He became premier of the province in the
1975 election when his party defeated the
New Democratic Party of Premier
David Barrett. In the
election of May 10, 1979, the Social Credit Party was re-elected with a reduced majority, followed by winning a larger majority in the
1983 election. He served until August 6, 1986. In 1978, Bennett was instrumental in establishing the
BC Winter Games and
BC Summer Games. As a result, an award was named in his honour in which he presented the award in 2008 in his hometown,
Kelowna, where the BC Summer Games were being hosted that year. His
cabinet included politicians such as
Pat McGeer,
Grace McCarthy,
Bill Vander Zalm,
Garde Gardom,
Rafe Mair, and Jim Nielsen. Bennett's government spent hundreds of millions of dollars to bring
Expo 86 and related projects to
Vancouver, including
BC Place, the city's
SkyTrain rapid transit system, and the
Vancouver Trade and Convention Centre. His government also built the
Coquihalla Highway at a cost of hundreds of millions of dollars with non-union Kerkhoff Construction Company as the main contractor. It distributed free shares to British Columbians for the
British Columbia Resources Investment Corporation (BCRIC). His government also spent over $1 billion on the Northeast coal project to create jobs. ==Controversies==