Saturday, June 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Christy Clark Says If Her Government Toppled, It Shows B.C. Legislature Can't Function

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Jun, 2017 11:21 AM
    VICTORIA — Premier Christy Clark says she ready to tell the lieutenant-governor British Columbia's legislature can't work if her Liberal minority government is defeated in a confidence vote on Thursday.
     
    If Lt.-Gov. Judith Guichon asks her opinion, Clark said Wednesday she will reply she hasn't seen any evidence the house can function with the NDP and Greens holding a one-seat advantage in the 87-seat legislature.
     
    It will then be up to Guichon to decide whether to dissolve the legislature and trigger an election or ask the New Democrats to form a minority government.
     
    The NDP and Greens have an agreement to defeat the Liberals in a bid to put the New Democrats in power.
     
    But a debate over who will serve as Speaker has raised questions about how long an NDP government might survive as the Liberals have not committed to allowing one of their members to serve in the position.
     
    If a New Democrat or Green member serves in the post, the house is deadlocked with votes likely to end in 43-43 outcomes, leaving the Speaker to decide whether to break the tie.
     
    Clark said the Liberals have tried to work with the opposition parties by adopting parts of their platforms in last week's throne speech.
     
     
    But at the first opportunity, they chose not to back her government: voting against proposals they support that would have banned political donations by unions and corporations, and given the Greens official party status in the legislature.
     
    Clark said the message from last month's election — which saw the Liberals win 43 seats, the NDP 41 and the Greens three — was voters want the three parties to co-operate.
     
    "That's why we decided the throne speech reflected priorities from all parties and all members because we want to make our legislature work," she said.
     
    "None of us should want to take the risk that an election could be called."
     
    She said if Guichon asks her opinion on the chances of the house working, she will give a frank answer.
     
     
     
    "I've got to be honest. ... It isn't working," she said.
     
    "I haven't seen any evidence that it could work. I know that they have the numbers to topple the government and to take power, but I haven't seen any evidence that they have the numbers they need to govern."
     
    NDP Leader John Horgan set the wheels in motion by introducing the non-confidence motion in the legislature on Wednesday during the throne speech debate.
     
    After 16 years in power, he asked why the Liberals didn't act before on the concerns expressed by the opposition parties. 
     
    "We expected the B.C. Liberal party ... to deliver a throne speech that represented the values that they have put forward in election after election after election," he said in a draft transcript of Hansard.
     
     
     
    "Instead, we had the bizarre phenomenon of hearing Green platform planks being put forward and New Democrat platform planks being put forward as if they were now all of a sudden the best ideas that the government could find."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Sears Canada Cutting 2,900 Jobs, Closing 59 Stores, Secures Creditor Protection

    Sears Canada Cutting 2,900 Jobs, Closing 59 Stores, Secures Creditor Protection
    TORONTO — Sears Canada Inc. (TSX:SCC) said it plans to close 59 locations and cut approximately 2,900 jobs under a court-supervised restructuring after it was granted protection from creditors Thursday.

    Sears Canada Cutting 2,900 Jobs, Closing 59 Stores, Secures Creditor Protection

    Torture, Detention Would Be Forbidden CSIS Disruption Tactics Under New Bill

    Torture, Detention Would Be Forbidden CSIS Disruption Tactics Under New Bill
    OTTAWA — The Liberal government's new security bill adds torture, detention and serious destruction of property that would endanger a life to the list of things Canada's spy agency cannot do when disrupting terror plots.

    Torture, Detention Would Be Forbidden CSIS Disruption Tactics Under New Bill

    Men Hit Over Back Of Head: Man Charged In One Of 3 Attacks In Downtown Calgary

    Men Hit Over Back Of Head: Man Charged In One Of 3 Attacks In Downtown Calgary
    CALGARY — Police have charged a man with aggravated assault in the first of three attacks in downtown Calgary in which men were hit in the back of the head with heavy objects.

    Men Hit Over Back Of Head: Man Charged In One Of 3 Attacks In Downtown Calgary

    Ex-Ski Coach Bertrand Charest Found Guilty On 37 Charges In Sex Trial

    SAINT-JEROME, Que. — A Quebec judge described a former high-performance Canadian ski coach as a sexual predator Thursday as he found him guilty of 37 charges related to the exploitation and sexual assault of his young female students.

    Ex-Ski Coach Bertrand Charest Found Guilty On 37 Charges In Sex Trial

    Victoria Man Faces 23 New Charges Linked To Historical Sex Assaults

    Victoria Man Faces 23 New Charges Linked To Historical Sex Assaults
    Harry Charles Sadd, a 70-year-old Victoria man, is accused in a series of historic sexual assaults after a victim, now an adult, came forward.

    Victoria Man Faces 23 New Charges Linked To Historical Sex Assaults

    PM To Change Name Of National Aboriginal Day To National Indigenous Peoples Day

    PM To Change Name Of National Aboriginal Day To National Indigenous Peoples Day
    OTTAWA — The federal government intends to rename National Aboriginal Day as National Indigenous Peoples Day, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said today.

    PM To Change Name Of National Aboriginal Day To National Indigenous Peoples Day