2017 British Columbian government formation

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DateMay 9–July 18, 2017
Participants
2017 British Columbian government formation
DateMay 9–July 18, 2017
LocationVictoria, British Columbia, Canada
CauseHung parliament following the 2017 general election
Participants
Outcome

The events leading up to the formation of the government of British Columbia took place between May 9 and July 18, 2017, following the 41st British Columbia general election. Neither the incumbent Liberal Party or the New Democratic Party, the two main parties in the province's legislature, were able to win a majority threshold of 44 seats, resulting in a hung parliament and uncertainty as to who would form government. By convention, the incumbent Liberals, led by Premier Christy Clark, continued to govern despite being one seat short of a parliamentary majority. Both the Liberals and the New Democrats attempted to persuade the Green Party to use their balance of power to either support or defeat the Clark government. The Green Party ultimately entered into a confidence and supply agreement with the New Democrats to support a New Democratic government led by John Horgan in exchange for the government's support of some Green Party campaign interests, such as electoral reform.

General election

2017 BC provincial election

87 seats in the Legislative Assembly
44 seats needed for a majority
Party Leader Vote % Seats +/–
Liberal Christy Clark 40.37 43 −6
New Democratic John Horgan 40.29 41 +7
Green Andrew Weaver 16.83 3 +2
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below.
Parliament before Elected parliament
Liberal majority Hung parliament

The 2017 British Columbia general election took place on May 9 to fill the 87 seats of the British Columbia Legislative Assembly. By the end of the night, no party had won a majority, with the incumbent Liberals leading and holding 43 seats, one short of the required 44 seat majority threshold.[1] As absentee ballots still had to be counted, which had the potential to flip some of the closer constituency elections, no winner was projected. Absentee ballot counting and some electoral recounts occurred up until May 24, but despite the close margins, there were no changes to the seat count reported on May 9, leaving the legislature with 43 Liberal seats, 41 New Democratic seats, and 3 Green seats.[2] Technically, the Liberals had a plurality of seats but were in a precarious position as the two opposition parties together outnumbered them in the legislature by one seat.

Initial statements and negotiations

On the night of the election, Christy Clark made a victory speech of sorts, acknowledging that despite winning the popular vote and a plurality of seats, their mandate was weaker, and they would have to collaborate with the other parties to satisfy the British Columbian electorate.[1][3] Andrew Weaver, whose Green Party now held the balance of power, stated that he would negotiate with both parties in hopes that the next government would be supportive of some of the Green Party's initiatives. At around 12:30 am on May 10, John Horgan stated that "we've waited 16 years for a new government and we have to ask you to wait a little bit longer", confident that he would be able to defeat a minority Liberal government in a hung parliament.[4] On May 29, Horgan and Weaver announced that they had reached a confidence and supply agreement where the Green Party would support an NDP government on budgets and matters of confidence.[5][6] Despite the announcement, Clark did not resign and argued that it was her duty to attempt to maintain confidence of the Legislative Assembly, although admitting she would likely be unsuccessful.[7][8]

During this time, who would become the next speaker of the Legislative Assembly was subject to speculation. The Legislature must elect a speaker before any other business, including the speech from the throne, can take place. However, as the speaker must be an MLA but only votes in the event of a tie, it would be disadvantageous for either a Liberal or NDP member to become the speaker, as it would effectively reduce the size of their caucus and make it more difficult for their party to maintain control of the Legislature.[9] On June 14, the Liberals said they would put forward a speaker, but suggested the person would not stay in the role if their government was defeated.[10]

First session of the Legislative Assembly

Non-confidence vote results
Caucus Yes No Abst.
Total 44421
 Liberal 0421[a]
 New Democratic 4100
 Green 300

The 41st Parliament of British Columbia was first convened on June 22. Steve Thomson, a Liberal, was acclaimed as Speaker by unanimous consent.[11] Later that day, Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia Judith Guichon delivered the throne speech on behalf of Clark's government.[12] The speech mentioned 48 initiatives that the Liberal government were planning to work towards, 30 of which were not part of the Liberal's campaign platform.[13] This drew criticism from several former BC Liberal politicians, who saw the move as a cheap attempt to stay in power by pandering to the opposition parties, rather than sticking with the Liberal's electoral promises.[14]

On June 28, John Horgan introduced a motion of no confidence against the Liberal government. It passed the next day by a vote of 44 to 42.[15] All Liberal MLAs (except Thomson, who, as Speaker, abstained) voted against the motion, while all NDP and Green MLAs voted in favour of defeating the government.[15]

Upon her government's defeat, Christy Clark requested that the lieutenant governor dissolve parliament so another election could be held. Despite Clark initially claiming that she would not seek another immediate election, she argued that no party could form a stable government with a one-seat margin in the legislature. The lieutenant governor refused the request and granted John Horgan a chance to form government instead. Horgan's cabinet was sworn in on July 18, with Horgan becoming the 36th premier of British Columbia. Ten days later, Clark resigned as the BC Liberal party leader, with Rich Coleman being appointed as the interim leader.

Aftermath

See also

References

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