B.C. Liberals Set Their Hair on Fire

bc liberal leadership race
Image by: Unambig

Maybe the next leader of the government should be someone who can explain taxes. Nah, forget that – check out the Liberals as they self-destruct.

I was planning to run a reasoned, pithy, post on tax policy. I know, you were waiting on the edge of your seat for that very thing.
 
But then along came the ongoing self-immolation of Gordon Campbell and the Liberal Party.

How could I resist? Tax policy be damned. You don't often see a governing party destroy itself like this.
 

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Well, maybe you do. This is B.C., after all. But these guys are doing it with such panache!
 
Outspoken Energy minister Bill Bennett gets sacked, apparently for opposing Gordon Campbell's desire to hang around even though he has resigned because of HST anger. Campbell says the cabinet bounced Bennett, but Bennett says it was the Premier, who's a big bully.
 
Meanwhile, other cabinet ministers are running for cover, avoiding the press and anybody who has anything to do with Campbell, the HST, the NDP, taxation, elections, and maybe men from Mars if there are any around.
 
Especially if they're for the HST. Then, almost immediately after the Bennett affair, we discover that the recently announced provincial income-tax cut is being ...uh... unannounced.

As in taking it back, didn't mean it, my mistake, so sorry, Just Kidding! That $600 average we were going to put back in your pocket is now a non-tax cut.
 
Of course, I, and everybody else in B.C., can see why Campbell announced the income tax cut. He was trying to sooth the uprising in the province over the new HST. I can argue until I'm blue in the face that the HST is actually good for BC, but few people believe me, so I'll stop.
 
What wasn't good was an income tax cut. Why? Because it benefits those who make (and spend) the most. Generally, the HST does the opposite.
 
I'm not sure what cabinet thought of all this, since they're not talking. But, apparently, they want BOTH the GST and a reinstatement of the income tax cut.
 
Okay, I know the province is in economic trouble, but really? The tax cut was a desperation move on the part of a Premier who was threatening to fall to below zero in the polls. It would have hamstrung the province financially for years.
 
Problem was that most people aren't really up on their tax knowledge. I guess that's because they don't stay up all night studying it. I can't imagine why.
 
As a result, they mistakenly see the HST as a new tax. Cutting the income tax meant nothing to them because they're fixated on the hated “new” tax.
 
 So here's my choice for the next leader of the Liberal Party. He/She should be a tax accountent.
 
 Nobody hates them.

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New Leader: Mea Culpa ... Honestly, the political landscape is so full of emotionally charged election land mines that the new leader of the Liberal has to clear the table. He or she has to blow up all of these "land mines" and rebuild. The only road to achieving this to first face the reality that the HST is dead. Any party supporting the HST just will not get elected ... period. Once that unsettling reality is faced and understood, options become much clearer. The first party that declares their *first* election plank is jettisoning the HST wins the next election yet it is a mystery why the NDP is waffling on the subject. The new leader of the BC Liberals does what is required ... a Mea Culpa, promising to ax the HST one way or another. Why the NDP would allow the new BC Liberal Leader to steal their thunder is a mystery but as long as the NDP remain mute or at best vague on the subject ... the opportunity for the new Liberal Leader remains. The rending of garments and scattering of ashes in the hair is not necessary for the new Liberal Leader but clearly the BC Liberal Party is at an all-time low right now. One could argue successfully that you could run a Stanley Park squirrel armed with an "ax the HST" platform against a sitting Liberal MLA and win an election today. That said, crystal clear BC Liberal dialog to the effect that "the electorate is the boss and the government is going to be run for the people and business, in that order ..." is needed here. The position that the HST is a "good tax" is based on perception. Sure it is good for business and I dare say a lot of people are willing to agree with that. My businesses benefit from the HST implementation but I disagree with it. I join a lot of people who feel that this shift in tax burden, from business to consumers, is morally bankrupt. The perspective of an average voter: I particularly appreciated the BC Business graphic caricature of Campbell taking that 15% bite out of the hamburger (previous issue of BC Business) because it illustrates the viewpoint, perspective if you will, of the average voter ... that the government is eating their lunch and that is just not on. The new leader has to clear the decks and be strong enough to ruffle some feathers in the current Liberal party
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Tony Wanless

Tony Wanless, CMC, is CEO of Knowpreneur Consultants, which helps businesses reinvent and innovate. Follow him on Twitter.

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