Dallas Brodie reclaims OneBC leadership after board resigns

Dallas Brodie says she is once again leader of OneBC, following her sudden ouster earlier this month.

“After negotiations, I have regained control of the party and have reassumed my position as leader of OneBC effective immediately,” said the Vancouver-Quilchena MLA in a social media post on X on Sunday.

“I am terribly sorry for this conflict that spilled out into the open. It was not what I wanted or ever dreamed could happen,” she said.

The party itself said in a brief post “we are back to work.”

Tim Thielmann, who was OneBC’s chief of staff, said in a separate post that the board had decided to resign on Saturday and transfer control of the party to Brodie.

Paul Ratchford also said on X he is no longer the executive director of OneBC and will have no further affiliation with the party.

Brodie returns to the top role about a week after the party’s board announced she had been removed as interim leader. The board issued a statement alleging Brodie had demonstrated “increasing instability, paranoia, erratic behaviour, and abusive conduct.”

Brodie has said the split happened after she raised concerns about a staffer’s social media posts that allegedly shared antisemitic and white nationalist views. She said her colleagues tried to prevent the staffer from being fired.

Tara Armstrong, MLA for Kelowna-Lake Country-Coldstream and former OneBC House Leader, said on Dec. 16 the Speaker’s Office had confirmed OneBC will no longer be recognized as an official party within the legislature. Armstrong said she would once again sit as an Independent.

Brodie and Armstrong launched OneBC in June, soon after leaving the B.C. Conservatives.

The post Dallas Brodie reclaims OneBC leadership after board resigns appeared first on AM 1150.

Emily Joveski
Emily Joveski
Emily is the provincial news reporter for Vista Radio, based in Victoria, B.C. She has worked in radio for more than a decade, and was previously on the airwaves as a broadcaster for The Canadian Press in Toronto.

Continue Reading

- Advertisement -

Related Articles

- Advertisement -

Latest News

MPs approve federal budget in tight vote, averting a snap election

A narrow majority of MPs voted in favour of the Liberal government’s budget Monday, avoiding another federal election.

‘Generational investment’: Ottawa’s 2025 budget focuses on housing, workers and clean energy

A “generational investment” is how Finance Minister François-Philippe Champagne introduced the 2025 federal budget, a plan that pours money into housing, workers and clean-energy projects.

Canadians head to the polls in ‘most important election of our time’

Polling stations are officially open across the country for those who have not already voted in advance polls.