Independent spoiler in riding of Vernon-Lumby has no regrets - Action News
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British Columbia

Independent spoiler in riding of Vernon-Lumby has no regrets

As final tabulations take place this week in the B.C. provincial election, a split in votes among right-leaning candidates may have paved the way for the B.C. NDP's potential victory in the closely contested riding of Vernon-Lumby.

With Kevin Acton taking 15.5% of the vote, B.C. NDP secures a narrow lead amid frustrations from Conservatives

Photo of a middle-aged white man with glasses, standing beside a campaign sign that reads, 'Independent Candidate Endorsed' and 'Right for B.C.'
Kevin Acton won nearly 4,200 votes as an independent candidate in the riding of Vernon-Lumby. (KevinActon/Facebook)

As final tabulations take place this week in the B.C. provincial election, a split in votes among right-leaning candidates may have paved the way for the B.C. NDP's potential victory in the closely contested riding of Vernon-Lumby.

Independent candidate Kevin Acton garnered just over 15 per centof the vote, likely drawing from a pool of Conservative supporters and complicating the election landscape.

B.C. NDP incumbent Harwinder Sandhu holds a 384-vote lead over Dennis Giesbrecht of the B.C. Conservative Party, withfinal vote counts underway this week.

Across B.C., theNDP is holdingor leading in46 seats in a close race withB.C. Conservatives who are holding or leading in 45 ridings. The B.C. Green Party has two seats.

If there are no changes to thosenumbers when the final results are announced later this week,the NDP willhave a minority government an outcome that frustrates some B.C. Conservatives likenewly elected MLA Amelia Boultbee representing Pentiction-Summerland.

"If you really dig into the riding-by-riding results, we lost Steveston-Richmond and Vernon-Lumbybecause of these B.C. United /Independent candidates who had, frankly, no business running, and they ran and split the vote, and if they hadn't done that, we would have a Conservative majority government," Boultlee said.

"Their own leader, Kevin Falcon, said, 'Step down. Stand down. Do the right thing for British Columbia, and let's all join together with the Conservatives to beat the NDP."

For decades, any talkof vote-splitting in B.C. politics usually referred to left-leaning voters making a choice between the B.C. NDP and the B.C. Green Party.

After the collapse of B.C. United this summer and the rise of the B.C. Conservative Party, vote-splitting in this election generally occurred on the right side,as a handful of former B.C. United candidates, like Acton,remained on the ballot as Independents.

Reflecting on his role in the election, Acton acknowledged he may have played the role of a spoiler.

"I would definitely agree that probably most of the votes I got would have come from people that were right-leaning."

However, he remains unapologetic about his decision to run, suggesting it may have played a part in keeping the B.C. Conservative party out of power.

A smiling in an orange suit jacket stands in front of an NDP election sign.
Vernon-Lumby incumbent Harwinder Sandhu got nearly 11,500 votes for the B.C. NDP, about 43 per cent of the popular vote. (Brady Strachan/CBC)

"The reality is more than 4,000 people put their faith in me,and likely they didn't want the far-right or the left that was offered to them," Acton said.

"I think I gave peoplean out, and now we are in a situation where maybe we will see the government work a little bit better together."

Acton pointed at the B.C. Conservatives' choice to go with Giesbrecht instead of accepting his offer to become their candidate as a reason for staying in the race.

Acton, the long-standing mayor of Lumby and a familiar face in the North Okanagan, saidGiesbrecht was chosento run in Vernon-Lumby despite not living in the area.

"I'm sure Dennis is just hating me right now, but the reality is this province is supposed to be about a democracy and not election engineering."

Head and shoulders shot of Dennis Giesbrecht, a middle-aged white man wearing a dark blue shirt, looking at the camera with a slight smile.
Dennis Giesbrecht garnered 11,144 votes in Vernon-Lumby for the B.C. Conservative Party, just 384 behind Harwinder Sandhu of the B.C. NDP. (Conservativebc.ca)

Giesbrecht says he's disappointed with the outcome buthas no hard feelings toward Acton, even if he did play the spoiler in the race.

"I don't hate anybody. That's not my nature. We ran a positive campaign. Ithappened the way it happened ... and it's not worth getting upset."

Even though Acton received 15 percent of the vote, the NDP's Harwinder Sandhu said she's not convinced that her leadinVernon-Lumby can be attributed solely to vote-splitting.

"There are people who voted for the Independent candidate here and around the provincethat clearly didn't agree with John Rustad or his stance on various issues, or his agenda and vice-versa for us," Sandhu said.

"Clearly, those voters didn't agree with either party platform."

Regardless of voters' motivations, the NDP's victories in Vernon-Lumby and Richmond-Steveston are crucial if the party hopes to govern with the support of the B.C. Green Party. The issue of vote-splitting is likely to remain a subject of debate long after the final election results are announced.