Surrey First Explained

Surrey First
Colorcode:
  1. 4953BE
Founder:Dianne Watts
Foundation:2007
Headquarters:Surrey
State:British Columbia
Leader1 Title:Mayoral Candidate
Leader1 Name:Gordie Hogg
Seats1 Title:Seats on the
City Council
Seats2 Title:Seats on the
School board

Surrey First is a civic political organization in Surrey, British Columbia, Canada. It is a non-partisan civic organization, members of which were elected to a majority on Surrey City Council in 2008.

History

Formation

Surrey First was founded in 2007 by former Surrey Mayor Dianne Watts, who was first elected to a Councillor position on Surrey City Council in 1996 when she was a member of the Surrey Electors Team (SET).

In 2005, after ongoing philosophical disagreements between SET Mayor Doug McCallum, known to be progressive on social issues and fiscally conservative on economic and tax issues, Watts left SET and challenged Doug McCallum as an independent candidate for mayor.[1] She won a convincing victory and became the first woman to be elected Mayor of Surrey, the second largest city in the province of British Columbia.

Watts embarked upon implementing a series of novel approaches and new ideas to the challenges facing Surrey, including the Surrey Crime Reduction Strategy, which has become a model for cities throughout the world. Under Watts' leadership, Surrey also became one of the first cities in Canada to implement a Whistleblower Policy aimed at protecting employees who report fraud, waste or abuse of tax dollars at City Hall. She also launched The Homelessness and Housing Foundation with a $9 million endowment, making it the first city in British Columbia to undertake such an initiative.

Other innovative initiatives launched by Watts in her first term include a Respectful Workplace Policy, a Lobbyist Registry and a Livability Accord, an agreement signed between Surrey, Abbotsford, Coquitlam and Langley to collaborate on initiatives related to crime, transportation and growth. These four cities are likely to absorb 70 percent of the growth in Metro Vancouver over the next 20 years.

Surrey also became the first City in Canada to establish economic investment zones to attract investment and create jobs as part of Watts’ Economic Investment Action Plan. The Action Plan was rolled-out in the wake of the 2008 financial crisis and was designed to foster strong economic growth through capital investment and strategic partnerships, and support the expansion of clean technology industries.

Soon after the founding of Surrey First, sitting Councillors Linda Hepner, Mary Martin and Barbara Steele resigned from SET to join Watts' slate. Independent Councillor Judy Villeneuve followed suit and thereafter Councillor Tom Gill.[2]

2008–present

The 2008 municipal election was the first for the Surrey First slate. On November 15, 2008, Mayor Dianne Watts defeated her lone challenger for the mayor's chair by almost 43,000 votes, and all six members of her Surrey First slate – Judy Villeneuve, Tom Gill, Barbara Steele, Linda Hepner, Mary Martin and then newcomer Barinder Rasode – won seats on Surrey City Council.[3] In 2011, Marvin Hunt joined Surrey First, making Bob Bose the only remaining city councillor not affiliated with Surrey First.[4]

In the 2011 municipal election, Surrey First Mayor Dianne Watts was re-elected, and swept the city council. The seven Surrey First incumbent councillors were re-elected. Surrey First candidate Bruce Hayne was also elected, replacing Bob Bose from the opposition Surrey Civic Coalition, giving Surrey First total control of the city council.[5]

In 2014, Surrey First chose Linda Hepner as its mayoral candidate for that year's municipal election.[6] In the municipal election, Hepner was elected as mayor, defeating Doug McCallum and ex-Surrey First councillor Barinder Rasode. Surrey First also won all the city councillor seats as well as the six school trustee positions.[7] Mike Starchuk MLA was a member from 2014 to 2018.

In April 2018, Linda Hepner announced that she would not seek re-election.[8] In June, councillor Bruce Hayne left Surrey First, a day before the party was to select its new nominee for mayor in the upcoming October municipal election.[9] Councillor Tom Gill was chosen as the party's candidate for mayor on June 22.[10] On July 17, a second Surrey First councillor, Barbara Steele, quit the party.[11] In August, another councillor, Dave Woods, resigned from the party after Surrey First's mayoral candidate Tom Gill announced his support for a handgun ban.[12] Bruce Hayne later formed his own political slate, Integrity Now, with Steele and Woods running as councillors for the new party.[13]

In the October 2018 Election, Linda Annis was the only Surrey First candidate elected City Councillor.[14] The defeat was seen as being from the party schism between Surrey First and Bruce Hayne's Integrity Now, allowing Doug McCallum and his Safe Surrey Coalition to win the mayor's seat and seven out of 8 city councillor seats.[15]

In the 2022 Election, Surrey First Councillor Linda Annis was re-elected along with Michael Bose.[16]

Electoral results

Mayoral! Election year! Candidate! Votes! %! Position! Result
2008Dianne Watts51,42385.871st
201155,82680.29 1st
2014Linda Hepner48,62248.15 1st
2018Tom Gill28,47325.93 2nd
2022Gordie Hogg24,91621.05 3rd
Surrey City Council! Election year! Votes! %! Seats! +/–
2008[17] 222,83455.44
2011[18] 319,38265.15 2
2014[19] 335,34049.77
2018195,31625.89 7
2022183,23122.46 1

References

  1. Web site: Cooley. T. Marvin Hunt joins Dianne Watts' Surrey First team. Vancouver Sun.
  2. Web site: Sinoski . Kelly . Surrey First: The political non-party . Vancouver Sun . 12 March 2024.
  3. Web site: Official City of Surrey November 2008 Election Results. City of Surrey. 2011-10-25. 2011-10-05. https://web.archive.org/web/20111005200017/http://secure1.city.surrey.bc.ca/electionresults/all_election_result_display.asp. live.
  4. Web site: Diakiw . Kevin . Hunt accepts Watts' Surrey First invitation . Peace Arch News . 12 March 2024 . en . 5 February 2011.
  5. Web site: Thomson . Stephen . Mayor Dianne Watts and Surrey First council to be sworn in . The Georgia Straight . 12 March 2024 . en . 5 December 2011.
  6. Web site: Bula . Frances . Surrey First names Linda Hepner as new mayoral candidate . The Globe and Mail . 12 March 2024 . en-CA . 25 June 2014.
  7. Web site: Azpiri . Jon . Surrey First wins big as Linda Hepner elected mayor . Global News . 12 March 2024.
  8. Web site: Surrey Mayor Linda Hepner will not seek re-election — who will be her party's nominee? . CBC News . 12 March 2024.
  9. Web site: McElroy . Justin . Councillor Bruce Hayne resigns from Surrey First party, will sit as independent . CBC News . 12 March 2024.
  10. Web site: Tom Gill selected as Surrey First mayoral candidate . CBC News . 12 March 2024.
  11. Web site: Zillich . Tom . Longtime councillor Steele quits Surrey First to run alongside Hayne . Surrey Now-Leader . 12 March 2024 . en . 18 July 2018.
  12. Web site: Brown . Janet . Surrey councillor quits ruling party over issue of gun bans . Global News . 12 March 2024.
  13. Web site: Reid . Amy . EXCLUSIVE: Why we left Surrey First . Peace Arch News . 12 March 2024 . en . 11 September 2018.
  14. Web site: City of SurreyDetermination of Official Election Results2018 Municipal Election. Iraci. Anthony Capuccinello. October 24, 2018. surrey.ca. 2019-12-15. 2019-10-23. https://web.archive.org/web/20191023103639/https://www.surrey.ca/files/2018FinalDeterminationOfOfficialElectionResultsSigned.pdf. live.
  15. Web site: Zytaruk . Tom . SURREY FIRST, burst: How the ruling slate earned just one council seat . Surrey Now-Leader . 12 March 2024 . en . 21 October 2018.
  16. Web site: Watson . Bridgette . Brenda Locke elected mayor of Surrey, CBC News projects . CBC News . 12 March 2024.
  17. Web site: Surrey 2008 Final Determination of Results . City of Surrey . 16 October 2022 . 2008 . 27 November 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211127120012/https://www.surrey.ca/sites/default/files/media/documents/DCT_Election_Results_2008.pdf . live .
  18. Web site: Surrey 2011 Final Determination of Results . City of Surrey . 16 October 2022 . 2011 . 27 November 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211127111303/https://www.surrey.ca/sites/default/files/media/documents/DCT_Election_Results_2011.pdf . live .
  19. Web site: Surrey 2014 Final Determination of Results . City of Surrey . 16 October 2022 . 2014 . 27 November 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20211127110934/https://www.surrey.ca/sites/default/files/media/documents/DCT_2014_Final_Results_Summary.pdf . live .