Jump to content

Draft:2013 Westside-Kelowna provincial by-election

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
2013 Westside-Kelowna provincial by-election

← 2013 July 10, 2013 (2013-07-10) 2017 →

Riding of Westside-Kelowna
Registered
46,021
Turnout
18,797 (40.84%)
  First party Second party Third party
 
NDP
CON
Candidate Christy Clark Carole Gordon Sean Upshaw
Party Liberal New Democratic Conservative
Last election 58.07% 30.84% 11.09%
Popular vote 11,758 5,563 1,115
Percentage 62.66% 29.64% 5.94%
Swing Increase 4.58 pp Decrease 1.20 pp Decrease 5.14 pp

MLA before election

Ben Stewart
Liberal

Elected MLA

Christy Clark
Liberal

A by-election was held on July 13, 2013, to replace MLA Ben Stewart in the riding of Westside-Kelowna. Stewart resigned his seat to allow the liberal party leader and incumbent premier of British Columbia Christy Clark to run in a liberal safe seat, following her electoral defeat in Vancouver-Point Grey during the 2013 British Columbia general election two months prior.

Background

[edit]

Vancouver-Point Grey election

[edit]

In the 2013 British Columbia general election, Premier Christy Clark attempted to keep her seat in Vancouver-Point Grey. The constituency election was essentially a rematch of the 2011 by-election won by Clark against David Eby of the NDP. Unlike the by-election however, Eby defeated Clark, leaving the incumbent premier of British Columbia without a seat in the legislature. Despite her personal election loss, the Liberals led by Clark held their majority in the legislature, which by convention allowed Clark's government to remain in power. In order to remain in the legislature, Clark sought out Liberal MLAs in Liberal safe seats who were willing to resign their seat, so that Clark could contest it in a by-election.

Westside-Kelowna election

[edit]
Ben Stewart, the resigning Westside-Kelowna MLA

Candidates

[edit]
  • JB Bhandari (Vision)
  • Christy Clark (Liberal; incumbent premier)
  • John Marks (Independent)
  • Carole Gordon (New Democratic)
  • Silverado Brooks Socrates (Independent)
  • Sean Upshaw (Conservative)
  • Dayleen Van Ryswyk (Independent)
  • Korry Zepik (Independent)

Results

[edit]
British Columbia provincial by-election, July 10, 2013: Westside-Kelowna
Resignation of Ben Stewart
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
Liberal Christy Clark 11,758 62.66 +4.58 $56,758
New Democratic Carole Gordon 5,563 29.64 −1.20 $38,827
Conservative Sean Upshaw 1,115 5.94 −5.14 $9,755
Independent Dayleen Van Ryswyk 134 0.71 $373
Independent John Marks 74 0.39 $250
Independent Silverado Brooks Socrates 46 0.25 $250
Vision JB Bhandari 45 0.24 $2,261
Independent Korry Zepik 31 0.17 $440
Total valid votes 18,766 100.00
Total rejected ballots 31 0.16 −0.80
Turnout 18,797 40.84 −6.68
Registered voters 46,021
Liberal hold Swing +2.89
Source: Elections BC[1][2]

Aftermath

[edit]

Christy Clark remained the premier of British Columbia for the remainder of the 40th parliamentary term. In October 2013, Ben Stewart was appointed by Christy Clark to be the BC Special Representative in Asia. In the 2017 election, Clark won again in Kelowna West (renamed from Westside-Kelowna), but her party lost their majority, resulting in a hung parliament. Despite her effort to keep the confidence of the legislature, her government was defeated fifty-one days after the general election, following the arrangement of a confidence and supply agreement between the New Democratic and Green parties.[3] Clark requested that the lieutenant governor order another election, but they instead allowed John Horgan's New Democratic Party the opportunity to form government.[4] After losing the premiership, Christy Clark resigned her seat as an MLA, and another by-election was organized in Kelowna West, which was eventually won by Ben Stewart. Clark also resigned her position as leader of the BC Liberals and was replaced by Andrew Wilkinson in the subsequent leadership election. After John Horgan resigned as premier in 2022 due to health problems, David Eby, who was Clark's original 2013 opponent, was subsequently acclaimed to the position.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "2013 Westside-Kelowna by-election - Statement of Votes" (PDF). Elections BC. Retrieved 18 November 2020.
  2. ^ "FRPC". contributions.electionsbc.gov.bc.ca. Retrieved 2020-11-19.
  3. ^ McElroy, Justin. "Timeline: the B.C. Election that took 52 days". CBC News. Archived from the original on June 30, 2017. Retrieved June 30, 2017.
  4. ^ Keller, James; Hunter, Justine; Hager, Mike. "B.C. NDP to take power following confidence vote, ending 16 years of Liberal rule". The Globe and Mail. Archived from the original on July 6, 2017. Retrieved June 30, 2017.