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Green Leader Andrew Weaver suggests recall campaign of NDP energy minister if Site C approved

The controversial Site C dam is unlikely to be on time or on budget, according to a highly anticipated report from the B.C. Utilities Commission. As Keith Baldrey explains, delaying the mega-project would be the most risky and costly option – Nov 1, 2017

With a decision on the future of the Site C dam expected as early as Monday, B.C. Green Party Leader Andrew Weaver has suggested a recall campaign against B.C.’s energy minister if the project is approved by the NDP government.

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Weaver took to social media Sunday to share a 2016 video of NDP MLA Michelle Mungall — before she became energy minister — that showed her making remarks critical of the project.

“I would suggest a recall campaign in Nelson-Creston would be in order if Site C is approved on her watch as energy minister,” Weaver wrote on Twitter.

In the video, Mungall argues in favour of alternatives to the dam project, referring to it as a “1953 solution to a 2016 problem.”

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“We will go through the B.C. Utilities Commission, and we will work to end Site C and we will work on a new solution to our energy needs that are actually in this century,” she told a group of Site C protesters.

A recall campaign against Mungall would be difficult. The legislation that allows for an MLA to be removed can’t be activated until they’ve been in office for 18 months.

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Campaigners would also need to collect the signatures of 40 per cent of eligible voters in Mungall’s riding.

Weaver’s comments come amid the Greens’ last-minute effort to defeat the project.

A government-commissioned report from the BC Utilities Commission (BCUC) in November found the project was unlikely to be on time, and would likely cost in excess of $10 billion.

WATCH: New report outlines three options for Site C dam

However, the same report found that winding the project down would cost about $4 billion, including money already spent.

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The battle over the Site C dam marks the biggest policy split yet between the NDP and the Greens, whose backing allowed the New Democrats to form government.

— With files from Liza Yuzda and Simon Little

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