NDP focused on forming government, Dix declares
Leader emerges from convention with a united party
Read more: http://www.vancouversun.com/focused+forming+government+declares/5844813/story.html#ixzz1gKfq8Dc4
VANCOUVER - Backed by a unified party and strong endorsement of his own leadership, the New Democratic Party’s Adrian Dix set his party on the path toward forming B.C.’s next government.
“This is our moment in history,” Dix told nearly 700 delegates at the NDP’s biennial convention in Vancouver on the weekend.
“We are going to take the fight to the Liberal Party in every single seat across British Columbia,” he told the convention, the last before the 2013 provincial vote.
“If we do our job, if we present a positive alternative, we’ll win the next election.”
Dix, who became party leader in April, got a leadership endorsement from 98.1 per cent of delegates at the convention, a result that confirms his party has come together behind him.
That show of unity represents a dramatic shift for the party, which last year at this time was deeply fractured and in the midst of a coup that forced out its former leader, Carole James.
Dix said the NDP can win the 2013 election by focusing on issues that address the problems of financial inequality.
“We need a government that supports a strong middle class and we’ve got a government that sees the middle class as a savings account for their friends,” he said.
But he warned that the NDP needs to prove it is ready to govern.
“I think people have decided about the government. What they haven’t decided about is whether we’re ready,” said Dix.
“So we’re going to put forward a serious agenda that I think meets the needs of the province without being extravagant.”
To that end, Dix used the convention to stress a need to be realistic and “modest” in what the party is willing to promise.
“We’re going to do bold things, but we’re going to be modest about what we can do in a four-year term and we’re going to say how we’re going to pay for things,” Dix said during his keynote speech Saturday that lasted more than an hour.
The message is a core theme Dix has said he’s trying to foster as he prepares his party for the coming election.
His speech gave no indication of what he’s taking off the table as priorities.
But as for what he wants to do, he spoke of increased access to public education, higher employment standards and severely restricting the export of raw logs.
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