With B.C. government in limbo, defeated cabinet ministers are still cabinet ministers
Ministers responsible for justice, TransLink and others to stay on until new cabinet appointed
B.C.'s provincial election may be over, but after a historic preliminary vote count that left the B.C. Liberals nine votes short of a majority, there are many questions — including how ministries with defeated ministers will operate.
Four cabinet members went down to defeat this week: Naomi Yamamoto (emergency preparedness) with Amrik Virk (technology, innovation & citizens' services), Suzanne Anton (attorney general and justice) and Peter Fassbender (community, sport, cultural development & minister responsible for TransLink).
- B.C. Liberals hang on to power, could form minority government
- Five races absentee ballots could still decide
- What comes next? A primer on how the B.C. election will be decided
That's in addition to Terry Lake (health) and Bill Bennett (energy and mines), who are no longer MLAs after choosing not to seek re-election this year.
UBC political scientist Gerald Baier says the government is continuing to operate as it was. What isn't likely happening however are daily briefings with ministers and the cabinet.
"There really isn't going to be lot of initiatives nor a lot of political response to crisis as they come," said Baier.
"The cabinet as a whole can give some direction to deputies, I would guess, but it's not coming on a day to day basis."
Government: they "remain ... as caretakers"
That will likely continue until it's known whether Christy Clark and the Liberals will retain their hold on power — either by winning an additional seat in the final count, or the NDP and Green Party not coming to a minority governing agreement.
Elections BC will make its final count between May 22 to 24, meaning there will be at least a two-week gap.
- Christy Clark remains B.C. premier until all votes counted
- Strange bedfellows: B.C.'s 3 party leaders must court each other
"During the time period before final election results are confirmed by Elections BC, the executive council of government continues," wrote Matt Gordon, assistant deputy minister for corporate priorities and communications operations, in a statement.
"Cabinet ministers (including those that did not seek re-election or who were not re-elected) remain in their positions as caretakers until a new executive council is sworn in. Government activity is typically very limited during this time as new policy and legislative work awaits the new executive council. However, on issues such as public and environmental health and emergency management, the public can expect the governments full attention to such matters."
Who would speak during an emergency?
One issue that will have the government's attention in the short-term is the possibility of communities in the southern Interior experiencing "unprecedented" flooding.
Yamamoto is the ministry of state responsible for emergency preparedness in B.C., but a Liberal spokesperson said it would be regional elected MLAs who would be making any public statements on behalf of the government should they be required.
- Kelowna mayor warns residents to prepare for unprecedented flooding
- Flood risk could remain in B.C.'s southern Interior for some time to come
With files from Farrah Merali