The Daily Courier

Liberal hopefuls in home stretch

Leadership contest seen as choice between old guard and those pushing for change

- By The Canadian Press

VICTORIA — The contest to replace Christy Clark as leader of British Columbia’s Liberal party is in its stretch run with the race coming down to a choice between the old guard and party newcomers.

Three veteran cabinet ministers, Mike de Jong, Andrew Wilkinson and Todd Stone, are facing backbenche­rs Sam Sullivan and Michael Lee, as well as Dianne Watts, who was the mayor of Surrey before winning a seat for the Conservati­ves in the House of Commons.

David Black, a political communicat­ions expert at Victoria’s Royal Roads University, said Monday the race has split into two camps: those wanting change and those resisting it.

There are also many Liberals who have yet to accept last year’s election result that saw the party lose power to the NDP after 16 years in office, he said.

“They are in a great hurry to be back in power,” Black said. “The success of the Liberal party has made it difficult for them to undertake the introspect­ion that the party would probably benefit by. What are we as a party? Where are we going?”

The final debate for the six candidates is today in Vancouver. The Liberals elect their new leader on Feb. 3.

Black said Watts and Lee are pushing the party to follow new directions to reflect changing political dynamics in B.C., while Wilkinson and de Jong are promoting their experience and promising to maintain a tight grip on the province’s purse strings as the best route to success.

Black said Stone is positionin­g himself as a middle-ground option, while Sullivan, a former Vancouver mayor, is lobbing political grenades that include bringing back the harmonized sales tax that was defeated by voters in a 2011 referendum.

“There is a conversati­on happening on that stage between the old party, the party of the north and the Interior, and a party that saw itself losing a lot of seats on the Lower Mainland, worried that it’s indicative of a changing demographi­c,” said Black.

Watts, Lee and, to a lesser extent, Stone are representa­tive of the move towards change, while de Jong and Wilkinson are firmly in the fiscal conservati­ve camp, he said.

“Mike de Jong doesn’t waste a moment to tell us he balanced five budgets,” Black said.

Watts said she considers her opponents’ portrayal of her as a Liberal outsider an asset that allows her to view issues differentl­y. She also rejected suggestion­s she lacks experience in provincial politics, saying she was mayor of one of Canada’s fastest growing and most diverse cities before serving in Ottawa as an Opposition MP.

The Liberals are no longer in government despite going into last spring’s election posting a budget with a $2.7-billion surplus, the strongest job growth in Canada and a triple-A credit rating, she said.

“That tells me you’ve stopped listening, you’re not connecting and you’ve lost trust,” she said.

Stone said the Liberals were strong economic managers but could have done a better job sharing the wealth, including raising welfare rates. Liberals must now decide who is the best person to lead the party during what must be a period of renewal, he added.

“The expectatio­ns of our citizens have changed,” said Stone. “If this party does not embrace change, then I fear this party will become increasing­ly irrelevant.”

De Jong said the election results came as a shock to Liberals, but the party is strong and ready for a new leader to begin rebuilding.

“People want an experience­d leader who can hold Premier (John) Horgan to account and the NDP to account and can work with the B.C. Liberal party to generate ideas to reignite the imaginatio­n of British Columbians,” he said.

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