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British ColumbiaAnalysis

'A dog's breakfast': Horgan and Wilkinson likely change few minds in angry debate

In the five months since Attorney General David Eby announced the questions on the ballot, the arguments haven't really evolved, as Thursday's debate made clear.

Instead of engaging with each other's arguments on voting reform, they served up one-liners

B.C. electoral reform debate

6 years ago
Duration 1:04:30
Premier John Horgan and Opposition Leader Andrew Wilkinson will debate electoral reform in B.C.

Well, so much for polite debate.

Thursday's electoral reform referendumdebate between Premier John Hogan and Opposition Leader AndrewWilkinson was the highest-profile opportunity for both leaders to make their pitch Horganto championproportional representation, Wilkinson to stay with the status quo.

It was a chance tosway voters on the fence over to their side with strong arguments.

Instead, voters got shouting, non-answersand one-liners.

"You won't tell people how many votes they have, you won't tell people how many MLAsthey have ... people are being confused by this ballot," said Wilkinson, shouting over Hogan.

"If you were woke, you'd know that pro rep is lit," said Horgan, in a line that will undoubtedly be the most recited indays to come.

It made for a lively 30 minutes. Whether it changed anybody's mind is a different matter.

Insistent vs. hectoring?

In the five months since Attorney General David Ebyannounced what would be on the ballot, the arguments haven't really evolved, as Thursday's debate made clear.

Those in favour of proportional representation gloss over the unknowns and differences between the three systems on the referendum ballot. Instead, theytalk about "fairness" and "collaboration" inherent in the system. Those who want to keep the current voting systemcomplainabout the referendum itself and focus on the unknowns instead of actual merits of the different electoral systems.

'If you were woke, you'd know that pro rep is lit,' said Horgan, in a line that will undoubtedly be the most recited in days to come. (CBC)

And so it played out again:Wilkinson would complain about things that wouldbe decided by an all-party committee or electoral boundary commission after the referendumand attempted to force Horganto give detailed answers on three different systems under limited time constraints.

In turn, Horgan would broadly praise the merits ofproportional representation "we're giving people choice when they go into the ballot box" was one such line butnot describethe details of each system. Helooked exasperated when Wilkinson continued to harangue him.

"Come on, man," he said several times.

But neither adequately wrestled with the main points from the other side.

"I was hopeful there would have been more education and less hectoring, but people will have to decide what they think," Horganlamentedafterwardin a press conference some observers thought provided more details than the actual debate.

Were any minds changed?

Leave aside the question of whether Horgan regretshaving threeoptions on the ballot that Wilkinson could conflate again and again. And leave aside whether Wilkinson's first large-scale exposure to the public left a positive impression.

If you believe public polling, both sides are in a tie. So if either manmanaged to sway a substantial amount of voters, it could be a turning point.

But no new arguments were really advanced. If the debate made anything clear, it's that both sides have fine-tuned what they feel are their best rhetorical attacks.

"John Horgan controls this entire process ... and what he's asking you to do is write that blank cheque for that car you don't understand," saidWilkinson.

'John Horgan controls this entire process ... and what he's asking you to do is write that blank cheque for that car you don't understand,' said Wilkinson. (CBC)

"I believe we should put the fear to one side, and we should look at hope.I believe we should focus on going forward instead of backward," saidHorgan.

They're nice one-liners. But we've had five months of nice one-liners. It's now up tothe public to search out the resources they need to be feel informed.

Because if all they did was rely on the remarks from the two leaders on Thursday, they might be lacking.

The half hour debate aired on CBC on Thursday night (CBC)