This blog page, which has been in existence for many years, has been replaced with a Substack page. What you have found here, with commentaries from a number of writers on BC and federal politics, will continue ... just in a new location. If you are interested, please take a moment to subscribe at: https://substack.com/@alanforseth #bcpoli #cdnpoli
MIKE RIGGS -- The candidates who win are the ones who can hold both sides without losing control of the message
If you step back and look at the BC Conservative leadership race, which begin 81 days ago on January 16th, the real difference is not experience, it is approach. Caroline Elliott understands where voters are right now. People are tired of being managed, talked down to, and boxed into rigid policy frameworks. They want someone who reflects their concerns but can still operate in the real world. That is where she separates from someone like Kerry-Lynne Findlay. Findlay represents a more traditional style of politics. She brings experience, but also a more controlled and cautious approach that can feel rigid at a time when voters want responsiveness and adaptability. Elliott is positioning herself differently. She leans more socially conservative in tone, which connects with a base that feels ignored, but she is also showing a willingness to be pragmatic. That balance is what actually wins elections. If you are too rigid, you stall out. If you are too soft, you lose your base. The candida...