Pubdate: Sat, 04 Sep 2004 Source: Vancouver Sun (CN BC) Copyright: 2004 The Vancouver Sun Contact: http://www.canada.com/vancouver/vancouversun/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/477 Author: Paul Willcocks Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/mjparty.htm (Canadian Marijuana Party) WHY B.C.'S TINY PARTIES MIGHT MATTER IN THE NEXT ELECTION VICTORIA - They've got few members, no money, and trailed the Marijuana Party in the last election. But B.C.'s clutch of small centre-right parties could still cost Gordon Campbell the election next May. Sure, it sounds implausible. Liberal politicians were quick to dismiss the impact of a planned merger between the Unity Party and the BC Conservatives under the Conservative banner. The parties barely register in the polls and are already bickering internally. They shouldn't matter. But they do. If the parties have even the most modest success -- an extra 30,000 or 40,000 votes across the province -- the Liberals will be vulnerable in a dozen critical ridings. University of British Columbia professor Werner Antweiler has come up with a "voter migration matrix," a handy way to test the effects of swings in the popular vote. It's a crude tool. The changes in voting patterns are applied equally to all ridings, without considering regional strengths or the quality of candidates. But it's still a useful indicator. The last Mustel Group poll showed the NDP at 42 per cent, Liberals at 40 per cent, the Greens at 11 per cent and the rest of the parties sharing six per cent of the vote. Plug those values into the model and it predicts a comfortable Liberal majority in next May's election. They would hold 46 seats, the NDP 33. But the outcome changes radically with even a modest increase in projected support for a right-wing alternative. Take the "other" parties from six per cent to 8.4 per cent support -- the level they reached in the 2001 election -- and the model predicts the NDP would take 40 seats to the Liberals' 39 seats. It's nowhere near a precise prediction. But it is an indication of how easily Unity, Reform, the Conservatives or some new entity could tilt the game -- just a little -- and cause big problems for the Liberals. The problem for Mr. Campbell starts with his own unpopularity. There will always be grumpy and disaffected voters, especially in cranky B.C. But the Liberals have driven away people who should be supporters, failing to convince them that the party -- despite faults - -- comes closest to representing their views. The risks to the Liberals are compounded by the number of ways in which a new party can grab a share of the vote. A popular leader -- remember Gordon Wilson and the PDA -- can make up for a lack of organization. One or two strong candidates, or supporters, can provide a regional boost. (The new Conservative party already has support from federal Conservative MP Darrel Stinson.) Or the party could just stumble into a moment, an issue that defines the campaign. New parties also have novelty on their side. Vancouver Island lawyer Tom Morino -- a two-time provincial Liberal candidate and former member of the party's provincial executive -- has launched the BC Democrat Alliance, aiming at the former supporters of Mr. Wilson's PDA. Voters can project a wide range of hopes on to any new party Even if the smaller parties don't make a big impact, voters may still decide to send a message that neither of the two main parties is acceptable. The Marijuana Party captured three per cent of the vote in 2001, slightly ahead of Unity. That result speaks as much to general voter anger as it does to support for the party's quirky policies. (The Marijuana Party isn't likely to run candidates this time; where those voters decide to land could be significant.) What about strategic voting, and the argument that centre-right voters will ultimately recognize the pragmatic value of supporting Liberal candidates when any other vote would increase the chance of an NDP win? In 2001 almost 200,000 British Columbians voted Green, the vast majority of them with the clear knowledge that their local candidate could not win. Ramshackle, quirky, bickering, broke -- none of that changes the reality. Any new strength for the parties of the right poses a significant problem for the Liberals -- unless they can improve their own popularity. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin