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B.C. Liberal leadership candidates debate different paths for party

Third debate held Sunday, Nov. 19 at Nanaimo鈥檚 Vancouver Island Conference Centre
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B.C. Liberal Party leadership candidates Dianne Watts, Mike de Jong, Sam Sullivan, Todd Stone, Michael Lee and Andrew Wilkinson attended a debate Sunday at the Vancouver Island Conference Centre in Nanaimo. (GREG SAKAKI/The News Bulletin)

The B.C. Liberals鈥 leadership debate Sunday in Nanaimo underlined some of the different ways the party could be headed.

Six candidates 鈥 Dianne Watts, Mike de Jong, Sam Sullivan, Todd Stone, Michael Lee and Andrew Wilkinson 鈥 attended the forum at the Vancouver Island Conference Centre to talk about transportation, education and other topics.

As the party chooses a new leader, Wilkinson said the Liberals can be proud of their record of economic prosperity and balanced budgets in B.C.

鈥淲e鈥檙e going to see the NDP on a spending marathon in the years to come and we have to be a party to stand up for balanced budgets, stand up for fiscal responsibility and make sure we don鈥檛 spend money we don鈥檛 have,鈥 he said.

Lee noted that the Liberals won only one seat on Vancouver Island and suggested the party underperformed in urban ridings, as well.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not because we don鈥檛 care. We just didn鈥檛 demonstrate it,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o issues around affordability, issues around transportation, we need to plan better and we need to articulate that better. That鈥檚 the reason we need a different approach. We鈥檙e not going to regain seats on this Island or in urban ridings just by talking about balanced budgets and a triple-A credit rating.鈥

Sullivan talked about privatization of liquor sales, some privatization of health care and even of education with talk of charter schools.

De Jong expanded on previously pitched notions of government decentralization.

鈥淲here is it written in this age of technology that government must all be located in Victoria?鈥 he asked. 鈥淚s it revolutionary to at least consider the possibility that the B.C. Ferries corporation could be headquartered in Nanaimo? We can do it with various departments of government.鈥

Ferries were an area of focus at Sunday鈥檚 debate and Watts said the fares are making the crossings unaffordable.

鈥淲hen you look at the system and you look at how it functions and how it moves, we need to be making sure that we have affordability built into that entire system,鈥 she said.

Stone, former transportation minister, said the ferry system wasn鈥檛 sustainable four and a half years ago.

鈥淏ecause of tough decisions, because of sacrifices in coastal British Columbia, it is sustainable and fares can now start to come down,鈥 he said.

Stone said he wishes to continue to reduce fares and said sports teams and school groups should get free ferry service, a concept Wilkinson questioned.

鈥淢y core principle as a B.C. Liberal is you don鈥檛 spend your kids鈥 money on operating costs today. You pay your own way,鈥 he said.

Sullivan suggested B.C. could take the example of the Washington state ferries and look to reduce staffing on vessels to provide more service in other ways.

鈥淚 believe that a lot of the regulations are too tough鈥︹ he said. 鈥淚鈥檇 like to be able to challenge the federal regulators and see if we could get a much more effective, cost-efficient ferry service.鈥

Candidates were allowed two opportunities to directly question one another and Stone directed both his queries at Watts. First he said, 鈥淵ou talk about a new vision for British Columbia 鈥 but the details of that vision have been pretty limited,鈥 and then suggested that she could have done more, as a Conservative MP, to help the B.C. Liberals in last spring鈥檚 election.

鈥淚 have to be honest. I didn鈥檛 really see that contribution from you and it could have made a difference. We might not be having this discussion today,鈥 Stone said.

Watts replied that she 鈥渄idn鈥檛 realize I carried that much power that if I had done more that we would have won, but thank you for that,鈥 and said she did try to support provincial Liberal candidates in her federal riding.

De Jong left the debate early to fly back to his Abbotsford riding to attend a celebration of life for a police officer killed in the line of duty, Const. John Davidson, but as he left, de Jong said all of the candidates are good people and 鈥渋t speaks well of who our party is.鈥

He said the B.C. Liberals鈥 path back to government will involve visiting every corner of the province and listening to people.

鈥淎nd generate the ideas from within our communities and within our party and take that vision to British Columbia rooted in the free-enterprise principles that have made this party great and have made British Columbia the envy of Canada,鈥 he said.

The party will choose its next leader the first week of February.



editor@nanaimobulletin.com

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About the Author: Greg Sakaki

I have been in the community newspaper business for two decades, all of those years with Black Press Media.
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