OneBC’s Platform Receipts: 53 Published Planks Voters Can Actually Judge
June 17, 2026 · iVoteOneBC research desk
OneBC’s official priorities page now gives voters a concrete platform record to test: 53 numbered planks across 12 categories. That is exactly the kind of public, checkable policy document a movement needs if it wants to be judged seriously.
What changed in the tracker
On today’s monitor, OneBC’s priorities page was live with detailed numbered planks under prosperity, housing, education, healthcare, immigration, family, energy, law and order, Indigenous policy, small business, environment, and democracy.
This site has updated the policy page and growth tracker to reflect the verified public platform structure. The important point is not to claim polling strength, membership size, or future seats. The important point is simpler: OneBC has published a detailed set of positions that voters can read, challenge, defend, and compare.
The positive case
Dallas Brodie’s lane has always been clarity over political fog. A 53-plank priorities page gives supporters something stronger than slogans: a sourceable record on taxes, red tape, housing costs, school choice, healthcare access, energy development, public safety, property rights, small business, practical environmental stewardship, and democratic reform.
Agree or disagree, voters are not being asked to guess what OneBC means. They can now point to a numbered public platform and ask the right democratic question: would this make British Columbia freer, safer, more affordable, and more accountable?
Verified platform categories now tracked
- Prosperity: tax cuts, red tape, infrastructure, and investment.
- Housing: land-use reform, rental construction, step-code costs, and property-tax stability.
- Education: funding choice, classroom neutrality, testing, and essential-service status.
- Healthcare: private-care options, insurance choice, health promotion, wait times, and MAiD limits.
- Immigration and family: Quebec-style provincial control, cultural integration, tax relief for mothers, and parental consent.
- Energy, law and order, and democracy: pipelines, CleanBC repeal, involuntary care, courts, paper ballots, referendums, and recall reform.
We are deliberately not publishing membership totals, petition-signature numbers, poll numbers, or seat projections unless OneBC or another reliable source publishes verifiable figures.