Pubdate: Fri, 18 Sep 2015
Source: Surrey Leader (CN BC)
Copyright: 2015 Surrey Leader
Contact:  http://www.surreyleader.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1236
Author: Frank Bucholtz

NO POT HOTBED IN SOUTH SURREY

It's been a topsy-turvy week for the federal Liberals in South
Surrey-White Rock, with candidate Joy Davies resigning Sept. 10 after
controversial remarks she made about marijuana use.

Davies has been replaced by longtime Liberal and former Surrey
councillor Judy Higginbotham. South Surrey resident Higginbotham has
been soldiering for the Liberals, both federal and provincial, since
1983, when she first ran with the provincial Liberals in what was then
the two-member riding of Surrey-White Rock. She left the provincial
Liberals to run with the doomed Social Credit party in the 1991
provincial election in Surrey-Cloverdale, but has been a loyal Liberal
since that time.

She has run provincially five times and federally three times, in
1988, 2004 and 2008. In 2004, she got almost 37 per cent of the votes,
and was just over 3,000 votes behind winning Tory candidate Russ Hiebert.

Davies was a curious choice as the candidate in South Surrey-White
Rock Some observers had been suggesting the Liberals had a chance to
win the seat, which has been held consistently by the Progressive
Conservatives, Reform, Canadian Alliance and Conservatives since it
was first split off from the larger Surrey riding almost 30 years ago.
Notably, threehundredeight.com, a website which looks at all polls in
aggregate, and CBC's poll tracker, were suggesting early in the
campaign that the Liberals could win the seat.

Threehundredeight.com does note its "riding projections are not polls
and are not necessarily an accurate reflection of current voting
intentions in each riding." On Tuesday, its website showed the
Conservatives in the ascendancy over the Liberals in South
Surrey-White Rock.

Davies has elected experience, as a councillor in both Tumbler Ridge
and Grand Forks. However, she is almost unknown in South Surrey and
White Rock. Her most prominent position in recent years was as a
founder and former government relations director of the Canadian
Medical (Therapeutic) Cannabis Partners Society.

This led to her social media comments, suggesting that pregnant women
could safely use marijuana and that the Canadian Cancer Society was
"another outlet for big pharma."

The Liberals have called for marijuana being legalized. However, the
party's pro-marijuana stance is a minimal factor in South Surrey-White
Rock, an affluent riding which has never been a hotbed of pro-pot sentiment.

Higginbotham is a known quantity in the riding. She has made
controversial comments during her years as a Surrey councillor, as
most councillors who serve for any length of time do. She has been
active in the community, has a strong interest in heritage and the
arts, and her name is well-known.

If the Liberals did have a shot at winning this riding against former
Surrey mayor Dianne Watts, who is running for the Conservatives, it
would have made sense to have a better-known candidate right from the
beginning.

On another subject, I will moderate an all-candidates' forum in the
riding on Sept. 29 at Crescent United Church. It runs from 7-9 p.m.

I'm looking forward to hearing from the candidates, although as of
last week, Watts' campaign office said she would not attend.

Given that she is one of the most capable and sure-footed politicians
on the Surrey scene over the past decade, that's surprising.
Conservative candidates in some ridings are avoiding such meetings. It
is up to voters to draw their own conclusions as to why Watts won't
attend this one.

The exact words in the campaign's email to the organizers were,
"Unfortunately, due to prior commitments and scheduling issues, Ms.
Watts will not be able to participate in your forum."
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MAP posted-by: Matt