDP has 41 seats and the Greens hold the balance of power with three seats.

The focus during the final count was on the riding of Courtenay-Comox, which the NDP won by 189 votes after holding a slim 13-vote lead on election night. The Liberals had hoped to swing the riding in their favour once absentee ballots were counted.

Elections BC says none of the races finished close enough to trigger automatic applicatio­ns for judicial recounts.

Explorator­y talks involving possible political collaborat­ions with the Greens have been underway since the election, but the parties have said they were awaiting the final results to begin the talks in earnest on the shape of a minority government.

Premier Christy Clark issued a statement saying the Liberals intend to form a government.

“With 43 B.C. Liberal candidates elected as MLAs, and a plurality in the legislatur­e, we have a responsibi­lity to move forward and form a government,” she said.

As the incumbent premier with the most seats, Clark would be given the first chance to form a minority government by the lieutenant-governor.

But NDP Leader John Horgan said the results show voters want change and he believes he can work with Green Leader Andrew Weaver to govern.

“British Columbians have voted overwhelmi­ngly to replace Christy Clark’s Liberals with a new government that works better for families,” he said.

The popular vote tightened as Elections BC finished counting almost 180,000 absentee ballots to finalize the results. The Liberals received just 1,566 more votes across the province than the NDP from almost 1.8 million ballots.

Weaver has said the major demands his party will be seeking in a minority government include being granted party status in the legislatur­e.

The Greens fell one seat short of official status after the election.

The Greens also want reforms to the electoral system to allow for proportion­al representa­tion and changes to party fundraisin­g rules that allow unlimited donations from corporatio­ns, unions and individual­s.

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