Wilhelmus Nicholaas Theodore Marie "Bill" Vander Zalm (born May 29, 1934 in Noordwijkerhout, South Holland)
is a politician and entrepreneur in British Columbia, Canada. He was the 28th Premier of British Columbia from 1986 to 1991.
He was first elected to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia in the 1975 election, in which Social Credit won back power after a three-year hiatus. He served in the cabinet of Premier Bill Bennett as Minister of Human Resources from 1975 to 1978, where he continued his crusade against welfare fraud. He also served as Minister of Municipal Affairs from 1978 to 1981 and as Minister of Education from 1981-1983. He was forced from Cabinet in 1983 after he called Bennett and his ministers "gutless".
In 1984, he bought Fantasy Garden World, a theme park. That same year, he ran unsuccessfully for mayor of Vancouver, as the candidate for the Non-Partisan Association, losing to Mike Harcourt, who would serve as provincial NDP leader during most of Vander Zalm's tenure as premier.
During the campaign, "Vandermania" swept BC, and the Socreds easily won another term over the opposition New Democratic Party. Bill and his wife, Lillian, attracted public adoration with their high-voltage smiles, positivity and charisma.
The party and its leader had no public plan for when they were elected for the long term. However, the main clear goal was to have a "fresh start" after the confrontational Bennett years.
The Social Credit Party had been a tenuous alliance between supporters of the federal Liberals, urban fiscal conservatives and Christian conservatives in the province's Bible Belt. Fiscal conservatives had dominated the party for over a decade, but under Vander Zalm social conservatives took control. Vander Zalm himself was a social conservative, and his government once tried to cut public funding for abortions that were not medically necessary. The resulting uproar forced Vander Zalm to drop the program. His government also had a confrontational relationship with labour unions.
As well, he appointed David Poole, a close friend, to be his "Principal Secretary". Before resigning in 1989, Poole had become the second most powerful person in the province despite never having been elected. This naturally attracted the anger of numerous cabinet ministers, such as Grace McCarthy, an influential SoCred MLA who resigned in protest from Vander Zalm's cabinet in 1988.
Vander Zalm became embroiled in a conflict of interest controversy over the sale of his Fantasy Gardens flower garden and theme park. The conflict of interest arose because the Taiwanese buyer, Tan Yu, was provided VIP treatment and lunch with the Lieutenant-Governor prior to the sale. Vander Zalm claimed that control over the theme park was his wife's responsibility. Adding fuel to the fire, Faye Leung, a colourful Chinese-Canadian entrepreneur and the woman who brokered the deal, thought that Vander Zalm was a "bad man" since they day she first met him and secretly recorded conversations she had with him, and was happily willing to speak to the media and provide copies of her audio tapes.
Vander Zalm resigned as premier in 1991 when a provincial conflict of interest report found he had mixed private business with his public office in the sale of the gardens. He was charged with criminal breach of trust, but found not guilty in B.C. Supreme Court in 1992. The court ruled that while Vander Zalm had put himself in a conflict of interest, he had not done anything illegal. He was succeeded as Premier of BC by Rita Johnston. In the British Columbia general election, 1991, the Social Credit party was reduced to 7 seats, and has not won a seat in any election since.
Since his retirement, he has appeared in advertisements, including TV spots for ICBC and "Way to Grow" garden supplements.
Vander Zalm is Dutch for "from the salmon".