Mouthpieces for corporate B.C

 

 
 
 

Editor:

In preparation for the provincial election on 2013, Christy Clark and the BC "Liberals" are obviously strategizing and preparing for their confrontation with the NDP. Their attack ads against Adrian Dix shows that they are desperate and are willing to utilize outright lies to set their agenda.

I put quotation marks around the word "Liberal," because we all know that they are not liberals in any sense of the word.

They are but a dog's breakfast-a coalition of Reformers, Socreds, Conservatives and a smattering of former Liberals that joined together in order to defeat the NDP .

Clark herself has a strategy to "out conservative" the Conservatives themselves in the faint hope that they can continue this "anything but the NDP" strategy that worked so well in 2001. I don't think that the people will be so fooled this time around.

Clark has hired the former senior advisor to Stephen Harper, Ken Boessenkool as her chief of staff and the former Reform advisor, Dimitri Pantazopoulos remains on her office staff.

At the local level here in Chilliwack, Clark has chosen Chuck Strahl's former staffer to run as the BC Liberal candidate in the upcoming provincial by-election.

Clark is obviously hoping to tie into that perceived Conservative vote in the upper Fraser Canyon and, hopefully for her, lay the groundwork for a Conservative vote in 2013. The new BC Conservative Party may have something to say about that one.

These incidents illustrate what I have been saying for many, many years-that there are no fundamental differences between the "Conservative" or "Liberal" parties in B.C., that they both are controlled, lock, stock and barrel by the corporate sector. Many corporations give large chunks of monies to both parties, while the NDP receives relatively little monies from union donations.

It is long overdue that more people accepted the reality that, while the BC Liberals and Conservatives are the mouthpieces of corporate B.C., the NDP is working tirelessly for the common working person, whether she/he be an hourly wage earner, a nurse, a teacher, a fireman, a farmer or a small business person.

Meanwhile, we can sit back and watch the ridiculous attack ads that, hopefully, all intelligent British Columbians will recognize them for what they are-a distortion of the reality.

Dick Harrington, Chilliwack

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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