Vaughn Palmer: Clark schemes, dreams NDP-Green alliance is a flop-in-waiting
VICTORIA — Most days, B.C. Lt.-Gov. Judith Guichon is preoccupied with the viceregal and symbolic roles of an office that is, to be sure, mostly ceremonial.
This is not one of those days.
On Thursday, Guichon, the Nicola Valley rancher who has served as B.C.’s 29th lieutenant-governor since 2012, faces one of the tougher judgment calls in the long history of the office.
Moreover the decision is tougher than it needs to be because of the antics of one of the more cunning partisans ever to serve as premier of this province, Christy Clark.
For weeks, Clark and her inner circle have schemed to contrive a dilemma for Guichon, all the while pretending they were doing nothing of the kind.
Once the NDP and Greens struck an accord to work together at the end of May, Clark acknowledged the likelihood that they would combine to defeat her government on a confidence motion in the legislature.
Asked about the job of Opposition leader, she said she was quite prepared to take it on. She even professed to be looking on the bright side of the reduced workload, quoting son Hamish as saying perhaps their household could now get a dog.
Clark also maintained that in the event of the defeat, she would meet with the Lt.-Gov. to signal her intention to resign without advising her honour on a particular course of action.
She would not recommend Guichon to call on Horgan to form a government. Neither would she suggest calling another election to try to resolve the 44-43 standoff between the Liberals and the NDP-Green alliance.
In short, the public was offered the picture of a premier who was prepared to take her electoral medicine, retreat to the Opposition benches, and not try to sway the viceregal representative one way or the other.
There matters stood until last week, when the legislature resumed with the B.C. Liberals plagiarizing whole sections of the Green and NDP platforms in a bid to persuade one or more members of the alliance to cross the floor or otherwise support the government.
No dice. So Monday of this week, Clark and her operatives tried another dodge, tabling two pieces of legislation crafted to drive a wedge between NDP Leader John Horgan and the Greens’ boss Andrew Weaver.
The scheme flopped spectacularly, as the Greens and New Democrats combined to subject both bills to the indignity of defeat on first reading, something that had never before happened to government-authored legislation in the provincial legislature.