British Columbia

B.C. premier denies anti-HST interference

B.C. Premier Gordon Campbell denies exerting any political pressure to impede the petition against the province's harmonized sales tax.

B.C. Premier Gordon Campbell denies exerting any political pressure to impede the petition against the province's harmonized sales tax.

Former premier Bill Vander Zalm has accused Campbell and chief electoral officer Craig James of thwarting democracy by stalling the eventual petition process.

Campbell was in California on Thursday to talk to state legislators.

"I'm not going to comment on Mr. Vander Zalm's comments," he said. "It doesn't help for anyone to cast aspersions on anyone else."

The anti-HST petition was verified Wednesday, which means that it met the threshold of 10 per cent of voters' signatures from each of B.C.'s 85 ridings.

But James said in a letter to Vander Zalm that a business coalition's challenge of the petition campaign must be dealt with in B.C. Supreme Court before the petition result can be addressed.

The court challenge questions the petition's constitutional validity.

According to the law under which the petition was conducted, it must be sent to a committee of the legislature, which would decide what next step to take.

Court hearing next week

Campbell said he doesn't tell James what to do.

"Craig James has been someone who has served the public for more than a decade … in an independent manner. He is doing, I'm sure, what he considers to be the best thing that he can possibly do for all the people of British Columbia."  

There would be no comment from Elections BC while the issue is before the courts, a spokesman in James's office said Thursday.

B.C. Opposition Leader Carole James said she demanded in a letter to Campbell on Thursday that he recall the legislature and debate scrapping the HST. The fact the issue is before the courts in no way stops the government from debating it, James said in Victoria.

If the court rules the petition is constitutionally valid, the legislative committee would have to decide whether to send a bill to the legislature withdrawing the HST or to put the issue to a province-wide referendum.

The court hearing is scheduled for the week of Aug. 16. Whatever the court decides, appeals of that decision could take years and leave the petition in limbo, anti-HST campaign organizers suggested Wednesday.