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

Dallas Brodie / OneBC Timeline

A living timeline of public milestones, town halls, policy moves, and movement growth. This page is designed to keep updating as new events, videos, and announcements appear.

iVoteOneBC adds a Video Watch update after the Dallas Brodie / OneBC YouTube channel’s June 14 “OneBC Post Game” video surfaced as the latest long-form direct communication item. The verified point is narrow: Brodie and Wyatt Claypool discussed the Vancouver–Quilchena recall campaign, the Kamloops event dispute, Kerry-Lynne Findlay as the new BC Conservative leader, and wider NDP-accountability questions without any new claimed membership, petition-signature, or alliance numbers.

Black Press Media reports Dallas Brodie’s June 14 Kelowna town hall went ahead at Parkinson Recreation Centre’s Apple Room with about 100 attendees while roughly 40 to 50 people protested peacefully outside. The verified milestone is now an outcome, not just a venue watch: public access held, protest was protected, and citizens heard directly from Brodie.

iVoteOneBC updates the Kelowna fair-access watch after new Black Press / Creston Valley Advance reporting says the Okanagan Nation Alliance also objected to Dallas Brodie’s June 14 town hall, while the City of Kelowna maintained that municipal room rentals are available across the political spectrum and do not constitute endorsement. The verified milestone remains narrow and defensible: equal access, safety planning, peaceful protest, and open public conversation.

iVoteOneBC adds a Kelowna fair-access update before Dallas Brodie’s June 14 Backbone of BC Tour stop. Local reporting says the event has drawn criticism and a planned peaceful protest, while the City of Kelowna says OneBC booked through the standard rental process and that room-rental approval is not endorsement. The verified milestone is equal municipal access, safety planning, and open public conversation — not any claimed attendance or membership number.

iVoteOneBC adds the Kamloops outcome milestone after CFJC Today reports Dallas Brodie’s June 7 town hall went ahead from a vacant lot at 100 Victoria Street West after the Sandman Centre permit dispute. Kamloops RCMP said opponents protested lawfully and peacefully and the event proceeded without issue, making the verified milestone a successful public-conversation outcome after a venue fight.

iVoteOneBC adds a Prince George venue-change watch after CKPG Today reports Dallas Brodie’s planned June 10 Backbone of BC Tour venue became unavailable because of staffing. The City of Prince George and the Community Arts Council reject any political motive; OneBC’s official page still lists the Prince George town hall with venue TBA, so the verified milestone is an alternative-location and fair-access watch.

iVoteOneBC adds a Kamloops venue-cancellation watch after CFJC Today reports Dallas Brodie’s planned Sandman Centre / former Kamloops Kia Lounge booking was cancelled following a dispute over added safety and security costs. OneBC’s official page still lists the June 7 Kamloops town hall with venue TBA, so the verified milestone is a public-facility fairness and final-location watch.

iVoteOneBC adds a Kamloops venue-watch update after local reporting describes a Sandman Centre / former Kia Lounge booking dispute for Dallas Brodie’s June 7 Backbone of BC Tour stop. The official OneBC event page still lists Kamloops as venue TBA, so the verified milestone is a fair-access and process watch — not a claimed cancellation.

Canadian Press / CityNews and The Tyee reporting put the question of former Conservative MLAs back on the post-Findlay unity table. For OneBC supporters, this creates a live accountability test: no confirmed OneBC–Findlay deal, but Dallas Brodie’s independent leverage now clearly matters in the wider reunification conversation.

iVoteOneBC updates the Alliance Tracker after public reporting says Kerry-Lynne Findlay won the BC Conservative leadership race on May 30. Because Yuri Fulmer did not win, the reported Brodie–Fulmer accord did not activate through that path; the live watch item is now Dallas Brodie / OneBC’s independent accountability lane and any public response from Findlay or OneBC.

The Conservative Party of BC official leadership page says voting is closed, first results will be announced at 6:00 p.m. PT, and livestream coverage will be available shortly before the 5:30 p.m. PT event start. iVoteOneBC updates the Accord Watch while avoiding any claim about the result before it is official.

The BC Conservative leadership voting window closes by schedule at 8:00 a.m. PT. iVoteOneBC adds a results-watch update ahead of the May 30 leadership convention, with the reported Dallas Brodie / Yuri Fulmer accord still conditional on the official result.

iVoteOneBC adds a final-hours Accord Watch update before the BC Conservative leadership vote closes May 29 and the May 30 result determines whether the reported Dallas Brodie / Yuri Fulmer unity accord has a path to move forward.

The BC Conservative leadership vote opens. iVoteOneBC adds an Alliance Tracker update because the May 30 result will determine whether the reported Dallas Brodie / Yuri Fulmer Unite the Right Accord can move forward.

iVoteOneBC adds a Legislature Watch update after reporting confirms Dallas Brodie / OneBC opposed a short-notice BC Legislature motion tied to the 1984 anti-Sikh violence, framing the issue around provincial discipline, proper process, and keeping imported separatist fights out of B.C. politics.

Elections BC lists the Dallas Brodie recall petition as issued for Vancouver–Quilchena, with a July 20 deadline and 15,232 required signatures. iVoteOneBC adds the recall to the democracy/accountability tracker.

Dallas Brodie announces a constituency-office milestone for Vancouver–Quilchena, with her official MLA site listing a temporary office, public meeting-request path, and Tuesday–Friday office hours.

Public reporting says Dallas Brodie and BC Conservative leadership candidate Yuri Fulmer announced a “unite the right” accord that could clear the path for OneBC in five targeted ridings if Fulmer wins the leadership.

Dallas Brodie is elected MLA for Vancouver–Quilchena, giving voters a direct voice for accountability inside the Legislature.

OneBC emerges as a new provincial movement focused on lower taxes, family, democracy, property rights, and structural reform.

OneBC’s public platform is published with priorities across prosperity, housing, education, healthcare, immigration, family, energy, law and order, Indigenous policy, small business, environment, and democracy.

OneBC’s official petitions page lists an urgent “Referendum on DRIPA” petition in Victoria, tied to Dallas Brodie’s call for voters to decide the future of DRIPA directly.

Dallas Brodie holds a Vancouver–Quilchena emergency town hall on property rights, DRIPA, the Musqueam agreement, and the future of public accountability.

OneBC’s official candidates page lists Jim McMurtry as candidate for Delta South, adding a verified riding-level campaign marker to the movement tracker.

OneBC lists Backbone of BC Tour town halls with Dallas Brodie in Kamloops (June 7), Prince George (June 10), and Kelowna (June 14), with stated topics including the OneBC platform, UNDRIP, defending private and Crown property, and Q&A.

Research note: This timeline is based on public OneBC pages, archived iVote research notes, and ongoing monitoring of Dallas Brodie / OneBC public channels. It will be updated when new sourced developments occur.
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. Source links are provided for public-interest political commentary.