The Pollcast: The B.C. Liberals choose a leader


READ MORE

The CBC Pollcast explores a universe of electoral politics, political polls and a trends they reveal.



When Christy Clark’s supervision was degraded final Jul by an fondness between a New Democrats and Greens, she stepped down not usually as premier of British Columbia though as personality of a B.C. Liberal Party as well.


On Saturday, a 60,000 members of a centre-right celebration will select her deputy — and a chairman who will take on Premier John Horgan when a range subsequent goes to a polls.


With a NDP governing with a minority propped adult by a Green Party’s 3 MLAs, a subsequent choosing could potentially come during any time. The B.C. Liberals won a many seats and a many votes in May’s provincial election, so a lapse to supervision earlier rather than after is a graphic possibility.


Six people are in a using to be a subsequent B.C. Liberal personality and, only maybe, a subsequent premier of a province. They embody MLAs Mike de Jong, Michael Lee, Todd Stone, Sam Sullivan and Andrew Wilkinson, as good as former Conservative MP Dianne Watts.


The party’s congress has essentially lined adult behind de Jong, Stone and Wilkinson — though that doesn’t indispensably meant they are a favourites. Clark won a party’s final care competition in 2011 with small congress support. 


So where do a 6 possibilities mount within a celebration and what are their chances to win on Saturday?


To mangle down a state of a race, Pollcast host Éric Grenier is assimilated by Ian Bailey of the Globe and Mail.


Listen to a full contention above — or subscribe to a CBC Pollcast here and listen to past episodes.​


Follow Éric Grenier and Ian Bailey on Twitter.




Article source: http://www.france24.com/en/20170528-libya-jihadist-group-ansar-al-sharia-announces-dissolution

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Canadian expected to be aboard Russia's 1st manned space mission since rocket failure

Getting the dope on pot stocks is becoming easier as media groups invest in content: Don Pittis

Toronto man denies conspiring with Marvel CEO in alleged hate mail scheme