Liberals Struggle with Yet Another Uphill Battle in BC Byelection
The federal Liberals will try to hang on to another seat in a December byelection in the Greater Vancouver area amid challenges in the polls and lacklustre results in the recent provincial election.
The Liberals lost two strongholds in byelections this past summer in Toronto and Montreal, leading to calls from within the party for Trudeau to step down.
The B.C. Conservatives surged from just 1.9 percent of the popular vote and not a single elected candidate in 2020 to win 44 seats in last month’s provincial election, coming close to unseating the ruling NDP which won 47 seats.
The four provincial ridings that roughly cover the area of the federal Cloverdale-Langley City riding were all won by B.C. Conservatives, albeit by small margins. For example, Conservatives won Surrey-Cloverdale by 587 votes, or 2.7 percent.
The election was a two-horse race between the NDP and the B.C. Tories. The successor to the provincial Liberals, B.C. United, did not run any candidates in the face of the Tory surge.
Flipping Riding
Jensen, an agricultural business owner, will be running again in the byelection in hopes of returning to the House of Commons.
The federal Liberals currently hold 14 seats in B.C.—all of them in Vancouver or the surrounding areas. Four cabinet ministers hail from B.C., including Emergency Preparedness Minister Harjit Sajjan, Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson, Citizens’ Services Minister Terry Beech, and Sports Minister Carla Qualtrough.
The Liberal B.C. caucus also has one MP who has not publicly backed Trudeau amid questions about his leadership.