Skip to main content

Posts

“I am a Canadian, free to speak without fear, free to worship in my own way, free to stand for what I think right, free to oppose what I believe wrong, or free to choose those who shall govern my country. This heritage of freedom I pledge to uphold for myself and all mankind.” ~~ John G. Diefenbaker

BC Conservative leadership candidates make their case on some of the province's most pressing issues.

Voting for the next leader of the Conservative Party of BC runs May 23-29. Ahead of the vote, candidates make their case, to Business In Vancouver, on some of the province's most pressing issues.  Q&A with Peter Milobar Q & A with Caroline Elliott Q & A with Yuri Fulmer Q & A with Kerry-Lynne Findlay Q & A with Iain Black  
Recent posts

NDP's Jenny Kwan Demands Ottawa Release Secret Police Deal With Beijing, Calling Continued Secrecy a Threat to Diaspora Safety

A senior New Democratic Party parliamentarian has formally demanded that the Carney government release the full text of its secret law enforcement agreement with China’s Ministry of Public Security, echoing a set of facts The Bureau has been reporting for months, while warning that Ottawa’s continued refusal to disclose the deal is fueling legitimate fear among diaspora communities who have experienced or fear transnational repression by the Chinese state. Jenny Kwan, MP for Vancouver East and one of Parliament’s most prominent voices on Hong Kong and Chinese diaspora issues, wrote to Minister of Public Safety Gary Anandasangaree and Minister of Foreign Affairs Anita Anand on May 12, calling the government’s silence on the agreement “particularly troubling” given what she described as the “problematic history of China’s foreign interference in Canada" ... CLICK HERE for the full story 

Are Canadians reaching their 'breaking point'? New data shows more people filing for insolvency

More Canadians are filing for insolvency, according to the latest data from the Office of the Superintendent of Bankruptcy, as rising costs stretch consumers to their limits. Some 37,121 Canadians filed for insolvency in the first quarter of 2026 — the highest number of consumer insolvencies since 2009, when North America was reeling from the financial crisis. Compared to the same time period last year, insolvencies are up 8.5 per cent ... CLICK HERE for the full story 

Conservatives, NDP voice common concerns about extending MAID to the mentally ill

The Conservatives and NDP sit on opposite sides of the spectrum, but they’re voicing similar concerns about the trajectory of Canada’s medical assistance in dying (MAID) regime. The two opposition parties could be moving toward an unlikely alliance against further expansion, with a report on extending MAID eligibility to the mentally ill expected by summer ... CLICK HERE for the full story 

Comment: There are limits to your right to protest in the streets

If a group feels that its rights have been unreasonably restricted, then it is free to challenge those restrictions in court. Recent weeks have seen claims made in Victoria about whether there is a right to hold protests in the streets and whether the city is obligated to facilitate such protests. What does the law say about this? Three sources of law are relevant ... CLICK HERE for the full story

Surrey Double Homicide Exposes Years of NDP Inaction on Public Safety

Macklin McCall, Critic for Solicitor General & Public Safety, is demanding the BC NDP government answer for the deadly gang violence in Surrey over the weekend that left two people dead and two others seriously injured. On Sunday evening, two men were shot and killed in an underground parkade on 133B Street near 70B Avenue. Earlier that morning, two more men were shot outside a gas station at 72nd Avenue and 152 Street, both transported to hospital with serious injuries. A vehicle was found burning near 144 Street and 84 Avenue shortly after the homicides. This tragedy is the inevitable consequence of a public safety crisis years in the making. In the past two years alone, Surrey has recorded 96 reported extortion's, 16 shootings, and 2 arson's, resulting in 51 victims. “Surrey has been sounding the alarm on violent crime for years. Families are afraid, businesses are under threat. This government has had every opportunity to step up on public safety and has repeatedly chos...

Many of those who were once comfortable sharing the label “conservative” no longer feel like allies

... this 30th anniversary (of the Winds of Change Conference) sees Canadian Conservatives not only defeated, but divided: the satisfied versus the resentful; the trustful versus the mistrustful; insiders versus outsiders. These splits do not map exactly onto the splits of 1996. Those were essentially regional: energy-producing West versus energy-consuming Centre. This time, the splits are about relationships to authority, expertise, and institutions ... CLICK HERE for the full Commentary

Opinion: BC needs more than megaprojects to grow

The province’s economic strategy needs to look beyond shovels in the ground and confront deeper weakness in private-sector growth  The BC government’s economic development strategy is increasingly centred on facilitating a new wave of large projects—mainly in the energy, mining and infrastructure sectors. Such projects are important and offer the tantalizing prospect of kick-starting a struggling economy. Advancing more projects will generate good jobs, foster new business for local suppliers of “inputs” (like engineering, technical and financial services), and add billions to the economy. But on their own, a few big projects will not be sufficient to sustain a healthy pace of growth or materially move the dial on overall economic well-being ... CLICK HERE for the full story

Economic growth now tops environment as priority in energy policy, poll suggests

More Canadians now say economic growth should be a bigger priority in Canada’s energy policy than protecting the environment, a new Angus Reid Institute report suggests. The pollster released a report Monday indicating 61 per cent of Canadians now see economic growth as the biggest priority in energy policy. The question offered two options on the top priority shaping federal energy policy: economic growth or environmental protection. That’s a shift in public opinion since seven years ago, when the same question had 55 per cent of Canadians saying the environment should be the top priority in energy policy ... CLICK HERE for the full story 

The Anti-Eby: Caroline Elliott's pitch to BC Conservatives

Caroline Elliott is an articulate, policy-driven candidate promising to lead — and unite — BC Conservatives at a moment when voters are fed up with Premier David Eby’s NDP government. “We have a 10-point lead right now in the polls. The best way to blow that is to divide ourselves,” says Elliott, front-runner in the BC Conservative leadership race. “A divided party is the biggest gift we can hand the NDP" ... CLICK HERE for the full story

Labels

Show more