Vancouver Sun

Not enough diversity, `other' Liberals claim in defeat

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B. C.'s Liberal party should view the election results as a wake-up call from voters who punished the free-enterprise coalition for refusing to renew itself in changing times, say former and current members of the legislatur­e.

The Liberals lost up to a dozen seats and finished a distant second to the New Democrats who will form a majority government.

The election revealed the party's declining support in Metro Vancouver and its failure to recognize the needs of middle-class families, said Jas Johal, who was the Liberal member for Richmond- Queensboro­ugh until his defeat in Saturday's election.

The Liberals also must do better when it comes to reflecting and supporting diversity and the rights of LGBTQ-plus people and others, he said.

“When you think you can convert somebody who is gay to a heterosexu­al life, I think that's absurd,” said Johal, referring to former Liberal Laurie Throness who placed ads in a magazine supporting conversion therapy.

Throness quit as the Liberal candidate in Chilliwack-Kent during the election after comparing free contracept­ion with eugenics at an all-candidates meeting. He continued to run as an Independen­t and was trailing NDP rival Kelli Paddon by fewer than 200 votes with mail-in ballots still to be counted.

Elections B.C. says there are about 600,000 mail-in and absentee ballots across the province still to count, so the final result in some ridings could change.

Johal said the Liberals chose to lick their wounds after the 2017 election when they should have embraced renewal after winning more seats and votes than the NDP but found themselves out of power when the Greens helped the New Democrats form a minority government.

“So in 2020, B.C. voters inflicted renewal on the party and that's what you're seeing now,” he said. “When you lose the amount of seats that we did in what was once solid B.C. Liberal territory, it's a wake-up call. To be very blunt, B.C. voters took us to the back of the barn and gave us a thumping.”

Johal's comments came a few hours before Liberal leader Andrew Wilkinson announced Monday that he will step down as party leader as soon as a successor is chosen. Wilkinson said his announceme­nt starts the “challengin­g and exciting process of rebuilding the party.”

Mike Bernier, a former Liberal cabinet minister, said the party will have to do a lot of soul-searching after Saturday's election defeat. The Liberals must find ways to keep the party's Liberal and Conservati­ve supporters together to maintain a united front to counter the NDP, he said.

Bernier, who was re-elected in his Peace River South riding, said now may be the time to change the name of the party, which has no affiliatio­n with the federal Liberals.

“In a big part of the province, a lot of the challenges are around the party name,” he said, adding that past calls to change the name weren't supported by its members.

Bernier said the Liberals were dejected after their loss of power in 2017 and renewal wasn't being considered, but it will be now.

“We need to look at our policies. We need to look at our vision and we need to look at what we can offer the people of B.C. as an alternativ­e to the NDP,” he said.

Johal said the Liberals must examine how they surrendere­d the urban vote to the NDP over the years. The NDP won traditiona­l Liberal seats in Vancouver, Surrey and even the Fraser Valley, he noted.

“Those ridings, especially the Fraser Valley, Richmond, that was the wall,” Johal said. “That's where our support would never waver and now it has. It speaks to the fundamenta­l need for the party to renew and speak to a new generation of voters.”

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