Daring to imagine more than politics and patronage as usual in B.C.
As summer sets in, it’s business and patronage as usual in B.C. politics.
As summer sets in, it’s business and patronage as usual in B.C. politics.
It’s full steam ahead for Christy Clark and the B.C. Liberal government, following a most unexpected election win last month.
There is cause for celebration in B.
“I am hurt, but I am not slain.
In May 1989, the student newspaper at Simon Fraser University ran a story about embattled student union president-elect Christy Clark under the headline ‘Unfit for office?’ Clark was late paying a fine for violating election rules, and so she was removed from office.
The B.C. election campaign is now in full swing, and the B.C. NDP maintains a substantial lead in the polls.
This year Earth Day lands in the middle of the provincial election campaign.
For all the ink spilled in the past couple of weeks about the death of Venezuelan President Hugo Chávez, there has been remarkably little written in the North American media about his actual policies.
Irecently watched the much-hyped new Netflix TV series House of Cards A big budget remake of an earlier BBC program, it’s a political drama set in the cutthroat world of Washington, D.
Earlier this month, I ripped into the B.C. government’s TV advertising blitz.
With less than 100 days to go until the B.C. election, the governing Liberals are throwing millions of public dollars into a TV advertising blitz.
The B.C. election is coming up soon – May 14, 2013. So, for the next four months, expect this space to be devoted almost exclusively to provincial politics.
After a dozen years in power, the B.C. Liberals are expected to be unceremoniously booted out of office.
British Columbian politics will see much change in 2013.