In less than a month, the HST will be rammed own the throats of Ontario and BC taxpayers. Ontario doesn't much seem to care, but out west the
citizens are getting ready to revolt. For the first time in memory, almost everyone in the most polarized province of Canada is in agreement about
one thing. We want Gordon Campbell's head on the end of a pointy stick.
During his campaign we were told they had no intention of bringing in an HST and then three days after they win - surprise!
It's not overly surpirsing that there would be protests (it's what we do out here) but what is startling is the broad support and outrage.
We have a former Premier spearheading a Citizen's Initiative to stop the tax under the BC Recall and Initiative Act. Bill Vander Zalm resigned due
to conflicts of interest (found not guilty of criminal breach of trust) and is responsible for the lack of a conservative party in BC (except for the
Liberals

) for the past 20 years. He has gone from one of the most hated men in the province to our new hero.
The Union of BC Indian Chiefs has joined forces with the Zalm to launch a legal challenge questioning the constitutionality of the tax and are looking
into asking for an injunction.
The NDP is loving every minute of this and are happily helping the Zalm try to kill the tax by bringing it up every time they talk to the media and
refusing to let it drop for even one second.
The Citizen's Initiative has around 625,000 signatures so far (more than double needed but some signatures are always thrown out because they touch
the lines or were signed in the wrong riding) and there's still nearly a month left to collect.
Will they even bother to listen to us? Probably not. That's where our recall legislation comes into play.
In summation (because I ramble and jump all over the place) - we have hundreds of thousands of British Columbians of all political stripe, the NDP,
First Nations and the former Conservative premier working together like one big happy family towards the same goal. That's something we've never
seen before in this province.
Politics really does make strange bedfellows.