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Prince George Citizen September 5, 2024

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October election is now a very different race A political science expert weighs in on BC United’s bombshell TED CLARKE Citizen staff

The bombshell that was Kevin Falcon’s decision to suspend BC United’s campaign for the Oct. 19 provincial election and encourage party supporters to prop up the Conservative Party of B.C. has kicked up a storm of political fallout. Just days before BC United and Conservative candidates were about to get on board the election train and activate their teams of volunteers to erect signs and begin blitzing the public to woo their votes, the rug was pulled out from under their feet. “I didn’t see the dropout coming. I anticipated that BC United were done, but that’s no great look into a crystal ball,” said UNBC political science senior instructor Jason Morris.

CITIZEN FILE PHOTO BY TED CLARKE

BC United leader Kevin Falcon joins Prince George-Valemount MLA Shirley Body, Cariboo North MLA Coralee Oakes and BC United Prince George-Mackenzie candidate Kiel Giddens at a Prince George event in July. Falcon shocked the province by pulling the party out of this fall’s provincial election.

“Since when does a party go from official opposition to dropping out in the space of one term? Since when does

the party that won the popular vote in every election but one, back to 1996, just seemingly pack it in?”

It also raises the question: does Falcon have the legal right to suddenly end the campaigns of all of BC United’s MLA candidates, who now will be forced to pick a side? “In Canada and B.C. most of our parties are hierarchical top-down organizations and it means the leader has a lot of power,” said Morris. “The leader was elected by the members of the party and that means the members can’t expel him so easily without triggering a leadership convention and there’s no time for that. “The leader also has the authority to have the final say on nominations for the 93 electoral districts and so he can effectively cancel all of those that were nominated.” The timing of Falcon’s stunning announcement, a day after he publicly stated his vision for forestry policy reform, a plan that proposed moving the forest ministry from Victoria to Prince George, is puzzling to political analysts. PLEASE SEE ‘FORMER’ ON PAGE 3


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