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I have no intention of being “Mr. Nice Guy” to Gordon Campbell because he’s leaving office to wait for his massive pension to kick in and for lush directorships from the Energy companies to be offered.

I’m an environmental activist trying to save our salmon, our rivers, and our farm land, Why should I get warm and mushy all over because Campbell has been pushed out of his office?

Under Campbell’s government the moratorium on Atlantic Salmon fish farms was lifted resulting in the loss of 100s of thousands of our wild salmon being lost to sea lice from the fish farms. Far from doing anything about it, Campbell has encouraged more of them. Continue Reading »

There is a new, to me at any rate, columnist in the Vancouver Province named Ethan Baron whom I enjoy. I was, however, amused and nonplussed by today’s article where he lists the errors of Gordon Campbell quite in contrast to The Vancouver Sun‘s editorial this morning praising the premier to the heavens. That the editor of the Sun‘s Editor Page is Fazil Mihlar, a Fellow of the Fraser institute, doesn’t, I’m sure, have anything to do with this fulsome praise for the departing premier.

What I was nonplussed about in Baron’s column was that it was accurate in the many low points of the Premier’s tour of duty but made me almost scream at the breakfast home, WHY THE HELL WEREN’T THESE MATTERS DEALT WITH BY COLUMNISTS AT THE TIME? In fact, it’s been amusing and annoying to see the Vaughn Palmers and Mike Smyths turn on their former hero during the last couple of months almost as if their editors had taken their leashes off. Continue Reading »

Campbell in Full Flight

Gordon Campbell

Bye, bye, Pinnochio. It's been swell!

I can only say this about Gordon Campbell’s resignation: if Damien and I did anything to assist this happening I’m only sorry that we didn’t do more and quicker. He was not only a bad leader – he disgraced himself and us. As an environmentalist I must also say that no matter who takes over as Liberal leader, they will need to do a massive 180 degree turn to even begin the recapturing of our province from the forces of greed and, yes, evil not just encouraged but paid off out of taxpayers’ money. Read full article at The Common Sense Canadian: Campbell in Full Flight

Come Back Gordon Wilson!

Further thoughts on why BC could use a new party, and who might put it together.

I’ve recently floated the idea that there’s room for a third party of the middle in B.C., and have been inundated (well, some people wrote… hell, a few folks have voiced opinions) such that I thought I should flesh out my thoughts and await another avalanche of responses.

The expression of political opinion as left or right goes back to the French Revolution, referring to the seating arrangement in parliament; those who sat on the left generally supported the radical changes of the revolution, including the creation of a republic and secularization. Those on the right were satisfied with the status quo.

In B.C., the left has been associated with the NDP, and recently, the right with the Liberal party; thus the NDP are seen as strong on social programs and weak on business management, while the right is the other way around.

For 31 years, the voters preferred a sort of hybrid called Social Credit, led by Bennetts I and II from 1952 to 1986. The successor to Bennett II, Bill Vander Zalm, was seen by many within the party as taking it too far to the right, making way for the surprising success of the Gordon Wilson-led BC Liberal party. The reason the Social Credit party was so popular until Vander Zalm is that it occupied the centre, marginalizing the right into an ineffective Conservative party, and forcing the NDP to fight for their recently successful movement to the centre.

Change, indeed dramatic change, came with the demise of Vander Zalm’s administration, resulting in the emergence of the Liberal party as a centre party under Wilson, while the right was shoved together in a lump as Socreds and reformers. The Socreds collapsed so completely that a “fencepost with hair could have won, and in fact a fencepost without hair did.” (I’ve used that joke a lot and hope that Mike Harcourt has a laugh because it arose out of an irresistible, but by no way malicious, tickled funny bone.)

The fact is, the 1991 election was “won” by Mike Harcourt and the NDP not because of a sudden conversion to socialism by the voter, but the collapse of the Socreds and the surprising occupation of the centre by the Wilson Liberals. In 2001, a scandal-ridden NDP (whose sins were to pale into insignificance after Gordon Campbell took over) were all but wiped, leaving the traditional political boundaries so blurred they were unrecognizable.

A vacuum needs filling

Politics, like nature, abhors a vacuum and always seeks the proper balance between left and right. In B.C.’s case, that also meant a buffer party in the middle which would, in the past, mean a party that freely pinched ideas from its rivals, forcing the NDP further left and the right further right.

What, then, do we have now?

We have a left unable to lead and present itself as a government in waiting, and a right which is the most unpopular government, if not of all time, certainly since the 1952 coalition which W.A.C. Bennett I drove from power. There is nothing in the centre, leaving an abhorred political vacuum which cries out to be filled, meaning a ripe time for a party of the centre.

Before addressing the challenges of a third party, can the Liberals and NDP prevent this happening? If so, how?

The NDP leadership, so far as we can determine, wants to occupy the centre-left but is having a serious case of political indigestion. It has a leader who wants to move her party towards the centre, but whose tentative utterances have encouraged dissent from many of the party’s “Young Turks,” while not helping her image with the traditional conservative wing of the party that never liked her much in the first place. At least, this is what appears to the public, and in politics appearance always trumps facts.

The NDP have often trotted out one of their favourite slogans — they being the party of slogans — attributed to Tommy Douglas. Namely, that when the government is collapsing, the opposition should just stand back and let it happen. This is nonsense. That’s the very time the opposition can stake out positions clearly and firmly.

Unfortunately for the reformers, Carole James is evidently a disciple of the Douglas doctrine.

After Gordo goes, then what?

The Liberal party must, of course, get rid of Campbell as fast as it can, but this doesn’t erase the problem if only because there is no leader on the horizon that isn’t associated with the Campbell serial scandals. Carole Taylor has all but taken herself out of the game as she has accepted the job of chancellor of Simon Fraser University for three years. Diane Watts, the popular mayor of Surrey, seems uninterested.

It’s very difficult to see how the Liberal party can recover its traditional role as champion of the centre.

What, then, of the centre?

In politics, six weeks is an eternity, and what I say in this regard must be seen in light of that aphorism.

The Gordon Wilson and Chris Delaney party?

At present, I see two people who have the ability to raise money and to set up 85 constituency organizations, not to mention a corporate management team for the party — namely, Gordon Wilson and Chris Delaney. I know both of them well and believe that if they could get together, form a party, cobble together a mission statement, put together a party program, elect a leader, thereafter working together, they could put together a party that would be in contention.

As in everything, overcoming inertia is the problem. An anecdote about Churchill is illustrative of this problem.

Back in the 1920s he wanted to paint, and his ambition was simplistic. As he put it: “… experiments with a child’s paint-box led me the next morning to produce a complete outfit in oils.” Unfamiliarity with technique could not lessen his determination; discipline and lessons would have to wait. Yet a sense of awe seemed to impose restraint. The budding artist was caught by the wife of Sir John Lavery (distinguished leader of the Glasgow School of Painting) tentatively handling a small brush.

“Painting!” she exclaimed. “But what are you hesitating about? Let me have a brush — the big one.” She showed him that a brush was a weapon to subdue a blank, intimidating canvas by firing paint at it to dazzling effect. Never again did he feel the slightest inhibition.

Thus it is with Mr. Wilson and Mr. Delaney — the canvas is there to be filled, you have the equipment and knowledge, and all you need do is overcome inertia.

How about the Greens?

On a final note, I’ve been asked, “What about the Green party?”

If we had a proportional representation system — any variety of that — then I would have a different opinion. The problem is that under first past the post, they can’t even elect an MLA, much less form a government. The same must be said about the BC Heritage party which clearly is a Christian, right-wing party without a prayer of electing anyone, in spite of their devotion to the Creator.

For the political junkie, the next few months will be fun to watch.

The roof of BC Place

This Campbell government is supposed to be business oriented. In fact, they are worse than any government I can remember. The litany of bad monetary decisions, overruns and waste would take a book to cover but suffice it to say that just an ordinary, everyday government fiscal fuck up makes the NDP look like prudent business leaders by comparison such that the “fast ferry” fiasco pales into insignificance. Now we find yet another fiscal fiasco with the ½ billion dollar enterprise, BC Place Stadium.

It seems that the retractable roof can’t be closed if there’s a sudden storm. This, I point out, is a sudden storm climate we live in. Continue Reading »

Potential new NDP leaders

My colleague on The Political Panel, CBC1 Mondays at 7:40, Moe Sihota, says that the NDP have no serious leadership problems. The fact that he’s the president of the NDP may be what’s casting the dust of stupidity in his eyes.

The NDP have long made the error of putting philosophy ahead of electability. I give you Tom Berger, Bob Skelly, Mike Harcourt (who only won on a monumental collapse of the Socreds and certainly couldn’t have won in a fair fight) Ujjal Dosanj and Carole James. I could even include Dave Barrett who won with 39% of the vote in 1972 as the Socreds crumbled, then lost three years later, again with 39%. The only clear NDP victory came with Glen Clark in 1996.

This surely happens because the obvious interest groups can only be brought together by a compromise which satisfies few (exception in 2001 when Indo Canadians were happy) leading to someone few love but no one really hates. Continue Reading »

Alexandra Morton

Alexandra Morton

It’s been brought to my attention that the Vancouver Sun recently ran a story called “Women of Influence” and notable by her absence was Alexandra Morton, the tireless fighter against fish farms and for the protection of our wild salmon.

I’m not going to replay all of Alex’s achievements because even with the biases of the crumbling Canwest empire, she’s known to the people that count as the most influential woman in BC and has been for more than a decade.

She has taken her fight throughout BC and in the place where they plot the destruction of our fish, Norway. She has marched and paddled throughout the province and done it all on a shoestring. Continue Reading »

When I opened the Vancouver Province this morning and turned to the editorial page I thought Wendy had thrown some strange potion into my cereal, as I read:

“And what sort of a government do we have in BC when our top justice official, Attorney-General, Mike DeJong, can agree to pay the crooked officials’ million legal fees as part of a deal between a supposedly independent special prosecutor and the defense lawyers? What is the point of hiring an independent prosecutor in the first place, if at the end of the process the attorney-general – a a politician in the very government whose integrity the case brings into question – will be needed to approve such a massive carrot in the plea bargain”.

The Province then asks. “Have the payment of lawyers’ fees ever before been part of such an arrangement?”

The answer comes right from the Campbell government which, when Glen Clark was charged with a criminal offense, said they would pay the lawyer if he won, not if he lost. Under this precedent, the accused should not have had a penny paid by us the taxpayers. Continue Reading »

Berardino’s statement

It has been brought to my attention that I may have misconstrued the following statement attributed to Bill Berardino, QC, Crown Counsel in the Basi-Virk case – Berardino said outside court that he didn’t see a copy of the agreed statement of facts, signed by the Crown and defence, until 9:40 a.m. — 20 minutes before court was scheduled to resume hearing the testimony of a witness.

Apparently, according to some, what he meant by this is that he had not seen the signed copy and that he did in fact make the deal.

If I misled you, I’m sorry, but I apologize for nothing. If Mr Berardino had meant “I negotiated solely on behalf of the Crown but I didn’t see the actual signatures until the morning at 9:40 why the hell didn’t he say so? Continue Reading »

Berardino and The Sun

Today a question for the prosecutor in the Basi Virk trial and a letter to the Vancouver Sun.

Prosecutor Bill Berardino says, in the Basi/Virk trial, that he didn’t see the “deal” until the morning it all happened. Here is a direct quote:

Berardino said outside court that he didn’t see a copy of the agreed statement of facts, signed by the Crown and defence, until 9:40 a.m. — 20 minutes before court was scheduled to resume hearing the testimony of a witness. Asked if there was any government pressure to end the trial, which had so far contained embarrassing allegations for the B.C. Liberal Party, Berardino said: “This is my decision. I made it on my own by myself”.

Mr. Berardino, if you didn’t make the decision, then who the Hell did? You were Crown Counsel and in your own words had complete control of the matter. Someone had to make this deal behind closed doors which you signaled about 10 days ago when you announced that you had shortened the list of witnesses. Continue Reading »

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