Independent supporter site · Not authorized by, affiliated with, endorsed by, or funded by OneBC, Dallas Brodie, or any candidate
Video watch

Dallas Brodie Turns the Condo Bailout and Floor Crossing Into a Direct Accountability Test

July 11, 2026 · iVoteOneBC research desk

Dallas Brodie’s newest long-form video gives OneBC supporters a clean accountability frame: keep the $3.2B housing-infrastructure dispute, the condo-bailout petition, federal reserve-expansion policy, and MLA Amelia Boultbee’s move to the BC NDP on the record — and separate verified facts from political spin.

What is verified

The Dallas Brodie / OneBC YouTube channel published a video on July 10, 2026 titled “Dallas Brodie on $3.2B Condo Bailout & BC NDP Floor-Crossing!” The public description says Brodie and Wyatt Claypool discuss the federal Liberal and BC NDP $3.2B condo-bailout issue, expansion of Indigenous reserves, new approved title claims, and MLA Amelia Boultbee’s move to the BC NDP.

The source record is useful because it connects several files this site is already tracking. OneBC’s official condo-bailout petition says Brodie will introduce fall-session legislation to initiate a public inquiry into the handling of what OneBC calls B.C.’s condo bailout. The federal announcement behind the dollar figure says Ottawa would invest nearly $1.6B over 10 years, matched by B.C. for up to $3.2B, to lower development charges for multi-unit housing and support housing-enabling infrastructure. Global News reported July 3 that Amelia Boultbee, previously elected under the BC Conservative banner and later sitting as an independent, joined the BC NDP.

Why supporters should care

The positive OneBC argument is not simply “oppose everything.” It is that big public decisions deserve a public ledger. If governments are moving billions into housing infrastructure, changing reserve-addition policy, or welcoming a floor-crossing MLA into the governing party, voters deserve clear explanations, plain costs, and measurable outcomes.

That is where Dallas Brodie’s long-form format helps. Supporters can point people to the full discussion, then keep the claims disciplined: the video exists, the petition exists, the federal-provincial funding announcement exists, and the floor crossing has been publicly reported. What is not verified should stay off the scoreboard: no invented membership counts, no guessed petition signatures, no polling claims, and no assumed alliance terms.

The accountable way to track it

  • Condo-bailout file: track whether Brodie tables promised fall-session public-inquiry legislation and whether OneBC publishes petition-signature milestones.
  • Housing money file: separate the federal/provincial infrastructure announcement from OneBC’s political label for it, then ask what projects, recipients, units, and outcomes are disclosed.
  • Floor-crossing file: track Boultbee’s public rationale, the BC NDP’s role, and whether any policy concessions or caucus terms are disclosed.
  • Property-rights file: keep reserve-addition and title-claim developments tied to dated source documents, not rumours.

The supporter takeaway is straightforward: Brodie is still doing the work of public argument. For a new party trying to prove it can hold government to account, that discipline matters.

Independent disclaimer: iVoteOneBC.ca is an independently operated supporter and commentary site. It is not authorized by, affiliated with, endorsed by, or funded by OneBC, Dallas Brodie, or any candidate.