Leonard Krog will resign provincial seat after being elected mayor of Nanaimo - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 05:48 PM | Calgary | -11.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Leonard Krog will resign provincial seat after being elected mayor of Nanaimo

For the past two years, Nanaimo's city hall has been wracked by infighting including a lawsuit the city filed against previous mayor Bill McKay, investigations by RCMP and special prosecutors, as well as the departures of over three dozen city staff.

Krog says priorities are to solve homeless problem but also good governance for city wracked with scandal

Leonard Krog gets a high five from a supporter in Nanaimo after being elected mayor on Oct. 20, 2018. (Megan Thomas/CBC)

NDP MLA Leonard Kroghas been elected the mayor of Nanaimo, triggering a provincial byelection that could shift the balance of power in the legislature.

Krog won nearly 73 per cent of the vote. He defeated Don Hubbard by more than 13,000 votes.

"The numbers are living proof that [people] did want me to run," he said.

"It wasn't just me hearing voices. It was me hearing the voices of people who were serious, who wanted to get this city back on track, who were concerned about Nanaimo in a way that it has been run."

Leonard Krog reacts to voting results at the Vancouver Island Conference Centre in Nanaimo on Oct. 20, 2018. (Dean Stoltz)

During the campaign,Krog promised to step down from his provincial seat and force a byelection.

If the Liberals win the seat, it could lead to an early general election, butNanaimo has voted NDP in 13 of the last 15 provincial elections.

Krog would not say when that resignation would come only that he intended to "savour this evening."

Krog says his number one priority is to solve the city's homelessproblem, but he says the campaign was also about good governance.

"People believed that I could bring council together. That was the theme of the campaign," he said.

Infighting

For the past two years, Nanaimo's city hall has been wracked by infighting including a lawsuit the city filed against previous mayor Bill McKay, investigations by RCMP and special prosecutors, as well as the departures of over three dozen city staff.

McKay announced in August he would not seek re-election.

Nanaimo has eight council seats. Only two incumbents,Sheryl Dawn Armstrong andIan Thorpe were re-elected.

The other seats went toErin Hemmens,Ben Geselbracht, TylerBrown,Jim Turley,Don Bonner and Zeni Maartman.