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Les Leyne: Liberal comeback slips off course

Somewhere at sa国际传媒 Liberal party headquarters there鈥檚 a recovery plan that charts a 15-point comeback in the polls en route to a victory in the May election. You have to wonder if the master plan makes room for the kind of week that just ended.

Somewhere at sa国际传媒 Liberal party headquarters there鈥檚 a recovery plan that charts a 15-point comeback in the polls en route to a victory in the May election.

You have to wonder if the master plan makes room for the kind of week that just ended.

Monday 鈥 Boundary-Similkameen Liberal MLA John Slater brought a troubled, confused story to an end with news he won鈥檛 run again, either as an independent or a Liberal.

The party had earlier referenced personal problems in the rocky relationship that had developed.

So Slater bowed out with a blast at 鈥渟mear and fear-based politics,鈥 and the 鈥渂rutal鈥 experience that prompted him to say 鈥渆nough.鈥

The only plus for the Liberals in this is that, oddly enough, the NDP candidate dropped out the same day.

Tuesday 鈥 NDP leader Adrian Dix unveiled a plan that would ban the kind of self-promoting saturation ad campaign that the Liberal government has been running for months at taxpayer expense.

It鈥檚 a good idea in itself. And the plan keeps some focus on the outlandish cost and prevalence of the campaign.

Also Tuesday, Surrey鈥檚 rejection of a casino favoured by the minister responsible for gambling, Rich Coleman, prompted intriguing fallout.

Surrey-White Rock MLA Gordon Hogg publicly rapped his colleague for intervening during the public hearings and complaining about the decision. 鈥淪urprised and disappointed,鈥 he told the Peace Arch News. He鈥檚 not the only person surprised. Coleman is a powerhouse in Premier Christy Clark鈥檚 government and not one whom colleagues would take on lightly.

There was a time when the Liberals hung together.

Clark also announced an $11-million commitment to an Indian media conglomerate that will stage a televised Bollywood awards ceremony in Vancouver this spring. The idea is to promote sa国际传媒 as a destination to the Indian middle class.

Based on government numbers, the show will have to pull 7,000 Indian tourists for this to pay off.

Wednesday 鈥 Trouble broke out in another Liberal-held riding. The fracturing of friendships and long-term relationships became obvious in Abbotsford. Longtime Liberal supporter Moe Gill, whose plans to run were quashed when the party hand-picked criminologist Darryl Plecas, announced he鈥檒l run independently.

He鈥檒l go up against cabinet minister Mike de Jong 鈥 his distinctly 鈥渇ormer鈥 friend 鈥 in Abbotsford South. He made the announcement citing the 鈥済reat disrespect鈥 with which he was treated by the party.

It鈥檚 the team-building that gets you.

Meanwhile, the Liberals formally abandoned the clumsy campaign to oust auditor general John Doyle, offering him a two-year extension. It was greeted with ominous silence.

Thursday 鈥 Doyle slept on the offer, then responded. He not only rejected it, he eviscerated the Liberals who made it. He said the re-appointment process is 鈥淢ickey Mouse.鈥 He said the Liberal MLAs in charge of it don鈥檛 know what they鈥檙e doing. And he said the MLA in charge 鈥 Eric Foster 鈥 should be removed because of unspecified remarks he made during an interview that suggested bias. He suggested the next government should make the decision, and he plans to take his own sweet time examining his options.

One thing that鈥檚 become clear over the years is that when governments take on independent special officers of the legislature, it doesn鈥檛 usually end well.

Clark鈥檚 ambitious plan for a 10-year deal with teachers was also floated Thursday. The teachers鈥 union dismissed it completely, as expected. Demonstrating how obstinate the sa国际传媒 Teachers Federation is might have been part of the roll-out plan. But it was odd to see an idea that has some merit driven right into a wall that everyone could see was there.

Friday 鈥 A quiet day. Not much to do but ponder an outfit in which a departing MLA decries his own team鈥檚 smears, another MLA raps a cabinet minister for meddling, a key organizer turns independent to run against his former friend and the premier finds $11 million to throw a party for an industry based 11,000 kilometres away.

It wasn鈥檛 all bad news. They鈥檝e found a way to stop the new Port Mann bridge from dropping ice bombs on toll-paying drivers. And they found $113 million to move Emily Carr University off Granville Island.

But with under three months until campaign kickoff, it wasn鈥檛 a week in which the Liberals used the word 鈥渕omentum.鈥