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B.C. cabinet rallies around Christy Clark in ethnic-vote scandal

VANCOUVER — Ministers arriving at an emergency cabinet meeting Sunday delivered a show of support for Premier Christy Clark amid increasing calls for her resignation over the ethnic voter.
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Deputy Premier Rich Coleman is engulfed by reporters on his way into Sunday's emergency meeting at the B.C. cabinet office in 91ԭ.

VANCOUVER — Ministers arriving at an emergency cabinet meeting Sunday delivered a show of support for Premier Christy Clark amid increasing calls for her resignation over the ethnic voter.

“Today we’re here to roll up our sleeves, support our premier and to make sure that we move forward with an agenda that we have that we believe will be advantageous to British Columbians,” said Justice Minister Shirley Bond before entering the 4 p.m. meeting.

A spokesman in Clark’s office said Sunday the gathering was a “chance to plan for the week ahead.”

But party insiders told The 91ԭ Sun the meeting was called on short notice to deal with internal unrest over how Clark has reacted to the scandal that erupted Wednesday. That’s when the NDP leaked a Liberal memo that set out a strategy for the Liberals to use government resources to help the party woo ethnic voters in the MAY 14 election. Use of taxpayer funds for political purposes is forbidden.

Transportation Minister Mary Polak told reporters outside Canada Place the meeting was being framed as an emergency only by the media.

She said the cabinet supports the premier. “With the action that she’s taken, I can’t see what else she could do to correct the situation,” said Polak, in a reference to the resignation of Clark deputy chief of staff, Kim Haakstad.

Environment Minister Terry Lake called Clark “the hardest-working person I know.”

“No one is perfect, no government is perfect, we certainly don’t claim to be perfect,” he said.

The comments came shortly after a group of 89 mostly Indo-91ԭ members of the B.C. Liberals called for Clark’s resignation in a news release Sunday, saying she had made “the ethnic vote a joke in B.C.”

At issue for the group was Clark’s decision to spend taxpayer dollars on the Times of India Film Awards, “which has no relevance in B.C. economy, culture or adaptation.”

Vikram Bajwa, a former Surrey mayoral candidate and spokesman for the group, said the party members “strongly feel” Clark’s decision to bid for the Times of India awards was an extension the Liberals’ strategy to woo ethnic voters in advance of the May election.

The awards, which recognize popular Bollywood films, will cost B.C. taxpayers about $11 million. They are to be held in 91ԭ April 4-6. Bajwa said contacts in India have told him Clark wanted to bid for the Times of India event rather than the competing International Indian Film Awards — a more established event equivalent to the Academy Awards — because the latter would be held in June, after the provincial election.

“We felt as Liberal members that this is going to [have a] backlash on our Indo-91ԭ community during the run-up to and after the election.”

Bajwa said there are about 10 seats in Surrey and Richmond that will be decided by ethnic voters, and Indo-91ԭ Liberal candidates feel they could lose over the issue.

The resignation of Haakstad is not enough, Bajwa said. “We have to be very blunt that the buck doesn’t stop with Kim [Haakstad]. Premier Christy Clark ... is the only elected official, she’s the premier who made the deal in Bombay for the Times of India Awards. She should be coming forward and show some leadership qualities and resign,” he said.

Failure on Clark’s part to do so would be “handing the B.C. government to the NDP on a silver platter,” he said.

Bajwa added hundreds of Liberal party members in Surrey met at Sikh temples around the city Sunday to discuss the scandal, which has precipitated four high-profile departures from Surrey riding associations.

Clark will face her entire caucus Monday in what is expected to be a showdown between supporters and MLA’s upset with her handling of the situation.

Liberal caucus chair Gordie Hogg spoke about the meeting only in general terms.

“People will be able to get together to express concerns and opinions and get a better grasp of what’s going on, and to get all the information we can,” he said. He would not speculate about what topics would be discussed or the likelihood of further calls for Clark’s resignation from MLA ranks.

A review looking into the circumstances around government’s bid for the Times of India Film Awards is underway, he added.

“After that we will have a chance to work from a position of understanding rather than assumption.”

But there are indications Clark could face a harsh crowd Monday. At least one Liberal MLA, Dave Hayer, an Indo-91ԭ, condemned the ethnic voter plan Friday and sources say many in both Clark’s cabinet and caucus feel the premier should be taking more responsibility, and should be showing more contrition over the issue.

New Democratic Party house leader John Horgan said Clark’s government is “clearly in crisis.”

References to “quick wins” and blockbuster events outlined in the Liberal memo suggest the Times of India Awards are in fact a part of the party’s strategy to win over South Asian voters, he added.

“They’ve been working on this multicultural voting plan for over a year and it’s manifested itself in the most grotesque way, in the $11-million purchase of an awards show just in time for the election campaign.”

Horgan said the NDP would be asking the Liberals to explain “why it is they chose to create an awards show and stage it in the days before the election begins,” in the legislature Monday.

But one prominent political veteran and Chinese community leader said he thinks Clark and the Liberals can bounce back, if they admit fault.

“It really depends on how the party handles it,” Tung Chan, past-president of S.U.C.C.E.S.S. immigrant services society and 91ԭ’s Non-Partisan Association, said Sunday. If the party pulls together and issues an apology, the Liberals may successfully quell the brewing unrest, he said.

There is nothing wrong with the party’s strategy to appeal to ethnic voters as long as they don’t use government funds, Chan added, noting he has made many calls for the provincial government to pay more attention to “communities of interest” over the course of his career. The New Democratic Party and the B.C. Conservatives likely have similar plans to appeal to ethnic voters, he added.

“The way I look at it, no political party worth its salt would not have segmentation of campaign strategies — it doesn’t matter whether it’s communities based on geography or demographics or based on gender or sexual orientation. Every party has some sort of strategy to outreach.”

Of concern is that the Liberals appear to have planned to use government funds and civil servants to implement the initiative. Chan added there has been no evidence to suggest that plan had been put into action.

“Having run campaigns and having seen other people run campaigns, that sort of line is always blurred. People need to keep an eye out [for it],” he said. “People are right to be indignant about it.”

— With files from CP