OPINIONS

After Rustad’s Chaotic Exit, What Is the Future of the BC Conservative Party?

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BC Conservative Party Future After Rustad Resignation | The Current

Opinion: After Rustad’s Chaotic Exit, What Is the Future of the BC Conservative Party?

By Chad Dashly, The Current

The sudden resignation of John Rustad as leader of the BC Conservatives, after a single day of open caucus warfare, has exposed a harsh reality: the BC Conservative Party future is far from settled. The question is no longer just who leads the party. It is whether there is still a coherent party left to lead.

A Day of Chaos That Shattered the Illusion of Unity

For 24 hours, British Columbians watched a political spectacle that felt closer to a leadership mutiny than an orderly transition. On Wednesday, Rustad stood before reporters insisting that he remained leader, even as a majority of the Conservative caucus had reportedly signed statements declaring they had lost confidence in him and were appointing Trevor Halford as interim leader.

Rustad said he was “planning to stay on” and “not planning to step aside.” Less than a day later, he resigned as party leader, though he will continue as MLA for Nechako Lakes. The gap between his defiant public stance and his rapid exit captures the instability at the heart of the party.

Meanwhile, the caucus itself descended into open confusion. Some MLAs insisted there had been a proper vote on leadership. Others said no such vote existed. Some declared Halford the new interim leader. Others flatly rejected that, insisting Rustad remained the only legitimate leader.

A Caucus Speaking with Many Voices, Not One

On one side, MLAs like Harman Bhangu argued that change was necessary and that Halford could provide that fresh direction. On the other, MLAs such as Reann Gasper and Sharon Hartwell expressed unwavering loyalty to Rustad, calling the move against him out of order and insisting he should still become the next premier of B.C.

This was not a caucus calmly debating strategy. It was a caucus at war with itself. Even those trying to sound measured could not hide the uncertainty. Halford acknowledged the process was “fluid” and admitted he was still figuring out what exactly had happened and how to move forward.

When a party can’t even agree on who its leader is, it has a problem that goes deeper than a single personality conflict. It has an identity crisis.

Is the BC Conservative Party Dead—or Just Deeply Fractured?

The obvious question now is whether this chaos marks the beginning of the end for the party. Some will be tempted to write the BC Conservatives off as finished. That would be premature—but so would assuming they will simply bounce back.

The party is not dead. It retains real support among voters frustrated with the status quo, especially those who feel politically homeless after the collapse of the old BC Liberal brand. But the events surrounding Rustad’s resignation show just how fragile that support base could become if internal divisions continue to spill into public view.

Inside the caucus, there are fundamentally different visions of what the future of B.C. should look like. Some members lean toward a populist, anti-establishment, social-conservative movement. Others want a more traditional, business-friendly, centre-right party that looks like a refreshed version of BC United. They disagree on climate policy, resource development, social issues, and the tone the party should strike with voters.

When the only thing uniting these factions was opposition to the governing party, conflict was inevitable the moment real power and responsibility came into view.

Can the Next Leader Unify a Deeply Divided Caucus?

The next leader of the BC Conservatives will inherit more than just a title. They will inherit a caucus that has already chosen sides and a membership base still processing a bitter internal fight. The challenge will be nothing less than redefining what the party stands for—and getting people who barely agree on that question to move in the same direction.

Can the next leader unify the party? It is possible, but only under some demanding conditions:

  • A clear, shared vision for B.C.: The party needs more than slogans. It needs a credible, detailed vision for the province’s future that can appeal to both its populist and traditional conservative wings.
  • Firm but fair internal discipline: A leader who cannot enforce basic caucus discipline will be overrun by factions, leaks, and backroom organizing.
  • Respect for democratic legitimacy: Membership votes, leadership reviews, and constitutional rules must be transparent and credible—something that has already been questioned within the party.
  • Willingness to lose some members: True unity may require acknowledging that not everyone will stay. A smaller but coherent party may be stronger than a larger but constantly feuding one.

A Party at a Crossroads

What happened around Rustad’s resignation is more than a messy leadership change. It’s a warning. Without a unifying purpose and respect for process, a party that rose quickly on a wave of voter anger could fall even faster under the weight of its own contradictions.

The BC Conservative Party future now depends on whether its next leader can turn a caucus of competing visions into a team, convince members to accept internal rules they may not like, and present British Columbians with a clear, credible alternative government.

Right now, the party isn’t dead—but it is very much in triage. The next leader will decide whether this moment becomes the origin story of a mature provincial party, or the beginning of a slow, public unraveling.

OPINIONS

Elliott Leads, but the Real BC Conservative Race Starts in the Transfer Rounds

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The Current Newsroom Chad Dashly

The BC Conservative leadership race has now reached the point where the easy takes are falling apart.

A few weeks ago, the clean read was that Peter Milobar looked like the safe, establishment-friendly frontrunner. He had caucus experience, public profile, and the kind of resume that usually gives party insiders comfort. If you were sketching the race from a distance, he looked like the guy with the most obvious path. Then the Pallas survey landed, and suddenly the board changed.

Now the public picture says Caroline Elliott is out front, Kerry-Lynne Findlay is in striking distance, Iain Black is still lurking as a live option, and Milobar has slid badly in the visible numbers. Yuri Fulmer, at least from the public data, looks like he is running out of road. That does not mean the race is over. It means the race is finally being understood for what it is: not a headline contest, but a mechanics contest.

That matters, because this is not a normal one-ballot vote. This is a ranked ballot, riding-weighted leadership race. Those are very different animals. In this kind of race, being first is good. Being broadly acceptable is better. And being hated by fewer people than your rivals can sometimes matter more than leading the first count.

That is why Elliott’s current position is stronger than just “31 percent in a poll.” If she is leading on first preferences and if a large share of members are failing to rank all the way down the ballot, she benefits twice. She starts ahead, and ballot exhaustion can lower the bar she has to clear in the final rounds. That is a huge advantage in a ranked system. You do not need to dominate the room. You need to survive it and still be standing when the math tightens.

But there is a catch. Elliott’s lead is public, not final. The Pallas survey was commissioned by her campaign, which does not make it fake, but it does mean nobody should treat it like holy scripture. Campaign-sponsored polling is useful for spotting movement. It is not the same as neutral gospel. So the smart read is not “Elliott has won.” The smart read is “Elliott has the clearest path today.”

Findlay is the candidate who benefits most from that distinction. She does not need to lead the first count to win. She needs to become the principal landing spot for everyone who does not want Elliott. That is a real path in a five-candidate field. If Fulmer voters break her way, if Milobar voters see her as the steadier alternative, and if enough Black supporters choose her over Elliott in a final round, she can absolutely come through the middle and win the thing. Not because she was the loudest. Because she was the last consensus option standing.

Black is even more interesting. He is the kind of candidate who can look weaker in a simple poll than he really is in a ranked contest. Third place in first choices is not fatal if you are the second choice of a lot of people. The problem for him is simple: he needs too many things to go right. He has to absorb enough lower-tier support early, then jump Findlay, then beat Elliott head-to-head. That is possible. It is just a narrower bridge.

And then there is Milobar, whose problem is not just the drop in numbers. It is the narrative collapse. Leadership races are psychological as much as mathematical. Once a candidate goes from “likely winner” to “why is he fading?” that becomes its own problem. Donors get jumpy. Volunteers lose swagger. Supporters start thinking strategically instead of loyally. A campaign can survive bad numbers. It struggles more to survive the smell of decline.

What this race is really revealing, though, is something bigger than the candidates themselves. The BC Conservatives are no longer a tiny protest club where a few insiders can settle things with a few phone calls and a familiar surname. With more than 42,000 eligible members in the mix, this is now a serious political organization with mass-membership dynamics. That changes everything. It means factions matter. Geography matters. Turnout operations matter. Data matters. Message discipline matters. You can no longer bluff your way through on reputation alone.

And that may be the most important takeaway of all. This contest is testing whether the party is becoming a real governing contender or just a larger version of its old self. Real parties do not just pick leaders. They stress-test coalitions. They find out whether their members want a fighter, a manager, a consensus-builder, or a disrupter. They find out whether they are animated by anger, ambition, discipline, or identity. This race is doing all of that in real time.

So where does that leave things now?

Elliott has momentum and the clearest first-ballot advantage. Findlay has the most plausible comeback route. Black has the most interesting upset path. Milobar looks like the candidate who most needs a dramatic late correction. Fulmer looks like he needs a miracle or a hidden organizational map that the public cannot yet see.

That is the state of play.

The lazy analysis says this race is about who is ahead. The better analysis says it is about who is acceptable, who is organized, and who can unite the pieces once the counting starts. In ranked leadership races, the winner is not always the person who excites the most people first. Sometimes it is the person the fewest people can live without by the end.

And right now, that is why Elliott looks strongest.

But strongest is not the same as safe.

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BCNEWS

BC Conservative Leadership Race: 24 Hours to Go

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High-stakes leadership contest enters its final hours

24 Hours to Go: The BC Conservative Leadership Race Hits the Final Hour

Key Takeaways

  • The BC Conservative leadership race has shifted from a crowded field to a battle between organized factions.
  • Endorsements and candidate exits have reshaped the race into a strategic second-ballot fight.
  • Four forces dominate: establishment candidates, outsider momentum, grassroots support, and electability concerns.
  • The outcome may hinge on second-choice ballots rather than first-ballot strength.
  • The real challenge begins after the vote: party unity, messaging, and expanding voter support.

The Deep Dive

There are leadership races—and then there’s whatever this has become.

With just 24 hours before ballots lock, the BC Conservative leadership race has evolved from a chaotic free-for-all into something far more consequential: a coalition war disguised as a vote. What began with a wide-open field of candidates has narrowed into a tightly contested battle between competing factions, each fighting not just to win—but to define the future of the party itself.

Early in the race, the field was crowded. Candidates from across the political spectrum within the party—MLAs, business leaders, activists, and political veterans—jumped in, sensing opportunity in the aftermath of internal upheaval. But as the campaign unfolded, the race began to eat itself.

Withdrawals, endorsements, and strategic exits quickly reshaped the landscape. Former contenders aligned behind stronger campaigns, consolidating support into distinct blocs. What remains is no longer a wide-open contest—it is a structured, disciplined, and highly strategic fight that will likely be decided on subsequent ballots.

At this late stage, four defining forces have emerged.

The Establishment Play

Candidates representing experience and institutional credibility have positioned themselves as the steady hand option. Their argument is straightforward: competence and professionalism are the keys to forming government. But in a membership-driven race, the question remains whether voters are seeking stability—or disruption.

The Outsider Surge

Momentum has also built around candidates who have successfully consolidated support through endorsements and organizational strength. This is not a personality-driven surge—it is a network-driven one. Late-stage consolidation has turned endorsements into political currency, and those who have gathered them may hold the advantage when ballots are counted.

The Grassroots Wildcard

One of the most unpredictable elements in the race has been the steady presence of grassroots-backed candidates. While others rose and fell, these campaigns maintained a consistent base of support. In a preferential ballot system, that stability can prove decisive—especially when second and third choices come into play.

The Electability Argument

Hovering over the entire race is a single question: who can actually win a general election? For many members, this consideration outweighs ideology or factional loyalty. The belief that the party is within reach of power has elevated electability into a central issue—and potentially the deciding factor.

Behind the scenes, the campaign has entered its final and most critical phase. This is no longer about messaging or momentum. It is about numbers.

  • Membership lists are being fully mobilized
  • Second-choice preferences are being negotiated
  • Endorsements are being leveraged for maximum impact
  • Campaign teams are making final calls to lock in support

The expectation among insiders is clear: this race will not be decided on the first ballot. And when it moves to transfers, the dynamics shift entirely. Alliances matter more than enthusiasm. Organization matters more than noise.

Why It Matters

This leadership race is about more than selecting a new leader—it is about determining whether the BC Conservative Party can function as a unified political force.

The party has recently endured significant internal strain, including leadership turmoil, caucus divisions, and public infighting. Despite this, it finds itself in a position of opportunity, within striking distance of forming government. That combination—momentum paired with instability—creates both potential and risk.

The next 30 days will be critical.

First, unity. Will the losing factions rally behind the winner, or will divisions deepen? Leadership races often leave scars, and how quickly they heal will determine the party’s trajectory.

Second, message discipline. The party must pivot from internal conflict to a clear and compelling case to voters. That transition is rarely smooth, but it is essential.

Third, voter expansion. While the Conservatives have strong support outside major urban centres, success in the Lower Mainland will be crucial. Without it, forming government remains unlikely.

Finally, political contrast. The governing party will move quickly to define the new leader. There will be little room for error and no extended honeymoon period.

In the end, the significance of this moment lies not just in who wins—but in what follows.

The BC Conservative leadership race represents a party at a crossroads: close enough to power to matter, but divided enough to falter. Within 24 hours, a leader will be chosen.

What remains uncertain is whether that choice will unify the party—or trigger the next phase of internal conflict.

In BC politics, those outcomes are often closer than they appear.

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OPINIONS

BC Conservative Leadership Race Is Spiraling, and No One’s in Control

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Opinion Current Newsroom Chad Dashly

Key Takeaways

  • This isn’t just a messy leadership race, it’s a full-blown political breakdown.
  • BC United got caught running a dirty misinformation campaign and walked away with a slap-on-the-wrist fine.
  • The scandal has now infected the Conservative leadership race through key campaign players.
  • Internal factions are openly at war, establishment vs. populist, and neither side trusts the other.
  • BC’s election laws look weak, outdated, and wide open to abuse.

The Deep Dive

Let’s stop pretending this is normal.

The Conservative Party of BC leadership race hasn’t just gone off the rails, it’s exposing exactly how fragile the entire political ecosystem in this province really is. What should have been a coronation moment for a surging party has turned into a case study in dysfunction, mistrust, and political malpractice.

Start with the facts: Elections BC confirmed that BC United ran a coordinated misinformation campaign during the 2024 election. Not spin. Not aggressive messaging. Actual deception — a fake grassroots website, a targeted mailer, and claims designed to smear Conservative candidates with allegations tied to foreign interference laws.

And what did it cost them?

$4,500.

No names. No real consequences. No deterrent.

Think about that. You can run a coordinated disinformation campaign in British Columbia, get caught, and walk away with a fine that wouldn’t cover a decent ad buy in Kelowna.

That’s not enforcement. That’s permission.

Now here’s where it gets worse.

The same ecosystem that produced that campaign has now bled directly into the Conservative leadership race. A key campaign manager tied to that period suddenly finds himself working for one of the frontrunners, then just as quickly “steps back” when the story breaks.

Convenient timing. Bad optics. Worse judgment.

And inside the party? It’s open warfare.

This race isn’t about ideas anymore, it’s about control. One side is made up of former BC Liberal and BC United operatives trying to steer the party back to something recognizable. The other side is a populist wave that doesn’t trust them, doesn’t want them, and sees them as a takeover threat.

That tension is now boiling over. Public shots. Debate boycotts. Backroom complaints. Alliance proposals that make moderates nervous and energize the fringe.

No one’s pretending this is unified. Because it isn’t.

And the timing couldn’t be worse. With membership deadlines closing and ranked ballots looming, campaigns aren’t just fighting to win they’re fighting to survive early rounds and become acceptable second choices in a deeply fractured field.

That’s not a recipe for leadership. That’s a recipe for compromise candidates and unresolved resentment.

Why It Matters

This isn’t just about one party having a bad month.

This is about whether the system itself can handle modern political warfare.

If disinformation campaigns come with negligible penalties, they will happen again. If campaign operatives can move between parties without accountability, trust erodes further. And if leadership races devolve into factional trench warfare, voters start to question whether anyone is actually in charge.

For the Conservatives, the risk is obvious. They’ve built real momentum. They’ve tapped into real voter frustration. But if they can’t get their own house in order, that momentum will stall — fast.

For voters, the stakes are bigger. This is a preview of what campaigns are becoming: digital, aggressive, and increasingly willing to cross lines that used to be untouchable.

The question now isn’t whether this race can be cleaned up. It’s whether anyone involved actually wants to.

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