Update — July 1, 2026
- DRIPA status refreshed: B.C. released its 2025/26 Declaration Act Annual Report on June 30, reporting progress on 84 of 89 Action Plan items and confirming the annual alignment process remains active. BC Declaration Act Annual Report
- Cowichan/private-property watch updated: a B.C. Supreme Court judge dismissed Montrose Properties’ bid to reopen the Cowichan title case as an abuse-of-process relitigation attempt; appeals remain live, so the issue is still not a settled province-wide rule. Canadian Press / CKPG Today
- Health-care watch updated: BCNU served 72-hour strike notice on June 29 after nurses rejected the tentative agreement; job action could begin July 2 if no settlement is reached. BCNU
- Primary-care wording refreshed from an older “700,000+ without a family doctor” shorthand to the current provincial dashboard framing that 77% of B.C. residents are attached to a primary-care provider. BC Gov primary-care update
Update — June 24, 2026
- Health-care/labour watch moved from ratification-window language to post-vote status: BCNU says nurses voted 67% to reject the tentative agreement reached with health employers, so the bargaining dispute remains active. BCNU
- Public-safety stats refreshed: the homepage no longer frames overdose deaths as “2,500+/year” current data; the latest Coroners bulletin says 119 people died from suspected unregulated-drug toxicity in April 2026, about four deaths per day. BC Coroners Service / BC Gov
- DRIPA/property/FOI watch checked: Bill 9 remains an enacted-law implementation issue, Cowichan/Montrose remains unresolved after the late-May reopening hearing, the Gitxaała/Ehattesaht mineral-claims appeal remains a Supreme Court of Canada watch item, and Elections BC still lists the Dallas Brodie recall petition as active through July 20. Bill 9 status · Cowichan/Montrose · Elections BC
Update — June 17, 2026
- Health-care/labour watch moved from pre-vote to mid-vote: BCNU ratification voting is now in the June 15–19 window, so the site keeps the tentative-agreement file open and does not claim a result before ballots close. BCNU
- DRIPA/resource certainty watch updated with the KSM mine ruling: B.C. Supreme Court found the substantial-start determination reasonable but required further consultation with Tsetsaut Skii km Lax Ha before reconsideration. CityNews / Canadian Press
- Dallas Brodie/OneBC watch updated after Black Press reported the June 14 Kelowna town hall went ahead with about 100 attendees and 40–50 peaceful protesters; Elections BC still lists the Vancouver-Quilchena recall petition as active and due July 20. The Progress / Black Press · Elections BC
Update — June 10, 2026
- FOI/accountability watch refreshed: Bill 9 has moved from a third-reading file to Royal Assent on May 28, 2026, so the live issue is implementation and whether requesters see narrower access or faster service in practice. Bill 9 text/status
- Jobs watch updated to Statistics Canada’s May 2026 Labour Force Survey: B.C. employment rose by 25,000 in May while the provincial unemployment rate held at 6.8%, partially offsetting earlier 2026 losses rather than erasing the broader jobs concern. Statistics Canada
- DRIPA/treaty/property watch refreshed: K’ómoks received provincial Royal Assent May 28, while federal ratification/effective-date steps remain ahead; Cowichan/Montrose remains an unresolved proceeding, not a settled province-wide private-property rule. BC Treaty Commission · CityNews
Update — June 3, 2026
- K’ómoks Treaty Act watch refreshed: the bill received provincial Royal Assent on May 28 while Wei Wai Kum opposition and UBCIC’s May 29 call for treaty-process reform keep overlap and consent concerns active. UBCIC
- DRIPA/private-property watch updated: the Supreme Court of Canada dismissed leave in the New Brunswick Wolastoqey title case, leaving the lower-court ruling in place, but that is not a merits ruling on B.C.’s Cowichan case; Cowichan/Montrose remains framed here as unresolved proceedings. SCC leave decision · CityNews
- FOI/accountability watch updated: Bill 9 received Royal Assent on May 28, 2026; the accountability issue is what the enacted rule changes mean once implemented. Bill 9 status
Update — May 27, 2026
- Health-care/labour watch updated: B.C. and health employers announced a tentative agreement with the Nurses’ Bargaining Association on May 22 after BCNU’s 98.2% strike mandate; BCNU says ratification voting runs June 15–19. BC Gov · BCNU
- DRIPA/private-property watch remains live: the Supreme Court docket for the Gitxaała/Ehattesaht mineral-claims appeal is now active, and the Cowichan/Montrose reopening application was being heard through May 27 with B.C.’s Attorney General supporting Montrose’s request to reopen the case. SCC docket 42200 · CityNews
Update — May 20, 2026
- Fiscal figures remain tied to Budget 2026: $13.309B deficit forecast for 2026–27 and total provincial debt forecast at $183.374B in 2026–27, rising to $234.559B by 2028–29. Budget and Fiscal Plan 2026/27–2028/29
- Jobs and health-care watch remain current: Statistics Canada’s May 2026 Labour Force Survey shows B.C. employment rose by 25,000 in May while unemployment held at 6.8%, partially offsetting the more than 40,000 B.C. jobs CityNews reported lost in the first four months of 2026, and BCNU reports a 98.2% strike mandate from more than 50,000 nurses. Statistics Canada · CityNews · BCNU
- DRIPA/land-claims watch expanded to include K’ómoks and Kitselas treaty implementation legislation, Bill 9/FOI accountability, and the live Cowichan/private-property discussion. K’ómoks Treaty Act · Kitselas Treaty Act · Bill 9 statement
Featured — June 14, 2026
Four drug deaths a day is not a solved crisis. BC Coroners Service preliminary data says 119 people died from suspected unregulated-drug toxicity in April 2026.
What This Site Is About
The BC NDP has governed British Columbia since 2017 — first under John Horgan, then under David Eby. In that time, BC has experienced some of its worst fiscal outcomes in modern history, a housing crisis that deepened despite years of promises, a healthcare system that shed capacity instead of growing it, and a sweeping Indigenous policy agenda that raises serious questions about who actually governs BC.
This site compiles the documented record from public sources: government budgets, commission reports, court decisions, Auditor General findings, and investigative journalism. Every major claim is cited. Draw your own conclusions.
BC's 2026 provincial budget projected a record deficit of over $13 billion. Within weeks, S&P and Moody's both downgraded BC's credit rating — the fifth downgrade in four years. When the Liberals left office in 2017, BC held a AAA credit rating and a balanced budget.
Explore The Research
NDP Failures
Casino money laundering ($7.4B). Site C cost doubling. Roughly 23% still unattached to primary care. a toxic-drug crisis still killing about four people a day in April 2026. A housing crisis that got worse. Five credit downgrades.
DRIPA & The Consent Industry
BC's Indigenous Declaration Act — what it actually means. The consent veto mechanism. The Stewart & Joan Phillip connection. The $10,000-per-member Eskay Creek vote.
Follow the Money
The 12 organizations. Treaty negotiations: $1.5–3B+ spent, only 4 treaties. The Ministry of Indigenous Relations budget — nearly tripled under the NDP. The accountability gap.
The Land Question
"95% unceded" — what it legally means vs. how it's used politically. Only 0.2% has confirmed Aboriginal title. The hereditary vs. elected chiefs problem. What UNDRIP implementation could mean for your property.
Mismanagement & Scandals
Bands under third-party management. Housing funds and where they went. Carbon credits: $50–150M/yr with no accountability. Treaty loan debt: $700M–1B+. Identity fraud. The off-reserve reality.
The Benefits Nobody Talks About
Section 87 tax exemption (real dollar values). $15–25K/yr housing subsidy. NIHB dental, vision, prescriptions. The true income comparison. Squamish Nation's $3–6B Senakw project. Wealthy bands vs. the reality on most reserves.
The Exodus
BC posted the worst population decline in Canada in Q4 2025. Doctors, tech workers, young families, and businesses are leaving for Alberta and the US. The data the NDP doesn't want to talk about.
Renaming BC
0.33% of BCers speak an Indigenous language. 1,215 speak one at home. Yet BC renames bridges, schools, and parks — without public votes — while speakers keep declining despite $400–500M spent.
Who Really Runs BC?
Stewart Phillip (UBCIC, 26+ years) is married to NDP MLA Joan Phillip. His government-funded organization helped write DRIPA. His organization celebrated her election. No recusal on record.
Who Gets Rich?
Chiefs earning more than the Premier while members earn $18K/year. Carbon credit millionaires. $3–6B in treaty lawyer fees. The 307% Atira funding surge. And zero accountability.
Share The Truth
6 bold, data-driven infographics — formatted for social media. Download and share. The numbers don't lie. Right-click to save or tap and hold on mobile.
The Daily Record
Fresh investigative analysis updated daily. The $10,000 vote at Eskay Creek. BC's most powerful couple. The exodus of doctors and workers. The stories the NDP won't tell.
Resources & Allies
Filmmakers, journalists, think tanks and politicians fighting for BC accountability. Aaron Gunn, Fraser Institute, BC Conservatives, Western Standard, and more — the voices worth following.
Submit a Tip
Know something? Whistleblowers, insiders, researchers, and concerned BCers — if you have documents, information, or a story that BCers need to know about, we want to hear from you. Anonymous submissions welcome.
The NDP Record at a Glance
NDP Takes Power — AAA Credit, Balanced Budget
John Horgan wins minority government backed by BC Greens. BC inherits AAA credit rating and roughly $66B in total debt. Eby discovers casino money laundering "incomprehensible" in scale — $7.4B laundered in BC in a single year (expert panel, 2019).
DRIPA Passed — First UNDRIP Legislation in Canada
BC becomes first jurisdiction in Canada to adopt UN Indigenous rights declaration in law. Section 7 creates mechanism for formal Indigenous consent requirements on government decisions. Critics warn of legal uncertainty for resource industries.
Snap Election — Breaking Faith with Green Partners
Despite COVID-19 and a confidence agreement with the Greens, Horgan calls a snap election. NDP wins record 57-seat majority. Critics call it cynical opportunism.
Site C Budget Nearly Doubles — $8.3B → $16B
BC Hydro announces Site C dam has doubled in cost. Later revealed $128M in no-bid contracts to SNC-Lavalin were concealed until exposed via FOI request.
Eby Becomes Premier — Atira & BC Housing Scandal
David Eby takes power by acclamation after challenger Anjali Appadurai is disqualified. Ernst & Young audit finds BC Housing has "inadequate oversight." Forensic audit ordered. Atira CEO received $50K+ raise during pandemic while managing troubled properties.
Drug Decriminalization Launched
BC becomes first Canadian province to decriminalize personal possession of up to 2.5g of hard drugs. Drug use spreads to parks, playgrounds, libraries, transit. Municipalities revolt.
Decriminalization Reversed
After 14 months and relentless public pressure, Eby recriminalizes public drug use. Overdose deaths remain a crisis — the April 2026 Coroners bulletin still counted 119 deaths, about four per day.
Record $13B+ Deficit — Fifth Credit Downgrade
BC's 2026 budget forecasts its largest deficit in history. S&P and Moody's both downgrade BC — the fifth downgrade in four years. BC Budget 2026 forecasts total provincial debt rising from roughly $66B in 2017 to $183.4B in 2026–27 and $234.6B by 2028–29.
In Their Own Words
"ICBC is a financial dumpster fire."
— David Eby, Attorney General, January 2018, describing ICBC's $1.3B projected loss
"Although Site C is not the project we would have favoured or would have started, it must be completed."
— Premier John Horgan, December 11, 2017 — announcing continuation of the dam that would cost $16B
"The numbers are such that we cannot support these folks. We're seeing significant exploitation of international students and temporary residents by employers, by landlords. We can't control the number of people coming in at the provincial level."
— Premier David Eby, CBC interview, December 2023
"[The 5th credit downgrade] puts provincial finances at risk, because of the growing interest costs."
— BC Conservative interim leader Trevor Halford, February 2026
All research is drawn from public sources: Wikipedia, CBC News, The Globe and Mail, Global News, BC Auditor General reports, Cullen Commission records, Statistics Canada, BC Laws (bclaws.gov.bc.ca), Supreme Court of Canada decisions, and government budget documents. Claims are cited throughout. This site presents factual research for political analysis purposes.