You can tell by a throne speech where a government is in the election cycle.
The closer to an election, the more ambitious, exciting and specific the promises are. And the sooner after re-election, the more restrained and vague the agenda is.
Tuesday鈥檚 throne speech is the second from Premier Christy Clark鈥檚 government in the nine months since winning the election. That further reduces any drama that might have been building about the kickoff of the legislative session.
So the peek at the government鈥檚 plans was mostly a brief summary of all that鈥檚 gone before. In three words: business as usual.
It鈥檚 the fifth speech to mention the liquefied natural gas opportunity. That鈥檚 gone from a one-line mention of the potential in 2009 to a big manifesto in 2013 that portrayed it as the trillion-dollar salvation of the entire province.
The B.C. Liberal government is a lot better at writing speeches about LNG than it is at bringing in the tax regime for it. That was supposed to be available late last year, but now it is expected late in 2014.
On Tuesday, LNG was promoted yet again: An 鈥渋ncredible opportunity鈥 that is one of the five foundations of the government鈥檚 jobs plan.
There were three newish ideas pitched in the speech. One is a 10-year skills plan, an idea to revamp all education systems to gear up for the widely expected skills shortage.
Another 10-year plan was promised for transportation infrastructure. That will likely become a lengthy wish list of new highways, subtitled: 鈥淭his is what we鈥檇 build if we had the money.鈥
And a long-term plan to address violent crime, specifically violence against women, is in the works.
They all sound promising. But all three initiatives are about problems or issues that have been studied extensively. There鈥檚 planning and there鈥檚 doing. And then there鈥檚 making planning sound like doing.
The rest of the speech was re-packaged items from the past few years. Six new mines, an apology to Chinese-91原创s for historical wrongs, a new water act and all the liquor changes that have already been promised over the past few months.
It鈥檚 a far cry from the February launch of the Liberal re-election campaign. That throne speech 鈥 40 per cent longer than Tuesday鈥檚 effort 鈥 had about 20 specific promises portraying the government as charging ahead on all fronts. It promised a seniors鈥 advocate, a school of Chinese medicine, early childhood programs and a host of other items. And there were multiple general visions of a bright future. Most of the specific items are still in the works.
The throne speech from last summer that followed the government鈥檚 re-election was a very brief recap of the February one. The two post-election speeches together don鈥檛 match the length of the pre-election opus.
Liberals think they鈥檝e put enough on their plate that the third such speech in a year can ease up on specific commitments in favour of reciting familiar themes.
But New Democrat Leader Adrian Dix said: 鈥淓ven by throne speech standards鈥 Tuesday鈥檚 address was devoid of substance.
He said it was pessimistic to the core, in that the Liberals don鈥檛 believe they can solve social problems, so they try to ignore them.
It鈥檚 more likely that one by-the-way line in the speech drove all the other considerations. And that line simply reaffirmed that the budget is balanced. Balancing a budget in this day and age means cutting spending to the bone. The Liberals got a lot of credit during the election campaign for doing so. But the downside is they can鈥檛 afford to address a lot of the pressing needs.
The speech highlighted a view that Clark expressed several weeks ago, that governments face a choice today of 鈥渕anaging decline鈥 or finding new ways to grow the economy. Liberals will continue to paint the NDP as the party of managed decline, while they rely on LNG to grow the economy.
Clark鈥檚 sales job over the past year has been one of the most impressive in recent history. The session that鈥檚 just underway will start to show whether she can execute on the deal she closed.
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