Scotia speaks during a news conference after a meeting between Premiers and 
leaders of National Aboriginal Organizations in Lunenburg, Nova Scotia, July 
25, 2012.


(Adam Scotti/Reuters) 
CHRISTY CLARK

Christy Clark's vanishing act follows Enbridge pipeline posturing
IAN BAILEY and ROD MICKLEBURGH 

VANCOUVER - The Globe and Mail

Published Friday, Aug. 10 2012, 8:17 PM EDT

Last updated Friday, Aug. 10 2012, 8:38 PM EDT

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/british-columbia/christy-clarks-vanishing-act-follows-enbridge-pipeline-posturing/article4475904/
The event was a carefully scripted, "women only" lunch at the Delta Town and 
Country Inn in suburban Vancouver, and the keynote speaker was Christy Clark. 
The B.C. Premier's Aug. 3 address was one of her few public appearances since 
she returned from the Halifax premiers' conference in late July.

Outside the Delta hotel, a dozen reporters and camera crews waited to question 
her about the proposed Enbridge pipeline: an issue that had come to define Ms. 
Clark in recent weeks and which many Liberal partisans see as their best hope 
for re-election.

More Related to this Story
  a.. Ottawa to stay out of B.C.-Alberta fight over Gateway revenues 

  b.. Northern Gateway Premier stays mum on how much B.C.'s pipeline approval 
will cost 

  c.. Feather dust-up highlights Enbridge's culture clash with first nations 

After Ms. Clark confidently strode to the microphone in Halifax and demanded a 
cut of Alberta cash as one of five conditions even to consider allowing the oil 
pipeline across her province - many expected her tough talk to continue, and 
for her to outline her next steps.

But back home, Ms. Clark has ceded the stage to Alberta Premier Alison Redford 
and the federal government; Prime Minister Stephen Harper and his senior B.C. 
minister, James Moore, spoke to local media in the past week about how 
important the pipeline project is to Canada's future.

Ms. Redford is expected to address the issue at a Vancouver conference on 
Monday.

But when Ms. Clark's Delta speech ended, she scurried out the back door into a 
window-tinted van with an RCMP driver while reporters clustered around what 
turned out to be a decoy vehicle in front.

Have things got so bad for the Liberals that their leader is consigned to 
getaway cars?

Poll results since the Halifax meetings continue to be grim, and questions 
about Ms. Clark's leadership - temporarily dormant - have resurfaced.

"There are always some people grumbling," said former attorney-general Barry 
Penner, who stepped aside from the Clark government earlier this year.

"But I hear a lot of people expressing concern, especially among business 
people. They ask me: 'What's going on? What's going to happen?' It's clear that 
this government has a steep hill to climb."

Former solicitor general Kash Heed, now a Liberal backbencher and an 
independent voice within caucus, was one of those mystified by Ms. Clark's 
decision not to capitalize on her strong performance at the premiers' meeting.

"As a leader, when you bring such public notice to these kind of contentious 
issues, you need to be around to explain your rationale," Mr. Heed said.

"It's the people of B.C. who are going to vote for you. They're the ones who 
are going to choose the next premier."

The Liberals are in more political trouble than ever before in the 11 years 
they have governed the province, most of them under Gordon Campbell.

Ms. Clark, a cabinet minister turned radio hotline host, won last year's 
contest to replace Mr. Campbell, campaigning as a fresh voice committed to 
doing things differently. The voters weren't impressed. Polls taken immediately 
after the premiers' conference showed Ms. Clark's approval rating still at just 
25 per cent. And when Ms. Clark made the 4,500-kilometre journey from Nova 
Scotia back to her native province, she all but disappeared from the limelight, 
opting for small meetings in the B.C. interior, available only to local media.

Press secretary Mike Morton told a Globe and Mail reporter that the Premier was 
beyond cellphone range.

"She owned the podium. She should have stayed on it," observed Vancouver 
realtor and power broker Bob Rennie, director of Rennie Marketing Systems and a 
long-time Clark fan, who still believes the pipeline issue could be a turning 
point for Ms. Clark.

Angus Reid pollster Mario Canseco is also perplexed by the Premier's low-key 
public profile since she dominated the premiers meeting by confronting Alberta 
and stalking out of discussions on a national energy plan.

". It's difficult to assess why she's suddenly so hard to find. I really can't 
figure it out," Mr. Canseco said.

Since the premiers' meeting, the Premier's only relatively prominent public 
appearance was on the religious TV talk show 100 Huntley Street, on which Ms. 
Clark, a devout Anglican, professed faith in the Bible to see her through tough 
times.

The Premier's backers, however, continue to believe that by resurrecting B.C.'s 
long political tradition of bashing those beyond its boundaries, Ms. Clark's 
pipeline posturing will yet bring back voters who have shifted their supportto 
other parties.

"This has come along, and it's very good for her," exulted John Reynolds, 
former B.C. Tory MP and Conservative House leader, who organized a lucrative 
fundraising dinner for Ms. Clark in June.

"With this issue, we'd get even more than last time. We'd fill the place."

He isn't concerned by her vanishing act, noting she has clearly outlined the 
issue and launched the debate on B.C.'s approach. "It's a good time to step 
back a little bit, and let it soak in with people."

Stockwell Day, another former federal Conservative prominent in the Clark camp, 
believes the Premier's stand is a smart political move that will reap benefits 
in the long run.

It's the right thing to do, as well, added Mr. Day, who had a long political 
career in oil-rich Alberta before jumping to the federal scene.

"You can do something for the right reasons and still be political. You can 
have that happy coincidence. I do believe that's the case here," he said. "As 
people more and more understand the seriousness of the position she's taking, I 
think that will find resonance with British Columbians, for sure."

But Mr. Canseco of Angus Reid said he believes many Liberals can't help but be 
disappointed that taking on Alberta over the pipeline proposal didn't boost the 
Premier's popularity. "I really think they were expecting something bigger 
would happen."


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