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Politics of British Columbia

The Politics of British Columbia involves not only the governance of British Columbia, Canada, and the various political factions that have held or vied for legislative power, but also a number of experiments or attempts at political and electoral reform.

Politics of British Columbia
Polity typeSub-national administrative division (federated state)
ConstitutionConstitution of British Columbia
Legislative branch
NameParliament of British Columbia
TypeUnicameral
Meeting placeLegislature building, Victoria
Presiding officerLieutenant Governor of British Columbia
Lower house
NameLegislative Assembly
Presiding officerRaj Chouhan, Speaker
Executive branch
Head of State
TitleLieutenant Governor
CurrentlyJanet Austin
AppointerCanadian monarch on the advice of the Prime Minister
Head of Government
TitlePremier
CurrentlyDavid Eby (BC NDP)
AppointerLieutenant Governor with the confidence of the legislature
Cabinet
NameExecutive Council
LeaderDavid Eby
AppointerLieutenant Governor
Ministries22
Judicial branch
Chief judgeRobert J. Bauman
Court of Appeal
Chief judgeRobert J. Bauman
SeatVancouver
Provincial Court
Chief judgeChristopher E. Hinkson
Provincial Court
Chief judgeMelissa Gillespie

History of politics in British Columbia

 
The chamber of the provincial legislature in Victoria

From BC's start as a province, BC used a mixture of the first past the post elections in single-member districts and multi-member districts where voters cast multiple votes (Block Voting). This was in use except for a small break in the 1950s, until the 1980s.

Prior to 1903, there were no political parties in British Columbia, other than at the federal level. One exception to this was the Nationalist Party, BC's first labour party founded in 1894. It elected an MLA in the 1894 and 1898 provincial election - Robert Macpherson.[1]

Sir Richard McBride was the first Premier of British Columbia to declare a party affiliation (Conservative Party) and institute conventional party/caucus politics.

Since party politics were introduced to British Columbia, there have been a number of political parties which have controlled the government for more than ten years, including the Conservative government of the early 20th century, the interwar Liberal government, the post-war Social Credit ("Socred") government of W.A.C. Bennett and, following a further brief reign by the New Democratic (NDP), another Social Credit government under his son, Bill Bennett, the NDP government of the 1990s and the BC Liberal Party Government in the 2000s under Gordon Campbell.

During the 1940s, the government was controlled by a coalition of the Liberals and Conservatives. Neither party had the electoral strength to form a majority, so a coalition was used as a means to prevent the B.C. Co-operative Commonwealth Federation (CCF) (the forerunner of the NDP) from taking power.

From 1972 to 1975, an NDP government led by Dave Barrett held power but was defeated after a showdown with organized labour. Social Credit was returned to power with a new leader, and the son of the former Premier, Bill Bennett, who had been recruited by the party's old guard but brought in a new style of politics. In 1986, the younger Bennett retired from politics and his successor was Bill Vander Zalm. Under his leadership, he and his party became increasingly unpopular. In the face of mounting unpopularity and numerous scandals, the party was defeated by the NDP who went on to lead the province for the next ten years. Mike Harcourt led the NDP for the first half of this NDP decade, but the party had difficulty finding stable leadership after that, going through three leaders and premiers over the next five years. The rejuvenated BC Liberal Party won the next four elections before losing the 2017 election to the NDP government under John Horgan.

In western Canada (other than Alberta until 2015), typically politics have featured the CCF or NDP on the left and some other party on the right. The present incarnation of the BC Liberal Party fulfills this role: the BC Liberal Party is neutral federally and derives its membership from the centre to the centre right. Since its takeover by supporters of Premier Gordon Campbell following the ouster of Gordon Wilson (who led the party from effective oblivion to Official Opposition in the 1991 general election), many consider it to be effectively a rebirth of the defunct BC Social Credit Party.

After the introduction of partisan politics (1903–1952)

Elections to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia (1903–1949) – seats won by party (italized and underlined numbers indicates a minority government)
Government Conservative Liberal Conservative Liberal Coalition
Party 1903 1907 1909 1912 1916 1920 1924 1928 1933 1937 1941 1945 1949
    Conservative 22 26 38 39 9 15 17 35 8 12
    Liberal 17 13 2 36 25 23 12 34 31 21
    Liberal-Conservative coalition 37 39
    Cooperative Commonwealth Federation 7 7 14 10 7
    Socialist 2 3 2 1
    Labour 1 3 3 1 1 1 1 1 1
    Provincial Party 3
    Non-Partisan Independent Group 2
    Unionist 1
    Social Democratic 1
    People's Party 1
    Independent Conservative 1
    Independent Liberal 2
    Independent Socialist 1
    Independent 1 3 2 1 1
Total 42 42 42 42 47 47 48 48 47 48 48 48 48

The Social Credit era (1952–1991)

Elections to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia (1952–1986) – seats won by party (italized and underlined numbers indicates a minority government)
Government Social Credit NDP Social Credit
Party 1952 1953 1956 1960 1963 1966 1969 1972 1975 1979 1983 1986
    Social Credit 19 28 39 32 33 33 38 10 35 31 35 47
    Cooperative Commonwealth Federation 18 14 10 16
    New Democratic 14 16 12 38 18 26 22 22
    Liberal 6 4 2 4 5 7 5 5 1
    Progressive Conservative 4 1 2 1
    Labour 1 1 1
    Independent
Total 48 48 52 52 52 55 55 55 55 57 57 69

After Social Credit (1991 to present)

Elections to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia (1991–2020) – seats won by party (italized and [*]starred numbers indicates a coalition government)
Government NDP Liberal NDP
Party 1991 1996 2001 2005 2009 2013 2017 2020 2024
    New Democratic 51 39 2 33 35 34 41* 57
    Liberal 17 33 77 46 49 49 43 28
    Social Credit 7
    Reform 2
    Progressive Democratic Alliance 1
    Green 1 3* 2
    Independent 1 1
Total 75 75 79 79 85 85 87 87

Electoral reform

Recall and initiative

British Columbia is the only province in Canada with recall-election and initiative legislation. These measures applied following the 1991 referendum.[2]

Only one recall petition was ever successful: that compelling MLA Paul Reitsma to resign his seat in 1998 – hours before he would have been removed from office.

Fixed election dates

British Columbia was the first province in Canada to institute fixed election dates. Previously, British Columbia elections were like most parliamentary jurisdictions, which only require an election within a specified period of time (being five years in all jurisdictions of Canada).

Alternative voting systems

1950s to the 1980s

By the 1950s, the Liberal-Conservative coalition had begun to fall apart. One of the last acts of the coalition government was to adopt the alternative voting system, which was implemented for the 1952 general election.

Under this system single-member districts and preferential voting was used. Rather than voting for one candidate by marking an X on their ballots, electors ranked their choices of candidates by placing numbers next to the names of the candidates on the ballot. If a candidate received an absolute simple majority of votes, that candidate would be elected. If not, the candidate with the fewest votes was dropped and the second choices marked on the candidate's ballots were allocated among the remaining candidates. This procedure was repeated until a candidate received a majority of votes.

The result was the election of enough candidates of the new Social Credit party to form a Socred minority government, with the CCF forming the official opposition. The Liberals were reduced to four members in the Legislature. The Conservatives (who had changed their name to “Progressive Conservative” in tandem with their federal counterparts) were reduced to three.

The Socred minority government lasted only nine months. The Alternate Voting system was again employed for the ensuing general election. The result was a Socred majority. During this term of office, the Socreds abolished the alternative voting system and returned the province to the traditional voting system, a system that used both single-member districts and multi-member districts elected with a block voting system, both using first past the post system.[citation needed]

This mixed multiple-member and single-member district system with Block voting, was abolished in the 1980s, bringing single-member FPTP into use consistently.

2000s

In 2004, a Citizens' Assembly recommended replacing the First Past the Post system with a Single Transferable Vote system to be implemented in 2009, and a referendum was held on May 17, 2005 to determine if this change should go ahead. The proposal received majority support (57% of the popular vote), but the government had required 60% to make the proposal binding. A second requirement was a simple majority in 60% of the current ridings and 77 of the 79 ridings achieved this, far more than the 48 minimum. The close result has provoked further interest in electoral reform. As a result of this, the Provincial Government promised a second referendum on the issue. The second referendum was held in conjunction with the 2009 general election but it also failed, garnering just over 39% of voter support.

2010s

In 2017 election, the BC NDP campaigned on the promise to hold a referendum on switching to a electoral system of proportional representation. A referendum was held in the subsequent year with two questions on the ballot. The first question was a binary choice between the current first past the post electoral system and a proportional representation electoral system. The second question asked citizens to rank three specific types of proportional representation: dual-member proportional representation, mixed-member proportional representation, and rural–urban proportional representation. (Ironically, this second question used a ranked ballot to determine the preferred method of proportional representation.) If a majority of citizens preferred proportional representation over first past the post, this second question would determine which specific type of proportional representation the province would adopt. In the end, the second question was moot as voters decicively chose the familiar first past the post system (61.3%) over the unfamiliar proportional representation (38.7%).[3] After the results of the referendum were released (and even during the referendum campaign), critics suggested that a major reason that proportional representation was defeated was the complexity of the second ballot question.[4] Although the general public was knowledgeable enough to understand the difference between first past the post and proportional representation, the subtle and numerous differences between dual-member proportional representation, mixed-member proportional representation, and rural–urban proportional representation were less easy to understand, motivating voters to stick with the electoral system.[5]

See also

References

  1. ^ Encyclopedia of BC, p. 486
  2. ^ (PDF). Elections BC. March 2002. p. 60. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2007-10-09. Retrieved 2008-01-02.
  3. ^ "2018 Referendum Voting Results". Elections BC.
  4. ^ "How the No side surged from behind to defeat proportional representation". vancouversun. Retrieved 2022-02-07.
  5. ^ Dhillon, Sunny (2018-05-30). "B.C. unveils its proposed question for voters in electoral-reform referendum". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 2022-02-07.

External links

  • CBC Digital Archives – How the West is Won: A Half-century of B.C. Elections

politics, british, columbia, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Politics of British Columbia news newspapers books scholar JSTOR March 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Politics of British Columbia involves not only the governance of British Columbia Canada and the various political factions that have held or vied for legislative power but also a number of experiments or attempts at political and electoral reform Politics of British ColumbiaCoat of arms of British ColumbiaPolity typeSub national administrative division federated state ConstitutionConstitution of British ColumbiaLegislative branchNameParliament of British ColumbiaTypeUnicameralMeeting placeLegislature building VictoriaPresiding officerLieutenant Governor of British ColumbiaLower houseNameLegislative AssemblyPresiding officerRaj Chouhan SpeakerExecutive branchHead of StateTitleLieutenant GovernorCurrentlyJanet AustinAppointerCanadian monarch on the advice of the Prime MinisterHead of GovernmentTitlePremierCurrentlyDavid Eby BC NDP AppointerLieutenant Governor with the confidence of the legislatureCabinetNameExecutive CouncilLeaderDavid EbyAppointerLieutenant GovernorMinistries22Judicial branchChief judgeRobert J BaumanCourt of AppealChief judgeRobert J BaumanSeatVancouverProvincial CourtChief judgeChristopher E HinksonProvincial CourtChief judgeMelissa Gillespie Contents 1 History of politics in British Columbia 1 1 After the introduction of partisan politics 1903 1952 1 2 The Social Credit era 1952 1991 1 3 After Social Credit 1991 to present 2 Electoral reform 2 1 Recall and initiative 2 2 Fixed election dates 2 3 Alternative voting systems 2 3 1 1950s to the 1980s 2 3 2 2000s 2 3 2 1 2010s 3 See also 4 References 5 External linksHistory of politics in British Columbia Edit The chamber of the provincial legislature in Victoria From BC s start as a province BC used a mixture of the first past the post elections in single member districts and multi member districts where voters cast multiple votes Block Voting This was in use except for a small break in the 1950s until the 1980s Prior to 1903 there were no political parties in British Columbia other than at the federal level One exception to this was the Nationalist Party BC s first labour party founded in 1894 It elected an MLA in the 1894 and 1898 provincial election Robert Macpherson 1 Sir Richard McBride was the first Premier of British Columbia to declare a party affiliation Conservative Party and institute conventional party caucus politics Since party politics were introduced to British Columbia there have been a number of political parties which have controlled the government for more than ten years including the Conservative government of the early 20th century the interwar Liberal government the post war Social Credit Socred government of W A C Bennett and following a further brief reign by the New Democratic NDP another Social Credit government under his son Bill Bennett the NDP government of the 1990s and the BC Liberal Party Government in the 2000s under Gordon Campbell During the 1940s the government was controlled by a coalition of the Liberals and Conservatives Neither party had the electoral strength to form a majority so a coalition was used as a means to prevent the B C Co operative Commonwealth Federation CCF the forerunner of the NDP from taking power From 1972 to 1975 an NDP government led by Dave Barrett held power but was defeated after a showdown with organized labour Social Credit was returned to power with a new leader and the son of the former Premier Bill Bennett who had been recruited by the party s old guard but brought in a new style of politics In 1986 the younger Bennett retired from politics and his successor was Bill Vander Zalm Under his leadership he and his party became increasingly unpopular In the face of mounting unpopularity and numerous scandals the party was defeated by the NDP who went on to lead the province for the next ten years Mike Harcourt led the NDP for the first half of this NDP decade but the party had difficulty finding stable leadership after that going through three leaders and premiers over the next five years The rejuvenated BC Liberal Party won the next four elections before losing the 2017 election to the NDP government under John Horgan In western Canada other than Alberta until 2015 typically politics have featured the CCF or NDP on the left and some other party on the right The present incarnation of the BC Liberal Party fulfills this role the BC Liberal Party is neutral federally and derives its membership from the centre to the centre right Since its takeover by supporters of Premier Gordon Campbell following the ouster of Gordon Wilson who led the party from effective oblivion to Official Opposition in the 1991 general election many consider it to be effectively a rebirth of the defunct BC Social Credit Party After the introduction of partisan politics 1903 1952 Edit Elections to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia 1903 1949 seats won by party italized and underlined numbers indicates a minority government Government Conservative Liberal Conservative Liberal CoalitionParty 1903 1907 1909 1912 1916 1920 1924 1928 1933 1937 1941 1945 1949 Conservative 22 26 38 39 9 15 17 35 8 12 Liberal 17 13 2 36 25 23 12 34 31 21 Liberal Conservative coalition 37 39 Cooperative Commonwealth Federation 7 7 14 10 7 Socialist 2 3 2 1 Labour 1 3 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 Provincial Party 3 Non Partisan Independent Group 2 Unionist 1 Social Democratic 1 People s Party 1 Independent Conservative 1 Independent Liberal 2 Independent Socialist 1 Independent 1 3 2 1 1Total 42 42 42 42 47 47 48 48 47 48 48 48 48The Social Credit era 1952 1991 Edit Elections to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia 1952 1986 seats won by party italized and underlined numbers indicates a minority government Government Social Credit NDP Social CreditParty 1952 1953 1956 1960 1963 1966 1969 1972 1975 1979 1983 1986 Social Credit 19 28 39 32 33 33 38 10 35 31 35 47 Cooperative Commonwealth Federation 18 14 10 16 New Democratic 14 16 12 38 18 26 22 22 Liberal 6 4 2 4 5 7 5 5 1 Progressive Conservative 4 1 2 1 Labour 1 1 1 IndependentTotal 48 48 52 52 52 55 55 55 55 57 57 69After Social Credit 1991 to present Edit Elections to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia 1991 2020 seats won by party italized and starred numbers indicates a coalition government Government NDP Liberal NDPParty 1991 1996 2001 2005 2009 2013 2017 2020 2024 New Democratic 51 39 2 33 35 34 41 57 Liberal 17 33 77 46 49 49 43 28 Social Credit 7 Reform 2 Progressive Democratic Alliance 1 Green 1 3 2 Independent 1 1Total 75 75 79 79 85 85 87 87Electoral reform EditMain article Electoral reform Recall and initiative Edit British Columbia is the only province in Canada with recall election and initiative legislation These measures applied following the 1991 referendum 2 Only one recall petition was ever successful that compelling MLA Paul Reitsma to resign his seat in 1998 hours before he would have been removed from office Fixed election dates Edit British Columbia was the first province in Canada to institute fixed election dates Previously British Columbia elections were like most parliamentary jurisdictions which only require an election within a specified period of time being five years in all jurisdictions of Canada Alternative voting systems Edit Main article Voting systems 1950s to the 1980s Edit By the 1950s the Liberal Conservative coalition had begun to fall apart One of the last acts of the coalition government was to adopt the alternative voting system which was implemented for the 1952 general election Under this system single member districts and preferential voting was used Rather than voting for one candidate by marking an X on their ballots electors ranked their choices of candidates by placing numbers next to the names of the candidates on the ballot If a candidate received an absolute simple majority of votes that candidate would be elected If not the candidate with the fewest votes was dropped and the second choices marked on the candidate s ballots were allocated among the remaining candidates This procedure was repeated until a candidate received a majority of votes The result was the election of enough candidates of the new Social Credit party to form a Socred minority government with the CCF forming the official opposition The Liberals were reduced to four members in the Legislature The Conservatives who had changed their name to Progressive Conservative in tandem with their federal counterparts were reduced to three The Socred minority government lasted only nine months The Alternate Voting system was again employed for the ensuing general election The result was a Socred majority During this term of office the Socreds abolished the alternative voting system and returned the province to the traditional voting system a system that used both single member districts and multi member districts elected with a block voting system both using first past the post system citation needed This mixed multiple member and single member district system with Block voting was abolished in the 1980s bringing single member FPTP into use consistently 2000s Edit See also Citizens Assembly on Electoral Reform British Columbia In 2004 a Citizens Assembly recommended replacing the First Past the Post system with a Single Transferable Vote system to be implemented in 2009 and a referendum was held on May 17 2005 to determine if this change should go ahead The proposal received majority support 57 of the popular vote but the government had required 60 to make the proposal binding A second requirement was a simple majority in 60 of the current ridings and 77 of the 79 ridings achieved this far more than the 48 minimum The close result has provoked further interest in electoral reform As a result of this the Provincial Government promised a second referendum on the issue The second referendum was held in conjunction with the 2009 general election but it also failed garnering just over 39 of voter support 2010s Edit See also 2018 British Columbia electoral reform referendum In 2017 election the BC NDP campaigned on the promise to hold a referendum on switching to a electoral system of proportional representation A referendum was held in the subsequent year with two questions on the ballot The first question was a binary choice between the current first past the post electoral system and a proportional representation electoral system The second question asked citizens to rank three specific types of proportional representation dual member proportional representation mixed member proportional representation and rural urban proportional representation Ironically this second question used a ranked ballot to determine the preferred method of proportional representation If a majority of citizens preferred proportional representation over first past the post this second question would determine which specific type of proportional representation the province would adopt In the end the second question was moot as voters decicively chose the familiar first past the post system 61 3 over the unfamiliar proportional representation 38 7 3 After the results of the referendum were released and even during the referendum campaign critics suggested that a major reason that proportional representation was defeated was the complexity of the second ballot question 4 Although the general public was knowledgeable enough to understand the difference between first past the post and proportional representation the subtle and numerous differences between dual member proportional representation mixed member proportional representation and rural urban proportional representation were less easy to understand motivating voters to stick with the electoral system 5 See also Edit Canada portal Politics portal Pacific Northwest portalOutline of government and politics of British Columbia Executive Council of British Columbia Legislative Assembly of British Columbia List of political parties in British Columbia List of British Columbia general elections List of premiers of British Columbia Council of the Federation Politics of Canada Political culture of CanadaReferences Edit Encyclopedia of BC p 486 Electoral History of British Columbia Supplement 1987 2001 PDF Elections BC March 2002 p 60 Archived from the original PDF on 2007 10 09 Retrieved 2008 01 02 2018 Referendum Voting Results Elections BC How the No side surged from behind to defeat proportional representation vancouversun Retrieved 2022 02 07 Dhillon Sunny 2018 05 30 B C unveils its proposed question for voters in electoral reform referendum The Globe and Mail Retrieved 2022 02 07 External links EditCBC Digital Archives How the West is Won A Half century of B C Elections Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Politics of British Columbia amp oldid 1128961520, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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