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Clark mum on whether HST defeat will spark early election
Clark mum on whether HST defeat will spark early election
Two years of bumbling on the harmonized sales tax came home to roost for the B.C. Liberal government Friday, but Premier Christy Clark isn't saying whether the public's rejection of her government's harmonized sales tax is enough to plunge the province into an early election.
The Liberals took stock of the defeat of the HST Friday, and again pointed fingers at the abrupt and toneless introduction of the tax in 2009 under then-premier Gordon Campbell.
That introduction was so damaging — coming with no public consultation — that B.C. officials assumed weeks ago that the public was set to reject the tax and began discussing such a scenario with Ottawa, Finance Minister Kevin Falcon admitted Friday.
"This has obviously been a pretty challenging exercise in public policy development and I think perhaps a lesson ... in how not to introduce major public policy change," Falcon said.
"We did our very best to try and ameliorate that very poor start and obviously we weren't successful in getting us all the way through."
Falcon said the government accepts responsibility for the HST's demise. "The buck stops with us; we're responsible."
But Premier Christy Clark, who inherited the mess after Campbell resigned, moved quickly to distance herself, saying it was time for the province to turn a new page on the issue.
"While I share your concern about the way the HST was brought in, our government tried to make things right by doing things differently," she said, speaking of her consultation efforts and proposal for a two-percentage-point reduction. |
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