Glen Clark (born November 22, 1957, Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada) is a Canadian democratic socialist politician who served as the 31st premier of British Columbia (1996–99).
Clark grew up in a working-class neighbourhood in Vancouver. He received a B.A. in history and political science from Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, British Columbia, and an M.A. (1985) in community and regional planning from the University of British Columbia. His thesis examined the role played by provincial government policy in the crises in British Columbia’s forest industry. Clark had joined the Ironworkers’ Union during a summer when he worked at a steel fabrication plant. He also worked as a union organizer, a post that served as a training ground for politics.
Before he was elected in 1986 to the British Columbia legislature from the riding (electoral district) of Vancouver-Kingsway, Clark worked as an assistant to Canadian parliamentarian Ian Waddell. There, as a member of the New Democratic Party (NDP), he made a name for himself as a harsh critic of the government. When the NDP came to power in November 1991, Clark was appointed house leader and minister of finance and corporate relations under Premier Mike Harcourt. He delivered two budgets that raised taxes and the provincial debt to record levels, and in 1993 he proposed a tax on homes worth more than $500,000. Following a public outcry, Clark was moved to the Ministry of Employment and Investment. This experience taught him the necessity of discussing policies before announcing them.
When Harcourt resigned in early 1996 as the result of a scandal involving the party’s use of charitable funds for political purposes, Clark was elected as his replacement. When Clark assumed office on February 22, 1996, he broke with tradition by having the swearing-in ceremony in his home riding rather than at the legislature in Victoria. He was reelected later that year, though his victory was viewed as running counter to a political trend toward conservatism in Canada at the time.
As premier, Clark proposed that the government invest in education and training, resource development, and megaprojects, areas that would create jobs and secure the economic future of the fast-growing province. However, his tenure as premier was beset by mounting debt and job losses and by corruption charges related to the expansion of gambling in the province. The resulting bad press culminated in a televised 1999 police raid on Clark’s home in connection with the investigation of a casino license application (a neighbour seeking a license had done free home renovations for Clark). After he stepped down as premier that same year, Clark continued to be plagued by an ongoing investigation into the matter. In 2002 he went on trial and was acquitted.
During this time Clark was hired by the Jim Pattison Group, a multinational conglomerate with diverse holdings, of which he later became executive vice president. He also became CEO of the News Group North America, a division of Pattison.