The NDP have a habit of self-destructing too, as the more radical members mismanage and drag the rest of them into chaos, so it's a fun watch party all round
Eby is a first-rate lawyer with extensive experience in matters dealing with human rights and civil liberties.
Yet a training in law doesn’t guarantee the ability to manage large complex organizations.
By contrast, Eby’s predecessor John Horgan had no legal background, yet he excelled at running the province.
Perhaps this is being overly critical of the premier. An NDP caucus can be a fractious group at the best of times, as Mike Harcourt and Glen Clark can attest.
There is not much correlation between outside expertise (lawyer, doctor, ex-general, businessman, financier, etc) and either electoral politics or statecraft. And since the former is the gateway to the latter, ending up with people good at statecraft is rare. Mostly what tells is character and sound moral and ideological premises.
I meant to post this at the time. A good article summarizing Rustad’s and the BCCP’s tribulations. I’m not that surprised that the wheels are falling off this bus.
Les Leyne: Bail reform requires major change of attitude
The B.C. Prosecution Service’s policy manual for Crown counsel on bail illustrates how entrenched the preference — even the legal requirement — is for releasing people on bail whenever possible.
There are volumes of legal and political arguments about the concept of bail, but where it all lands at ground level is in the B.C. Prosecution Service’s policy manual for Crown counsel.
The eight-page directive on bail, refreshed three weeks ago, illustrates how entrenched the preference — more like the legal requirement — is for releasing people on bail whenever possible.
It will have to be completely rewritten if the latest federal bid to restrict bail becomes law. That will amount to a big change in mindset.
The Criminal Code is federal law, but the provincial prosecution service administers it. B.C.’s 500 prosecutors are the key players in making the case to a judge on whether an accused person should be locked up.
The main point stressed in the policy — flowing from various Supreme Court of Canada decisions — is that “every person charged with an offence has the fundamental right to bail on reasonable terms and the right not to be denied reasonable bail without just cause.”
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