Point Grey By-election: How quickly Christy Clark has forgotten her radio host roots

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From the Globe & Mail – May 8, 2011

by Gary Mason

Not that long ago, Christy Clark the radio host would have had a field day with Christy Clark the politician.

Before
Ms. Clark became B.C. Premier in February, she often delighted in
putting politicians on the hot seat during her afternoon time slot. Her
inquisitions were often so hard-hitting, listeners felt sorry for the
poor elected official on the other side of the microphone.

Were she still sitting in her host’s chair today, it’s difficult to
imagine Ms. Clark accepting now-Premier Clark’s excuse that’s she’s “too
busy running the province” to participate in an all-candidates debate
in the by-election in which she is running.

Ms. Clark has done a
number of commendable things in the short time she has been Premier. Her
populist instincts, no doubt honed during her time in radio, are
exceptional. And she has surrounded herself with a team of advisers that
has demonstrated an undeniable adeptness in pushing the right buttons.

But
the Premier’s decision not to enter at least one all-candidates debate
does not reflect well on her. In fact, it’s a position that demonstrates
a fair amount of contempt for the Point Grey voter.

No space in
her schedule for a two-hour debate? Really? But she does have time to
throw on an apron and pretend to be a waitress for a couple of hours?
This, we’re told, so the Premier could “spend a bit of time walking in
someone else’s shoes.”

Please.

It was a cynical and crass
publicity stunt designed to draw attention to the government’s decision
to raise the minimum wage – a move for which Ms. Clark deserves full
credit. It should have happened a long time ago under the Liberals. She
didn’t need to sully a good public policy decision with a blindingly
transparent, carefully orchestrated photo-op purely intended to accrue
positive publicity.

The Premier has no more appreciation now of
the life of a person living on minimum wage than she did before she and
her political strategists decided it might be good for her numbers if
she served coffee for a couple of hours in a diner. Ms. Clark makes
nearly $200,000 a year, plus benefits most people can only dream of.
Spend a year on minimum wage, Premier, and your fact-finding mission
might not look quite as patronizing.

But back to the debate.

By
now, Christy Clark the radio host would have asked Premier Clark what
she is afraid of? Why she is refusing to put her candidacy up to the
scrutiny of an all-candidates debate? Especially given that the Premier
campaigned during the Liberal leadership race on a promise to be more
open and transparent. What does she have to lose?

The answer is more than the other guys.

That
is why Ms. Clark is not debating; because she has more to lose than
anyone else in the debate, especially NDP candidate David Eby. She would
inevitably be asked questions that would be uncomfortable. (About her
connections to the BC Rail scandal, perhaps.) Plus, a debate would only
serve to give Mr. Eby publicity that he is having trouble generating on
his own. So why give him that platform?

The answer is because it’s
the right thing to do. When you run in an election, you are expected to
field questions from your opponents. It is a crucial test of your
candidacy. It is practically a fundamental tenet of our democratic
system. You don’t say you don’t have time because you’re the Premier. If
you can’t find two hours in your schedule to attend an all-candidates
meeting, how do you expect to represent the riding once you’re elected?

I think those are all questions Ms. Clark would have asked during her radio days.

To
this point, the Premier has received little grief from her former
colleagues in the media for the stand she’s taken. So she’s probably not
concerned about the issue hurting her chances of winning.

She has
mostly been spending her time being out front of a number of popular
and populist announcements that we’re likely to see plenty more of in
the coming months. Her recent decision to cancel parking fees in parks,
while not a huge deal, was smart. As was her edict to cancel
controversial rate hikes being planned by BC Hydro.

There is almost certainly an election coming this fall, so it should be all good news, all the time until then.

At
this point, it’s uncertain in whose shoes the Premier intends to walk
next – as she’s promised. Maybe she’ll slip out of her power suit and
high heels to become a homeless person for an hour.

And then afterward she can meet her friends at the Four Seasons for dinner and tell them all about it.

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About Damien Gillis

Damien Gillis is a Vancouver-based documentary filmmaker with a focus on environmental and social justice issues - especially relating to water, energy, and saving Canada's wild salmon - working with many environmental organizations in BC and around the world. He is the co-founder, along with Rafe Mair, of The Common Sense Canadian, and a board member of both the BC Environmental Network and the Haig-Brown Institute.