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If recall legislation hadn’t changed, the HST would have won

Editor: Re: NDP MLA Bruce Ralston’s comments on HST:

Editor:

Re: NDP MLA Bruce Ralston’s comments on HST:

Bruce, firstly, note that Charlie Wyse won this same riding for the NDP in 2005, by only a margin of 114 votes.

Secondly please use reality and facts in your commentary.

Remember the reading public were not born yesterday. The HST referendum result is drastically short of what would have been needed to kill the tax if former premier Campbell had not changed the “threshold for success” under the Recall and Initiative Act brought in under the former provincial NDP government.

Under the initial rules, fight HST would have needed 50 per cent of all eligible voters or about 1.5 million people to vote in favour of killing the tax for the HST to be scrapped.

If the rules had been applied, the Aug. 26, 2011 tally would have failed by more than 640,000 votes.

Bill Vander Zalm thanked former premier Campbell for these changes because if they were not made, there is no way the HST would have been defeated. Adrian Dix, on the other hand, has chosen not to comment on this topic as the old rules were initiated by the former NDP government.

Dalton McGuinty, premier of Ontario who also brought in the HST on July 1, 2010, commented after the HST vote in B.C. that as “Steady as she goes, HST has stabilized the Ontario economy, more new jobs this year than the rest of Canada. We have the advantage.”

Joe Sawchuk

Duncan