Pubdate: Sat, 22 Apr 2017 Source: Prince George Citizen (CN BC) Copyright: 2017 Prince George Citizen Contact: http://www.princegeorgecitizen.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/350 Author: Neil Godbout Page: 6 CLARK BOBS, WEAVES LIKE A PRO What a difference four years makes. When Premier Christy Clark sat down for her exclusive election interview with The Citizen in April 2013, there was a grim urgency to her visit and it was reflected in the cover shot chosen to accompany the story. She was down in the polls and there was chatter that the Liberal caucus was kicking her to the curb the instant the results were in. Locally, Pat Bell had abruptly dropped out of the race in February, leaving Mike Morris to step in as the Prince George-Mackenzie candidate with no notice. During that 2013 interview, she spoke with the passion of someone who felt it all slipping away. She just had to keep going, in hopes people would finally start listening and believe in her. Fast forward to Friday afternoon. Clark walked in with the champion's swagger, accompanied by Morris, Shirley Bond and the party entourage. She still speaks with passion about jobs, young people and the future of the province but she does so now with the overwhelming confidence of a proven winner. Four years ago, she knew she might lose. Now, defeat seems as inconceivable as the sun rising from the west. An already polished speaker and political performer in 2013, she's now even more relaxed, more assured in her manner and her words. She talks about the NDP and 1990s like a bad dream and John Horgan as a pretender to the throne, while four years ago, she seemed genuinely fearful of the prospect of Premier Adrian Dix. She's more careful, however, artfully dodging the tricky questions. When asked how the "remember the NDP and the dirty 1990s" is supposed to attract young voters, she insisted that people in their 20s heard their parents talking back in the day about those hard times, before pivoting to "how well we're doing now." The honest answer would have been is the internal polling still shows "the 1990s" resonates with older, wealthier voters, the kind who will turn up to cast a ballot and support the centreright party. She didn't want to talk about marijuana much, deflecting the question of what she will do to promote the industrial growth and production of legal pot that could dwarf the rest of the provincial agricultural sector, create thousands of jobs and pour hundreds of million of dollars into the tax coffers. On one hand, she made it sound like it was some distant potential development (like LNG?) but then admitted that much has to be decided by the end of the year. When pressed, she made a weak case that pot shouldn't be sold in liquor stores ("we shouldn't have the two intoxicants in the same place"), for the ridiculous reason that people buying alcohol don't want to see packets of marijuana on the shelves. That logic is as ridiculous as saying Scotch aficionados want their own store because they'd rather not be slumming with the beer and wine drinkers. She simply stated the obvious about "doing it right" and "keeping it out of the hands of kids." No mature adult would disagree with that, nor would any NDP or Green candidate. Four years ago, Clark was more willing to tackle those kind of thorny issues head on. Now she bobs and weaves around the landmines, talking but saying little. Steady as she goes. Four more years. Trust in the proven winner. It's the same message as 2013 but the tone and the delivery in 2017 is noticeably different. - - Managing editor Neil Godbout - --- MAP posted-by: Matt