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OUR VIEW: A few ground rules for the Burnaby election season

Though the real campaign period is still months away, it’s safe to say Burnaby’s municipal election race is already underway.
Election ballot
New Westminster-Burnaby voters will have eight candidates to select from during the 2019 federal election.

Though the real campaign period is still months away, it’s safe to say Burnaby’s municipal election race is already underway.

We already know that the Burnaby Greens will be lining up candidates in an effort to break the Burnaby Citizens Association’s
stranglehold on city council and school board positions.

They will undoubtedly be joined by a host of other local folks looking for elected office – or, possibly, just looking for a chance to make their voices heard during the campaign.

We don’t know, yet, who all those folks will be.

But whoever they are, we have to confess: We’re nerdily and goofily excited that it’s an election year.

From a newspapering point of view, there’s something extra satisfying about a year when local elected officials are hyper-aware of the fact their actions are all coming under public scrutiny – and when their critics are equally aware that now’s their chance to make hay with those elected officials’ perceived shortcomings and poor decisions over the previous four years.

But we don’t want to see local politics descend into a free-for-all of finger-pointing and name-calling.

So we’re putting ourselves on the record right here, right now, in asking all our local candidates to please play nice.

You remember all those great life rules you learned in kindergarten?

Take turns. Share. Don’t be mean to each other. Don’t push. Don’t call anyone names. Take responsibility for yourself. Don’t blame other people for stuff that’s your fault. Clean up your own mess. Say sorry when you hurt somebody, even if it’s by accident.

Use those as your guidelines to politicking, and we’ll all make it through this sure-to-be-silly season with style.

Yes, we love to write entertaining headlines.

But even more than that, we love democracy – and we need everyone’s help to ensure our electoral system delivers the best government we can get.