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Krog passed over for cabinet, named NDP caucus chairman

Nanaimo MLA Leonard Krog will be caucus chairman of B.C.’s new governing party
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Nanaimo MLA Leonard Krog will be caucus chairman of B.C.’s new governing party after being passed over for a cabinet post. (NEWS BULLETIN file)

Nanaimo MLA Leonard Krog will be caucus chairman of B.C.’s new governing party after being passed over for a cabinet post.

The B.C. government made the announcement about its caucus executive on Wednesday, a day after NDP leader John Horgan was sworn in as premier and cabinet was unveiled.

Krog said he didn’t consider it a snub not to be named a minister.

“Everybody wants to be in cabinet, but not everybody can be in cabinet and it’s a tough job the premier has in making these decisions,” he said. “Cabinet is representative of government, representative of the people and you want that diversity.”

Horgan, speaking in a conference call Tuesday, said he wanted a cabinet that was both gender-balanced and ethnically diverse.

“I wanted to make sure that the people of British Columbia saw themselves reflected in their cabinet and we have experienced people, we have new people and we have a caucus that is committed to making sure that we’re able to deliver for British Columbians,” the premier said. “Everybody wants to be in cabinet, but everybody also understands that the job ahead involves all of us.”

Krog said all the party’s MLAs, minister or not, will have an important role in a legislature that is so narrowly split.

“Keeping the team together is job No. 1, so everyone is important. I can’t emphasize that enough,” he said.

Krog had been the attorney-general critic, but David Eby, Vancouver-Point Grey MLA, is B.C.’s new attorney-general. Krog said Eby is a high-profile MLA who will do well in the role.

Michelle Stilwell, B.C. Liberal MLA for Parksville Qualicum, said the premier seemed to have put thought into his cabinet choices.

“It was unfortunate, I think, for us to not see the Nanaimo MLA Leonard Krog receive a cabinet appointment. I think he was deserving of it,” she said.

Stilwell had been minister of social development and social assistance under the previous B.C. Liberal government, but that ministry has been rebranded and Shane Simpson, Vancouver-Hastings MLA, takes over as minister of social development and poverty reduction.

Stilwell said Simpson will find some good programs in place that she hopes he will respect, pointing to the single parent employment initiative as an example.

“What I’m disappointed to see is that there isn’t an actual minister responsible for accessibility,” Stilwell said. “I think we were making great strides to bring in the legislation for accessibility and that’s something that I will be ensuring I use my voice [for] as we move forward.”

She said since the NDP cabinet was just announced yesterday, her party will wait to consider which MLAs might serve as opposition critics.

Moving to the opposition side of the legislature, Stilwell said the biggest difference is that when advocating for the community and British Columbians, she’ll be working with a new minister in charge instead of talking to her own colleagues at the cabinet table.

“Overall, we’re going to be as an opposition making sure that the NDP isn’t wasting or misusing taxpayer dollars, that they’re putting things into place that benefit all the people of British Columbia, that they’re doing it without raising taxes and that we continue with our core values as B.C. Liberals to fight for and stand up for jobs and a strong economy,” she said.

Krog said seeing an NDP government take office this week was very important to him and very exciting. It hadn’t happened in his political career since he was first elected in 1991, because he lost his seat in the 1996 election.

He said there are immediate tasks to take care of in Victoria such as staffing and setting up offices. Once legislature is back in session, he’s hoping “that a lot of the progressive stuff will pass quite quickly,” noting that the NDP and Greens have a signed agreement and the B.C. Liberals indicated agreement on many items in their recent throne speech.

“On one hand I am incredibly excited by what we want to do and what we have promised to do, [but] I understand how hard it is to make stuff happen around here,” Krog said. “You’ve got to get support from the people who are affected by the decisions that are made, you have to have a legislature that’s ready to approve it, a cabinet that’s ready to help drive the agenda, all of those things. It’s a lot of work. It’s daunting.”

greg.sakaki@nanaimobulletin.com



About the Author: Greg Sakaki

I have been in the community newspaper business for two decades, all of those years with Black Press Media.
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