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Editorial: Truth matters in sa国际传媒 politics

It鈥檚 a measure of the state of politics these days that some British Columbians waited nervously to see if Premier Christy Clark would apologize for telling a whopper, or would double down.

It鈥檚 a measure of the state of politics these days that some British Columbians waited nervously to see if Premier Christy Clark would apologize for telling a whopper, or would double down.

She apologized, so old-fashioned notions about truth and accountability are more than just nostalgia. Let us hope they still have some life in them as we move into election season.

Clark jumped into the deep end last week by blaming the NDP for allegedly hacking into the sa国际传媒 Liberal website the previous weekend.

The sa国际传媒 Liberals had announced the alleged hacking on Feb. 6, claiming that over the weekend their 鈥渙pponents鈥 gained access to supporters鈥 feedback on the party鈥檚 Vancouver Island platform. The hackers also obtained the supporters鈥 names, email addresses and postal codes, the Liberals said.

When it appeared that the hacker had used a computer inside the legislature building, Clark leaped to the conclusion that the NDP were the culprits. Challenged on it, she could provide no evidence that the New Democrats were involved.

And with good reason. First, because the NDP didn鈥檛 do it, and second, because there was no hack.

Clark said: 鈥淚 jumped to the conclusion that almost everybody else jumped to, which was: Somebody in the sa国际传媒 legislature has malicious intent and they鈥檙e trying to harm the sa国际传媒 Liberals.鈥

On Friday, she apologized to NDP Leader John Horgan, who had threatened to sue her over the allegation.

鈥淚t is further proof of the fact that when we jump to conclusions and we make a mistake we should own up to it. And I have no problems saying sorry because I made a mistake, and I shouldn鈥檛 have jumped to those conclusions as quickly as I did,鈥 Clark said.

Independent MLA Vicki Huntington revealed Friday that one of her staff had found the information sitting on the Liberal website, unprotected. The 鈥渉ack鈥 was nothing more than sloppiness on the part of the Liberals.

In the days before Clark apologized, she and the party clung to the accusations without any proof that they were true. The affair seemed to echo the bizarre assertions of U.S. President Donald Trump and some of his officials, who offer unsupported allegations, but refuse to back down. Instead, they repeat unproven statements or outright lies, in defiance of the conventions of civilized discussion.

While we are in favour of trade with the United States, that鈥檚 one product we don鈥檛 need to import from our southern neighbours.

Everyone from party workers to voters to politicians should try to support their arguments with facts. If someone makes a mistake, acknowledge it and correct it. If someone gets caught in a lie, they must admit it and apologize.

Politics can be a dirty business, and emotions run high, especially at election time. These days, political differences seem as bitter as wartime hatreds. But if we want to maintain a strong and viable democracy, those emotions mustn鈥檛 overwhelm our basic respect for the truth.