What OneBC says it stands for
OneBC’s official priorities page now lists 53 numbered platform planks across 12 categories. This page tracks those public planks as platform receipts — not as poll numbers, membership claims, or election projections.
Income-tax and corporate-tax cuts, lower government costs, red-tape reduction, competitive infrastructure delivery, and removing UNDRIP / band veto barriers to investment.
Agricultural Land Commission reform, support for resource-community housing, rental-construction investment, step-code cost relief, real-estate tax review, and stable property taxation.
Equal funding across public, private, homeschool, and charter options; removal of SOGI and political activism; letter grades and testing; post-secondary neutrality; and essential-service status.
Private-care options, private health insurance, health promotion, shorter wait times, and tighter limits on MAiD outside terminal illness with unbearable suffering.
Quebec-style provincial control, ending mass immigration into B.C., promoting cultural integration, and stopping imported foreign grievances and fentanyl flows.
Income-tax relief for mothers, principal-residence property-transfer-tax exemptions, foster/adoption reform, and parental consent for drugs or surgeries on minors.
Pipeline and resource-development reform, CleanBC and industrial carbon-tax repeal, Clean Energy Act repeal, and leveraging energy resources for AI, Bitcoin, and technology.
Alberta-style involuntary care, more beat cops, faster criminal processing, bail and sentencing reform pressure on Ottawa, and action against money laundering and drug trafficking.
Indian Act reform, voluntary band governance and accountability, ending voluntary race-based transfers of cash/land/control, ending mandatory land acknowledgements, and English street/place names.
Higher small-business tax-bracket ceiling, micro-business regulatory exemptions, low-risk consumer-product deregulation, and a large-retailer fairness levy.
Practical wildfire/flood/drought resilience, farmer water autonomy, race-neutral access to parks and stewardship, and a levy on cheap plastic toys.
Same-day in-person voting with hand-counted paper ballots, referendums on major public-land transfers, and a lower MLA recall threshold.
Policy spotlight
53 numbered planks
OneBC’s public platform can now be tracked by category and number. That gives supporters a serious accountability baseline and gives voters a concrete record to examine.
DRIPA and land control
OneBC links its property-rights agenda to UNDRIP/DRIPA reform, band-veto concerns, referendums on large public-land transfers, and equal legal treatment.
Direct accountability
OneBC supports same-day in-person voting, hand-counted paper ballots, referendums on major land transfers, and a lower recall threshold.