Friday, July 13, 2012

Why do Young British Columbians Veer Left?


Today we feature a quest opinion piece from Jesse Donovan. 

Jesse Donovan is a Political Science student at the University of Toronto. He was born and raised in North and West Vancouver. Jesse has served in the Canadian Armed Forces since 2010, and he is currently, he works as a Summer Intern for the BC Conservative Party. 

Jesse is also the President and Founder of the BC Conservative Youth Association, a grassroots organization for young conservatives in BC.

In 2010, after nearly a decade of BC Liberal rule, the youth unemployment rate in British Columbia had reached a staggering 13.8 percent. This was the highest it had been in the past seven years.

Under the BC Liberal Government, young British Columbians have faced many obstacles to their economic success. High unemployment, slow wage growth, and a disproportionate amount of part-time labour are some of the severe threats to the financial well-being of young British Columbians. 

Under the BC Liberal government, young British Columbians have not only had to deal with high unemployment, but also incredibly slow wage growth. Between 2007 and 2010, the weekly wages of BC Youth have grown around 20 times slower than the weekly wages of British Columbians aged 25-54.

British Columbia is the anomaly among the successful Western Provinces. Young Canadians from Alberta and Saskatchewan have fared relatively well under their Conservative governments. While all Western Provinces experienced rising youth unemployment from 2008 to 2010, BC’s was by far the highest. Between 2008 and 2010, British Columbia’s youth unemployment rate increased by 5.8%. This is over twice as much as Manitoba’s increase and almost three times more than Saskatchewan in the same period.

Many young British Columbians are concerned and angry about their seemingly bleak economic future. They are right to be concerned and their anger is justified. There is, however, a worrying trend in how young people are directing these emotions.


Instead of demanding that governments remove impediments to success such as high taxes and cumbersome over-regulation of business, young Canadians are responding to their economic insecurity by demanding extreme left wing reforms to our economic system. Such reforms include levying enormous taxes on successful individuals and placing crippling regulatory measures on British Columbia’s businesses.

The misdirection of their anger was visible during the ‘Occupy Vancouver’ protests. These protests were led by youth who were concerned about their financial well-being and the future of their Nation. However, instead of putting the blame on the high taxes created by left-wing governments and regulatory red tape that impedes job creation, the protesters blamed successful Canadians and corporations.

The latest Provincial polling provides another example of a significant portion of young British Columbians favouring risky, left-wing economics. The most recent Angus Reid poll shows that the BC New Democratic Party will capture one out of every two voters between the ages of 18-34.

The future of our Province lies in the hands of BC’s youth. Will young British Columbians realize that a combination of low taxes and small government is the only path to economic freedom and success or will BC continue its path to becoming a left-wing economic basket-case like Spain or even Greece?

Hope is not lost for the future of conservatism in British Columbia. Fostering youth involvement in conservative politics will energize the current conservative movement as well as prepare the future conservative leaders of our Province and our Nation. The BC Conservative Youth Association has been created to accomplish these two goals. The movement is gaining in strength and support and will seek to counter the influence of the political left in British Columbia in the long-term future.


1 comment:

Adam said...

As a young British Columbian I would agree that their is significant frustration amongst our generation. The current economic conditions throughout the western world have led to historic unemployment and unsustainable debt levels. While I agree that excessive taxation and regulation by government will only exacerbate the current state of affairs, I think it is disingenuous to blame "left-wing governments" for the poor economy. Though past interventions by the US Government into the housing market to get eveyone a home did not help matters, the disaster that is the world economy is the result of artifically low interest rates and fiat money set by corrupt central banks to benefit wall street scum. Free market capitalism would have let the banks fail in 2008 and until we let free market forces take hold we are digging a very deep hole for current and future generations.