B.C. Greens prove they're here to stay, winning a projected 3 seats - Action News
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British Columbia

B.C. Greens prove they're here to stay, winning a projected 3 seats

Just a little more than a month into the job as leader of the B.C. Green Party, Sonia Furstenau appears to have expanded her party's footprint in the province.

Party projected to have its first seat on the British Columbia mainland in West Vancouver-Sea to Sky

A white woman claps while looking at a laptop screen, as a bald man looks on.
B.C. Green Party Leader Sonia Furstenau sits with Green candidate Adam Olsen at the Delta Victoria Ocean Pointe Resort, as provincial election results arrive in Victoria on Saturday. (Chad Hipolito/The Canadian Press)

Just a little more than a month into the job as leader of the B.C. Green Party, Sonia Furstenau appears to have expanded her party's footprint in the province.

CBC has projected three seats for the Greens in the next legislature, with wins for returning candidate and LeaderFurstenau in Cowichan Valley andAdam Olsen inSaanich North and the Islands. The party is also projected to win its first seat on the B.C. mainland, withJeremy Valeriote projected to defeat the Liberals in West Vancouver-Sea to Sky.

It means the Greens are on track to matchtheir record-breaking result from the 2017 electionand gainone seat compared to what theyhad when the legislature was dissolved in September.

During a speech on Saturday night, Furstenausignalled her readiness to challenge the projected NDPmajority government, a shift from the more co-operative approach of the last three years.

"We have worked hard every day to put forward a hopeful vision for how we can help British Columbians during this pandemic," Furstenau said.

Shesuggested thesurprise election was engineered by the NDP and Leader John Horgan to "destroy their opposition," but said theydidn't quite succeed.

"What this election has shown is that British Columbians are not willing to give the government a pass on things like climate change, logging of old growth forests and the holes in the pandemic recovery plan," Furstenau said.

Green candidate Adam Olsen takes a breather Saturday night after learning he's projected to hang onto his seat as MLA for Saanich North and the Islands. (Mike McArthur/CBC)

The NDP's projected majority, however, means the Greens will no longer hold the balance of power in the legislature.

But Olsen said he and Furstenau are returning to the legislature with a wealth of experience they didn't have when they started as first-term MLAs three years ago.

"Sonia and I are going to be prepared to go in there and hold them accountable," Olsen told CBC.

Watch: Sonia Furstenau's election night speech

B.C. Green Party Leader promises to hold NDP government accountable

4 years ago
Duration 1:30
Leader Sonia Furstenau says although her party no longer holds the balance of power in the legislature, it will continue to hold the government accountable.

Hitting the ground running

The party has seen some highs and lows over the last few years, beginning with its historic results in the 2017 election. Its record-high three seats gave it the power to play kingmaker in a situation where either the Liberals or the New Democrats could have formed government.

Former Green Party leader Andrew Weaverused those three seats to prop up an NDPminorityfor three years before the snap 2020 election, thanks to an agreement on matters of confidence and supply.

Furstenau has only been party leader for a little over a month, taking over after Weaver stepped down in January, and she was forced to hit the ground running when an election was called just a week later.

Weaverhad been the first Green ever elected to the B.C. legislature, but he left the party caucus to sit as an independent not long after he stepped down as leader.

By this spring it was clear there was lingering friction with his former colleagues. In May, he used Twitter to lash out at Furstenau and Olsen, saying they "were afraid to stand up to the B.C. NDP" over LNG development.

Weaver revealed he had been ready to break ranks with the New Democrats over the LNG Canada project and force an election in 2018, but said he was outnumbered. At the same time, he complained that the party has shifted too far left from the centrist position he preferred.

It's clear that rift has not healed though he did not run in theelection, Weaver endorsed John Horgan's NDP.