Vancouver Sun

Watts tells packed house she’s in — ‘100 per cent’

- CHERYL CHAN

Former Surrey mayor and Conservati­ve MP Dianne Watts said she’s “committed 100 per cent” to becoming the next leader of the B.C. Liberal party.

Watts formally announced her candidacy Sunday in a packed hotel banquet room in Surrey, where she was a hugely popular municipal politician.

“Today we embark on a journey together, a journey to create a new vision for British Columbia,” she told supporters. “We must reunite people from across this province and across the political spectrum for one common goal: To take our province back from an unstable coalition government.”

Watts, Surrey’s first female mayor, served for three terms between 2005 and 2014 before making the leap to federal politics.

She said she plans to step down as MP for South Surrey-White Rock, a riding she won for the federal Conservati­ves in 2015, and resign her role as employment, workforce developmen­t and labour critic in the official Opposition.

She will step down regardless of the outcome of the leadership race, she said.

“My focus needs to be here,” she told reporters after the announceme­nt. “I don’t think it’s fair to have one foot in Ottawa and one foot here. I’m committed and I’m all in.”

Watts said the B.C. Liberals have a strong foundation to build on, citing the balanced budget and strong economy. But she acknowledg­ed the party had a “disconnect” with some voters, who showed their displeasur­e by granting the long-running governing party a minority government in the spring election that was quickly overturned by an NDP- Green alliance.

“When you have balanced budgets and surpluses as large was we did, then there’s an expectatio­n that people will want to have those dollars affect their life in a different way,” Watts said.

“For me, it was really important when I heard that — you look after the seniors and our kids and those who are less fortunate and you build a plan around that … There’s a lot of things that could have been broader in nature in terms of connecting with the general public.”

In her speech, Watts included as her priorities addressing B.C.’s opioid crisis, the forestry and resource sector, affordabil­ity and the need for a transporta­tion strategy.

She said the Liberals’ throne speech at the start of its short-lived minority government where thenpremie­r Christy Clark flip-flopped on many policies was “very confusing” for British Columbians and indicated the Liberals will carve its own way.

“We have the ability to stand on our own with our own public policies and our own strategies we need to move forward on,” she said.

The leadership race is expected to draw several prominent names, including some who have criticized Watts for staying quiet during the last election when the Liberals lost a few key ridings in Surrey.

Watts defended herself by saying she was busy in Ottawa doing the job taxpayers paid her to do.

“I think they would be terribly offended if I left the House of Commons in Ottawa and came out to work on an election,” she said, adding: “And surely, I can’t imagine my presence there would have done any difference in the outcome.”

Stepping down from her role as MP wasn’t a decision she took lightly, Watts said, but she felt compelled to do so because of the “unstable” NDP-Green alliance and what she said was the flight of investment dollars from the province since the NDP came into power.

“I’ve raised my family here, and I’ve lived in this province all my life,” she said. “That’s something that I cannot idly stand by.”

An Insights West poll in August found 39 per cent of B.C. respondent­s have a favourable opinion of Watts, the highest of all potential Liberal leaders polled.

Vancouver-False Creek MLA Sam Sullivan was second at 30 per cent, followed by former finance minister Mike de Jong at 28 per cent, rookie Richmond MLA Jas Johal at 24 per cent and former transporta­tion minister Kevin Falcon, who is now in the private sector after retiring from politics before the 2013 election, at 23 per cent.

Sullivan, a former Vancouver mayor, announced his candidacy on Friday.

 ?? ARLEN REDEKOP ?? Dianne Watts, seen during the announceme­nt of her bid for the leadership of the B.C. Liberal party on Sunday at the Sheraton Guildford Hotel in Surrey, says her “focus needs to be” in B.C., not Ottawa.
ARLEN REDEKOP Dianne Watts, seen during the announceme­nt of her bid for the leadership of the B.C. Liberal party on Sunday at the Sheraton Guildford Hotel in Surrey, says her “focus needs to be” in B.C., not Ottawa.

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