“Incredible” is one of the most over-used and mis-used
adjectives in the English language. I generally avoid using it altogether, except
I find that it is the best word to describe
our recently-deposed B.C. premier, Christy Clark. As I see it, the premier’s strategy of trying
to embarrass the NDP by placing several of the NDP’s key policies in the Throne
Speech is problematic in policy terms and likely to backfire politically. In terms of policy, what she is saying is
that, if the Liberals had gotten 189 more votes in the Courtney-Comox riding,
thereby securing a majority of seats in the Legislature, it would somehow have
been better to not spend a billion dollars on new child care spaces, or to raise
welfare rates by $100 per month, or to have a moratorium on the Massey Bridge,
or to have a ban on corporate and union
donations. But, since the Liberals failed to get a majority and were facing
defeat on a confidence motion in the Legislature, these things all of a sudden became the ‘best’
things to do.
Call me old-fashioned, but either child care is a good thing or it isn’t. Premiers owe it to their voters to stick to the principles they campaigned on, or they lose credibility with those voters. For example, if Clark and the Liberals had fallen on the sword of their own platform, and we had another election in six months’ time, I would expect Conservative voters to see the error of their vote-splitting ways and vote Liberal in enough numbers to win more ridings like Courtney-Comox. But since the Liberals ignored their own platform and tried to enact the same tax and spend agenda that they had campaigned against, Conservative voters may learn to trust the Liberals even less. Then there are the urgent questions of Site C and Kinder-Morgan--you know, the reasons Clark said in May that it was urgent to re-convene the Legislature, until she realized that by dragging her feet before legislation could be changed, she could fill Liberal coffers with new corporate donations. Incredible.
Call me old-fashioned, but either child care is a good thing or it isn’t. Premiers owe it to their voters to stick to the principles they campaigned on, or they lose credibility with those voters. For example, if Clark and the Liberals had fallen on the sword of their own platform, and we had another election in six months’ time, I would expect Conservative voters to see the error of their vote-splitting ways and vote Liberal in enough numbers to win more ridings like Courtney-Comox. But since the Liberals ignored their own platform and tried to enact the same tax and spend agenda that they had campaigned against, Conservative voters may learn to trust the Liberals even less. Then there are the urgent questions of Site C and Kinder-Morgan--you know, the reasons Clark said in May that it was urgent to re-convene the Legislature, until she realized that by dragging her feet before legislation could be changed, she could fill Liberal coffers with new corporate donations. Incredible.
Most incredible of all are the messes at ICBC and BC Hydro. At ICBC , it
was revealed this year that insurance rates had been suppressed for political
reasons and that the Corporation had been forced to raid its capital reserves
to the tune of about $500 million. Meanwhile , over at BC Hydro, the Liberal cabinet--which
had stripped the BC Utilities Commission of its rate-setting authority in 2012--
has been setting BC Hydro’s annual rate increases well below the actual cost of
acquiring and distributing electricity. BC Hydro has been forced to take on
debt in order to pay $1.3 billion in dividends to the BC government. These
practices have increased BC
Hydro’s debt to the point that Moody’s is warning that this trend may threaten
the province’s credit rating.
Of course, the Liberals could just let the NDP government
and its allies in the Green Party take the heat for any such downgrade while
they are in office, along with the unavoidable rate increases at ICBC and BC
Hydro, making it easier for the Liberals
to return to power in 6-18 months with a grinning Christy Clark once again
recapturing the premier’s chair. Given
who is truly responsible for these messes, that would be “incredible”. But
don’t bet against it.
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