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Christy Clark wins Vancouver Point Grey
Christy Clark wins Vancouver Point Grey
Liberal leader captures seat in byelection
VANCOUVER - Premier Christy Clark completed her political comeback Wednesday, winning a seat in the legislature by defeating NDP challenger David Eby in the Vancouver-Point Grey byelection.
The vote was a dramatic nail-biter for supporters of both candidates. Eby led for most of the evening, with Clark first inching ahead then gaining momentum as the last ballot boxes were counted. She was 595 votes ahead with all ballot boxes reporting, according to Elections BC.
“We knew it would be close, within 500 votes,” said Clark campaign strategist Brad Zubyk.
“It’s a byelection, so you’re dealing with low voter turnout. But we feel pretty good about where we are now.”
When a smiling Clark arrived at a Fourth Avenue restaurant to speak to her cheering supporters at about 10:30 p.m., she was clearly happy with the results.
“Well, we did it, and when I say we, I really mean we,” she said. “This was a close race, just as it always is in this riding.”
She told reporters that she won about the same percentage of the vote that Gordon Campbell did in his last run in the riding.
Clark won 49 per cent of the vote, with Eby, a well-known civil liberties and poverty activist, taking 45 per cent.
Clark said she expects the results will be described as a squeaker, “but when Henrik Sedin is holding up the Stanley Cup over his head and he’s doing it in Game 7 after three overtimes, not a single one of us is going to complain.”
She said the governing party hasn’t won a by-election in 30 years “and you have reversed that curse.”
Clark said the tight result shows the B.C. Liberals can’t take their support for granted and that the party has to remain united because the results marked an improvement for the NDP in the riding.
“We cannot count on the NDP vote to be split.”
She told reporters, “There were a few anxious moments but nothing that upset me too much.”
At Eby’s West Broadway headquarters, where about 200 high-energy supporters watched results come in through the night, the mood was scarcely less celebratory.
“Do you know what we almost did tonight? We almost beat the premier,” said a jubilant Eby, wearing the NDP colours with a blue shirt and orange tie.
“I’m no political scientist, but I’ve got to think the provincial Liberals are in trouble if a first-time provincial run by David Eby almost took out their premier,” he said to loud applause.
“At one stage Christy and I were tied and I said to my campaign manager, ‘You told me to write two speeches but you didn’t tell me to write three.’
“I never thought we would get this close, but it’s clear to me what running a community-based campaign can do. What an amazing outcome.
Eby said he wasn’t sure if he will return to his job at the B.C. Civil Liberties Association, but he will “definitely consider” running in the general election.
“I am very buoyed by this result. I think people are going to look at this and realize if I did run again, it would be a very interesting result.”
John Cummins, leader-designate of the B.C. Conservatives, issued a statement congratulating Clark on her victory.
“The premier should have a seat in the legislature, which is why the B.C. Conservatives did not run a candidate in the riding,” he said. “I look forward to squaring off with Ms. Clark in the next general election.”
Clark quit her job as a radio talk show host last year and captured the leadership of the B.C. Liberal Party in late February. She has been premier since March 14, 2011.
But without a seat in the legislature, Clark has been forced to watch the current spring session from the sidelines.
She could be back on the floor of the legislature and into the hurly-burly of question period as early as May 24, according to Elections BC. |
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