Cranbrook Daily Townsman, October 20, 2015

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OCTOBER 20, 2015

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Vol. 64, Issue 201

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NDP takes tight Kootenay-Columbia race

BARRY COULTER, ARNE PETRYSHEN AND TREVOR CRAWLEY

In the end, vote-splitting on the left was a moot point. High drama kept voters in Kootenay-Columbia awake into the small hours, as Conservative David Wilks and New Democrat Wayne Stetski traded the lead down to the last handful of votes, in what was one of the tightest contests in the country. On an historic election night, Monday, October 19, 2015, the riding saw massive voter turnout — more than 73 per cent. With all polls reporting, according to Elections Canada online updates, Kootenay-Columbia could have a new Member of Parliament. According to preliminary results, Stetski finished on top by only 285 votes — 23,529 to Wilks’ 23,244. Liberal candidate Don Johnston got 12,315, Green Party candidate Bill Green 4,115. 63,232 out of 85,653 eligible voters cast ballots. In David Wilks’ campaign office in Cranbrook the mood was sombre after a remarkably tense evening. “I was cautiously optimistic going into this and knew that it was probably going to come down to the last couple polls and it did,” Wilks said. “Congratulations to Mr. Stetski and I look forward to him working well with the constituency of the new riding of Kootenay Columbia. “It’s been an honour for me to be in Ottawa for the last four and a half years.” Wilks said he thought that the NDP ran a good campaign and that was what made it such a

close race. He noted that Leadnow — an independent advocacy organization — targeted this riding very heavily. “That probably played a significant role,” he noted. Wilks said he had no regrets through the campaign. “I worked a very hard campaign, I think all four of us worked a really hard campaign,” he said. “It is what it is, and you move on.” Wilks said some of the comments Stetski during the campaign were incorrect, but didn’t have an impact. “I needed to make sure the people knew what the proper story was and I did that, and I don’t think that that was something that hurt me at all,” he said. Wilks added the voting turnout was pretty impressive. Stetski apparently benefitted from the anti-Stephen Harper sentiment that led to a shocking Liberal majority government in Canada, a new Prime Minister (see related story, Page 5). It was absolutely neck and neck as the polls reported and the vote counts came in, with both candidates trading the lead. High drama indeed, on an historic night that saw the advent of Justin Trudeau as Prime Minister while Stephen Harper’s resignation was announced the same night. It is apparent the anti-Harper sentiment was alive and well in Kootenay-Columbia, and for the first time in almost 20 years, a Conservative victory in this riding was not a foregone conclusion, where the Conservative vote totally more than all other candidates’ votes combined.

See KOOTENAY-COLUMBIA, Page 3

TREVOR CRAWLEY PHOTO

Wayne Stetski greets supporters at a Kootenay-Columbia NDP party at the Manual Training Centre in Cranbrook.

David Wilks reads poll numbers to a supporter at his campaign office in Cranbrook

BARRY COULTER PHOTO


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