Skip to main content

“I am a Canadian, free to speak without fear, free to worship in my own way, free to stand for what I think right, free to oppose what I believe wrong, or free to choose those who shall govern my country. This heritage of freedom I pledge to uphold for myself and all mankind.” ~~ John G. Diefenbaker

FORSETH: All of this, and other findings in the poll, are not good news for supporters and members of the Conservative Party of BC

 

Conservative BC leader John Rustad

MAY 9th, 2023: Information in a new poll released today from Research Co. shows:

 

Public backing for the governing BC New Democratic Party (NDP) has increased over the past three months in British Columbia, a new Research Co. poll has found.             

 

In the online survey of a representative provincial sample, 46% of decided voters would support the BC NDP candidate in their constituency if an election took place today, up two points since a similar Research Co. poll conducted in February.

 

BC United is in second place with 33% (-3 since the previous survey as BC Liberals), followed by the BC Green Party with 16% (=) and the Conservative Party of BC with 4% (+2).

 

It also shows that:

 

Premier and BC NDP leader David Eby maintains an approval rating of 59% across the province. The numbers are lower for BC Greens leader Sonia Furstenau (40%, -2), BC United leader Kevin Falcon (38%, -6) and BC Conservative leader John Rustad (18%).

 

Another version showing the popularity of each party leader, published today in Business in Vancouver expanded on that last point by stating:

 

Conservative supporters, who may have expected their party to reach double digits after finding a leader who actually has a seat in the legislative assembly, may be disappointed. The approval rating for John Rustad stands at 18 per cent – significantly lower than the numbers posted by the three people who command the other main provincial parties: Premier and BC NDP leader David Eby (59 per cent, unchanged), BC Greens leader Sonia Furstenau (40 per cent, down two points) and BC United leader Kevin Falcon (38 per cent, down six points).

 

All of this, and other findings in the poll, are not good news for supporters and members of the Conservative Party of BC (full disclosure, while not currently a member, I have twice been a member of the party, and was active in campaigns, as well as providing research information and formulating media releases for the party).

 

Looking over concerns noted by BC residents, in the poll, their specific focus on the validity of COVID vaccinations, and freedoms as espoused by the so-called Truckers Convoy are just not there – with the exception, to some extent, to vaccinations.

 

Instead, the poll shows BC voters are MOST concerned with Housing, Homelessness, and Poverty as their #1 issue ... #2 is Healthcare, in 3rd is Crime and Public Safety, while the Economy and Jobs is in 4th spot.

Where the Conservatives could have some traction, in looking at these numbers, are in the areas of healthcare, and public safety.

 

Rustad has already been vocal in a demand for the re-hiring of doctors and nurses who had refused to receive a COVID vaccine, including these comments made in a March 30th news story in the Prince George Citizen:

 

"Even (Prime Minister Justin) Trudeau's Health Minister (Jean-Yves Duclos) admits the immunity of individuals who were twice vaccinated in 2021 has now waned,” Rustad said. “There is no scientific reason why health-care workers who have chosen not to receive shots should continue to be barred from working side by side with their colleagues who were twice vaccinated in 2021. This policy makes zero sense.”

 

Even if those numbers (of doctors and nurses) only amount to a few thousand healthcare works, given the extreme shortages being seen across the province, having them back caring for patients would be a huge boost. Still, the Conservatives need to have more of a broad-based healthcare platform – especially ideas on how to get out of the crisis we are currently, with having such a shortage of doctors and nurses available – especially given the federal governments plans to greatly increase immigration.

 

As for Housing?

 

Honestly, it seems everything governments at all levels do, only makes things worse. I don’t know what the answer is to affordable housing – both for those who rent and those who want to own – but unless we want to see even more people homeless, including the working poor, we’d better come up with something soon.

 

One thing that didn’t make the list is the Carbon Tax, which the Conservative Party of BC has indicated they will eliminate. The one flaw in that, and which no one seems to have questioned, is what will replace it?  The federal government has enacted legislation that a “TAX” on carbon has to be in place, and if not applied at the provincial level, the federal government will do it for them. With that in mind, what then will Conservatives do, because something MUST be in place? They can’t simply say they’ll eliminate ... they have to have a way to circumvent federal law, or at least have it apply more fairly (IE: not on home heating fuel).

 

A decade ago, Conservatives in BC, under former MP John Cummins, ran the largest number of candidates ever (56) ... although it was still 29 short of a full slate. In 2017 the party ran just 10 candidates, and in the last provincial election in 2020, they fielded just 19 candidates out of a total 87 ridings.

 

Then party leader Trevor Bolin, running in his Peace River North riding managed a very respectful 34.3%, but it wasn’t enough to unseat Liberal Dan Davies who won the riding with just under 56%. In fact, no Conservative candidates were elected.

 

Just three short weeks ago Conservative BC leader John Rustad stated, “It has never been more clear, there is only one choice for conservatives in British Columbia and there is only one choice for voters who want real change.

 

If British Columbians want change, they will have the option to vote for a Conservative Party of British Columbia candidate in every riding in our big, beautiful province. And, unlike other opposition parties, the Conservative Party of British Columbia is not 'united' with Trudeau's Liberals or the BC NDP".

 

Since first being elected to the BC Legislature in 2005 with over 50% of ballots cast, Nechako Lakes MLA John Rustad has won five straight provincial elections (2005, 2009, 2013, 2017, and 2020), averaging nearly 54% of the vote.

John has a big job ahead of him in taking a party that captured just 2% of votes in 2020, and distributed amongst 19 candidates, to a full slate of ‘electable’ candidates across every riding in the province.

They’ll talk the talk, and say there’re in it to capture enough seats to win government, in the next provincial election which is slated for October 19th of next year (2024) – that of course if current NDP Premier David Eby doesn’t pull the plug before that.

 

Personally, I believe if they can run candidates in all of the Peace River, Thompson and Okanagan, Cariboo, Fraser Valley, and a handful in the Rockies / Kootenay’s, metro-Vancouver and Vancouver Island ridings, along with John’s Nechako riding, I think they’ll be doing good. 

 

And an election day result?

 

They should be delighted, I think, if they can capture at least half a dozen ridings, which will more than give them enough seats to gain party status, and the additional staffing that comes with that.

That will ONLY happen however, in my opinion, if they can present a broad enough platform that will attract a broad swath of voters from not just the right side of the political spectrum, but if they can pull from center right voters like myself, who consider themselves to be fiscal conservatives, with what I call a ‘social conscience’.

 

Right now, I’m not seeing that, but there’s still over a year and a half to go till the 2024 provincial general election.

 

In Kamloops, I’m Alan Forseth ... what do you think?

 

NOTE (from the Elections BC website:


Provincial by-elections are pending for the Langford-Juan de Fuca and Vancouver-Mount Pleasant electoral districts. 
A by-election must be called within six months of Elections BC receiving notice of a vacancy in the Legislature.

The Langford-Juan de Fuca seat became vacant when MLA John Horgan resigned on March 31, 2023. The Langford-Juan de Fuca by-election must be called by September 30, 2023.

The Vancouver-Mount Pleasant seat became vacant when MLA Melanie Mark resigned on April 14, 2023. The Vancouver-Mount Pleasant by-election must be called by October 14, 2023.

Comments

  1. Concise assessment Thank you.

    ReplyDelete
  2. To get elected as a Conservative the candidate must position as a "red" Tory which means fiscally conservative but socially progressive, i.e. low taxes and liberal on welfare, etc. It's a tough trick.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

'Very good news' that Supreme Court will hear B.C. mineral claims case, Eby says

The BC government needs clarity from the Supreme Court of Canada on a landmark mineral rights claim, Premier David Eby says. But the lawyer representing the challenger says that they would have preferred the province respect the lower court's decision. Eby said Thursday it is very good news that the court will hear its appeal of a ruling that found the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the provincial mineral claims regime are "inconsistent." The BC Court of Appeal ruled in December that the provincial Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, or DRIPA, should be "properly interpreted" to incorporate the UN declaration into the laws of B.C. with immediate legal effect. That ruling set off the appeal from the province amid concerns that it could cause economic uncertainty ... CLICK HERE for the full story 

EBY OFFSIDE WITH NATIONAL INTEREST AS CARNEY AND SMITH BUILD BC'S ECONOMIC FUTURE WITHOUT HIM ~~ BC Conservatives

IMAGE CREDIT :  CBC News   Prime Minister Mark Carney and Alberta Premier Danielle Smith announced a landmark agreement today committing Ottawa to designate a new pipeline to BC's west coast as a project of national interest by October 1, 2026, with construction approval targeted for September 1, 2027. The deal pairs the pipeline with a new industrial carbon pricing framework and a fall 2027 construction start. British Columbia, the province where the pipeline ends, where the jobs would land, and where the export terminal would be built, was nowhere at the table. "This is a nation-building deal, and the BC NDP have been locked out of the room," said Trevor Halford, Interim Leader of the Official Opposition.  "While the Prime Minister and the Premier of Alberta were doing the hard work of growing the Canadian economy, the NDP is on the sidelines calling this pipeline a 'fiction' and an 'energy vampire.'  He chose petulance over partnership, and now BC ...

Kamloops - North Thompson BC Conservative MLA Ward Stamer speaks to Bill 20 — K’ómoks Treaty Act

The following is a condensed version of Kamloops – North Thompson MLA Ward Stamer’s remarks, to the BC Legislature, on the afternoon of Tuesday May 19th : I rise today to continue remarks on Bill 20, the K’ómoks treaty, and to address what I believe are some of the most important constitutional, democratic and governance concerns facing this Legislature today. At the centre of this debate are two major issues. First, unresolved overlapping territorial boundaries tied to this treaty process. And second, the growing legal and political consequences arising from the provincial government’s implementation of the Declaration of Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, more commonly known as DRIPA. Much of the government’s defence on DRIPA rests upon references to the United Nations declaration on the rights of Indigenous Peoples, commonly known as UNDRIP. And this is where we must begin having a more honest and mature conversation in this province. UNDRIP was never originally designed to function ...

Labels

Show more