Christy Clark officially enters B.C. Liberal race
Supports free vote in legislature on HST
Former Liberal cabinet minister Christy Clark has officially joined the race for the leadership of the B.C. Liberals and the premiership of the province with a proposal for a free vote in the legislature on the future of the HST.
Clark made the announcement Wednesday morning on CKNW radio in Vancouver where she has worked as a host. She later appeared at a rally filled with members of the media and supporters at the SFU Segal Graduate School of Business.
Clark, who was not accompanied by any sitting MLAs on the stage at her announcement, said she wanted to bring more open discussion to the B.C. Liberal Party and promised to spend more time listening to the people of B.C.
While Clark will be remembered by many as a confrontational education minister who had a run-in with the teachers' union, on Wednesday morning she was preaching virtues of inclusion and debate within the Liberal Party.
"Let's have a political party where we can have debate and discussions, where we can disagree and then find common ground."
The working mother said supporting families will be a major focus for her campaign, and if she wins, she plans to bring a work-life balance to the premier's office that will allow her to continue to spend time with her young son.
Put HST to free vote
Clark outlined her first policy by saying she did not expect the HST to survive the coming referendum. Instead, she supports putting its future to a free vote in the legislature.
But that idea immediately ran into opposition from another Liberal leadership candidate. George Abbott said the HST bill passed three readings in the house last spring and another vote makes no sense.
"We've had months of debate in the legislature on this. We have heard from every member of the legislature on each side on their views on this," said Abbott.
"The premier never said to anyone, you've got to go in and support this. People spoke of their own free will. They voted of their own free will. To go back in, in my view, would accomplish nothing," he said.
NDP finance critic Bruce Ralston also dismissed the idea, calling it gibberish from Clark.
Already a front-runner
Clark is already considered to be the front-runner in the race to replace Premier Gordon Campbell. Several polls put her far ahead of all the other four declared candidates from the B.C. Liberal cabinet.
If Clark does win the leadership of the governing party, she would also become premier, although she would be expected to immediately seek a seat in the legislature in a byelection.
Clark's decision to enter the race was leaked when a poll for new members enrolling on the B.C. Liberal Party's website listed her as one of five candidates new members could register their support for on Tuesday. But soon after the story broke, her name was removed from the website.
First elected in 1996
Clark was first elected to the legislature in 1996 in the riding of Port Moody-Westwood as a B.C. Liberal and served as an opposition critic. She also served as a campaign co-chair for the Liberals' 2001 election sweep when she won her seat again.
Under Campbell, she served as minister of education and deputy premier and as minister of children and family development before stepping down from politics before the 2005 election.
She then ran for the NPA nomination to run for mayor of Vancouver, but lost to Sam Sullivan in 2005, before becoming a radio show host with CKNW.
Four Liberal MLAs have already officially entered the race: Moira Stilwell, George Abbott, Mike de Jong and Kevin Falcon. All four stepped down from their cabinet posts to enter the race.
The party has scheduled the leadership vote for Feb. 26.