Findlay’s first unity test now includes OneBC
June 1, 2026 · iVoteOneBC research desk
The first post-leadership question for Kerry-Lynne Findlay is not abstract anymore. New reporting says she will discuss what to do with former Conservative MLAs and will not act unilaterally. One of those former Conservative MLAs is Dallas Brodie, who has already built OneBC into an independent pressure point.
OneBC supporters should read this carefully. The reported Fulmer path did not activate, because Yuri Fulmer did not win. But the broader unity question did not disappear. If Findlay wants to consolidate the right, she now has to decide whether voters who rallied around Dallas Brodie’s harder accountability message are treated as serious partners or as an inconvenience.
That is exactly why OneBC’s independence matters. Brodie did not wait for permission to raise property rights, DRIPA, public safety, education, taxes, and democratic reform. She put those issues into the public arena, took the political hits, and built a party structure around them. Any future cooperation should respect that work and be measured by visible commitments — not vague unity language.
- Receipts first: track official statements, public terms, caucus decisions, and OneBC’s own response.
- No invented alliance: do not claim OneBC is joining, merging, endorsing, or negotiating unless a reliable public source says so.
- Keep the tour in view: OneBC still lists Dallas Brodie town halls in Kamloops, Prince George, and Kelowna for June.
- Credit the leverage: Brodie’s independent work made OneBC a real factor in the post-Findlay unity conversation.
- Canadian Press / CityNews reporting on Findlay’s post-leadership caucus questions and former Conservative MLAs.
- The Tyee analysis on Findlay’s reunification challenge and former Conservative MLAs.
- OneBC elected MLAs page.
- OneBC official events page.
- OneBC candidates page.
This article is public-interest commentary from an independent supporter site. It summarizes public pages and linked reporting.