Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
National

Past Mistakes, Soul-Searching Feature In First B.C. Liberal Debate

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 Oct, 2017 11:33 AM
    SURREY, B.C. — Six of the candidates running to lead British Columbia's Liberals laid out their ideas to rebuild the party Sunday in a debate that dwelled at times on what went wrong in last spring's election.
     
    The field of candidates includes three members of Christy Clark's pre-election cabinet and two of them did some soul-searching on why the party lost seats and was eventually dumped from power in a confidence vote after 16 years in office.
     
    Andrew Wilkinson said the party spent too much time talking about its wider economic success and didn't listen to voters who were feeling the pinch.
     
    "We were preaching at people from 30,000 feet. Telling them about credit ratings, telling them about our debt-to-GDP ratio," said the one-time attorney general. "It meant nothing in their living rooms. The NDP were in their living rooms offering them a cheaper way of life."
     
    The province's minority NDP government will struggle to keeps its election promises to make life more affordable but there is an opportunity for the Liberals to capitalize on issues like the high cost of housing, he added.
     
    "People are living with two income families from pay cheque to pay cheque. We've got to understand that and provide a better solution right here in the Lower Mainland."
     
    Dianne Watts wasn't in Clark's cabinet, but she reiterated Wilkinson's argument, telling the party it needs to change.
     

    Watch the First Debate of BC Liberal Leadership 2018!

    Posted by BC Liberal Party on Sunday, 15 October 2017
     
    "We lost that election because we stopped listening," said Watts, a former Surrey mayor who quit the House of Commons seat she held for the Conservative party to seek the leadership.
     
     

    Thank you to everyone who came out to today's BC Liberal Party Leadership debate or watched online. Your support truly means a lot!

    Posted by Dianne Watts on Sunday, 15 October 2017
     
     
    Former transportation minister Todd Stone said he launched his campaign in rapidly growing Surrey to acknowledge the quality of life issues of many voters in the Lower Mainland around Vancouver, and that means adding more child-care spaces, increasing spending on affordable housing and creating better transportation links that get people home quicker after work. 
     
    "In this last election we didn't get it all right. We didn't speak the language that resonated with enough folks in the Lower Mainland and their issues of affordability and housing, child care and transportation."
     
    Former finance minister Mike de Jong has bore the brunt of much of the criticism since the election, facing arguments that his tight-fisted control of the province's purse strings meant programs aimed at easing financial pressures for people never made it off the drawing board, hurting the party in Metro Vancouver.
     
    But de Jong was unapologetic.
     

    It was an absolute privilege to take part in the first BC Liberal Party leadership debate. My message today was clear,...

    Posted by Todd Stone on Sunday, 15 October 2017
     
     
    "I have heard the criticism, that tightwad de Jong," he said. "I may be the only finance minister in living history, now former finance minister, whose criticism is rooted in the proposition that I was too careful with the taxpayers' dollars."
     
    The NDP was left with a $2.7 billion surplus by the Liberals.
     
    The Liberal Party of British Columbia is not affiliated with the Liberal Party of Canada and describes itself as "a made-in-B.C. free enterprise coalition." That coalition includes members of the federal Conservative and Liberal parties. 
     
    The nearly two-hour debate also featured legislature members Sam Sullivan and Michael Lee. Terrace businesswoman Lucy Sager didn't participate and former education minister Mike Bernier bowed out of the race on Saturday, throwing his support behind de Jong.
     
    Lee said his children are in their early 20s but they don't have the same chances of economic success as his parents when they arrived in Vancouver from Hong Kong.
     
    "We need to be smart with your money and we need to plan for the future," he said.
     
    Sullivan said he has hope for the Liberals' future as he made his pitch to lead the party.
     
    "You need someone to take bold moves to take decisive actions and to get the job done," he said.
     
    A number of candidates panned the NDP's proposal to change the system used to elect members of the legislature by holding a referendum on proportional representation.
     
    The Greens and NDP have supported a system of proportional representation that accounts for the number of seats each party gets in the legislature based on their percentage of their popular vote.
     
    But Watts described the system as "destablizing" while Wilkinson said the NDP is threatening the "basis of our democracy" with proportional representation and changes to political fundraising laws.
     
    Sunday's debate was the first of six the party will hold across the province before it elects a new leader in February.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Police Investigating Suspicious Blaze At Abbotsford, B.C., Church

    ABBOTSFORD, B.C. — Police say the cause of an early morning blaze at an Abbotsford, B.C., church is suspicious.

    Police Investigating Suspicious Blaze At Abbotsford, B.C., Church

    Former ICBC Employee Pleads Guilty In B.C. Justice Institute Attacks

    Former ICBC Employee Pleads Guilty In B.C. Justice Institute Attacks
      An earlier trial heard 15 families across Metro Vancouver were terrorized after a man who saw them park at the justice training centre in New Westminster, B.C., tracked them down using information from their licence plates.

    Former ICBC Employee Pleads Guilty In B.C. Justice Institute Attacks

    Man Pleads Not Guilty To Killing Three People, Including Father And Toddler

    Man Pleads Not Guilty To Killing Three People, Including Father And Toddler
    LETHBRIDGE, Alta. — A man accused in the deaths of three people in southwestern Alberta, including a two-year-old girl and her father, has pleaded not guilty. 

    Man Pleads Not Guilty To Killing Three People, Including Father And Toddler

    Man Convicted Of First-Degree Murder Eight Years After Shooting In Surrey, B.C.

    Man Convicted Of First-Degree Murder Eight Years After Shooting In Surrey, B.C.
    A jury has convicted a man of first-degree murder, eight years after a shooting death in a Surrey, B.C., apartment.

    Man Convicted Of First-Degree Murder Eight Years After Shooting In Surrey, B.C.

    After Bruising Month-Long Campaign, Voters Decide In British Columbia

    After Bruising Month-Long Campaign, Voters Decide In British Columbia
    Voters across British Columbia are marking their ballots as a sometimes bruising 28-day election campaign fought on jobs, the economy and the influence of big donors in provincial politics wraps up.

    After Bruising Month-Long Campaign, Voters Decide In British Columbia

    PIC: NDP Bus Spins Its Wheels As All Parties Leaders Push Before Tuesday's Election

    PIC: NDP Bus Spins Its Wheels As All Parties Leaders Push Before Tuesday's Election
    NDP Leader John Horgan tweeted that he was less worried about his bus and more concerned about British Columbians getting stuck with four more years of Liberal Leader Christy Clark.

    PIC: NDP Bus Spins Its Wheels As All Parties Leaders Push Before Tuesday's Election