There’s no way to function as a party leader in a parliamentary system if your caucus doesn’t want you.
The way to get around this has generally been to start your own party to beat your old party (or take over a dead one) or force a merger on more favourable terms. Rustad has already done the former.
I don’t know how caucus would manage to function at all if Rustad actually won, but it would be the funniest possible outcome.
RNTMA on
Rustad was ultimately ousted as leader because he didn’t have the leadership skills necessary to unite his party. He bled MLAs both to the left and the right, and even after it was clear that the majority of caucus wanted him out, he tried to cling on. Why he thinks he can run again, I have no idea, but he’d be DOA.
Ideologically, Rustad is quite interesting, he’s socially conservative, but culturally moderate, which describes very few people. His first instinct when he was booted from the Liberals was to join the SoCreds, not the Conservatives, though it had been defunct for a decade. He eventually joined the CPBC, but he’s not exactly the type of culture warrior the base desired. Anybody thinking he’ll be replaced by a more „moderate“ leader is sorely mistaken.
Godzilla52 on
I really wish the BC Liberals had avoided electing Kevin Falcon. I feel like provincial politics would have been a lot healthier with them and the BCNDP being the two largest parties.
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There’s no way to function as a party leader in a parliamentary system if your caucus doesn’t want you.
The way to get around this has generally been to start your own party to beat your old party (or take over a dead one) or force a merger on more favourable terms. Rustad has already done the former.
I don’t know how caucus would manage to function at all if Rustad actually won, but it would be the funniest possible outcome.
Rustad was ultimately ousted as leader because he didn’t have the leadership skills necessary to unite his party. He bled MLAs both to the left and the right, and even after it was clear that the majority of caucus wanted him out, he tried to cling on. Why he thinks he can run again, I have no idea, but he’d be DOA.
Ideologically, Rustad is quite interesting, he’s socially conservative, but culturally moderate, which describes very few people. His first instinct when he was booted from the Liberals was to join the SoCreds, not the Conservatives, though it had been defunct for a decade. He eventually joined the CPBC, but he’s not exactly the type of culture warrior the base desired. Anybody thinking he’ll be replaced by a more „moderate“ leader is sorely mistaken.
I really wish the BC Liberals had avoided electing Kevin Falcon. I feel like provincial politics would have been a lot healthier with them and the BCNDP being the two largest parties.