British Columbia

Former NDP cabinet minister defects, saying party isn't championing rural B.C.

A former New Democrat cabinet minister says he is joining the Opposition B.C. United, saying his former party no longer champions rural British Columbia.

Harry Lali has joined the Opposition B.C. United

A man in a blue suit and striped pink tie stands in front of a bank of microphones in a B.C. Legislature hallway.
Former B.C. NDP cabinet minister Harry Lali, seen here in a B.C. Legislature hallway on May 11, 2023, says his former party no longer represents the best interests of resource-dependent, small-town rural B.C. (Meera Bains/CBC)

A former New Democrat cabinet minister says he is joining the Opposition B.C. United, saying his former party no longer champions rural British Columbia.

Harry Lali, who was the NDP's transportation and highways minister in the late 1990s, says in a statement the New Democrats are now an urban interest party with little focus on issues and challenges facing rural communities.

Lali was first elected in 1991 in the Merritt-area riding of Yale-Lillooet and re-elected four times before his defeat in 2013 by Jackie Tegart, who now represents the Fraser-Nicola riding for B.C. United.

The 68-year-old ran unsuccessfully for the NDP in the Fraser-Nicola riding in 2017, despite former premier John Horgan asking him not to run.

Lali was in the legislature on Thursday when B.C. United Leader Kevin Falcon welcomed him to the party.

The statement says Lali likes the small business and rural development focus of the B.C. United, and he is a friend and supporter of Falcon.

"I firmly believe that the best interests of resource-dependent, small-town rural B.C., and British Columbia in general, will be best served by a Kevin Falcon-led B.C. United government after the next election,'' the statement says.

In the most recent general election, held in 2020, the B.C. NDP tended to win in urban and coastal ridings, while the B.C. Liberals (now B.C. United) were elected in more sparsely populated Interior and northern ridings. However, both parties received significant votes across the province.

A map showing electoral results in B.C.
In the 2020 general election, the B.C. Liberals tended to win more sparsely populated ridings in the Interior and north, while the NDP won in urban and coastal ridings, although both parties received a significant amount of votes throughout the province. (CBC News)

With files from CBC News