Please Advise! Did the BC Conservatives Get It Right with Findlay?
Jun 02, 2026•6 min•Ep. 2
Episode description
Extremely right, says Dr. Steve. The NDP are likely still partying. … Article written by Steve Burgess.
Dear Dr. Steve,
B.C. Conservatives held their leadership vote on the weekend. The new leader is former Stephen Harper cabinet minister Kerry-Lynne Findlay.
Did the party choose well?
Signed,
Connor
Dear Connor,
As the final ballot result was announced on Saturday evening, you could surely hear the sound of champagne corks popping. But enough about the headquarters of the BC NDP. Findlay's team must have been happy too.
It was a lively gathering of B.C. Conservatives at the Rocky Mountaineer Station. The event began with a solemn land acknowledgment of the unceded territory of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh nations.
Ha ha, Dr. Steve makes a little joke there. They'd be just as likely to kick things off with a dozen kazoos playing "Solidarity Forever."
Land acknowledgments were a big topic in this campaign. By some algorithmic fluke, Dr. Steve's Facebook page was regularly blessed with campaign videos from candidate Caroline Elliott. Every clip showed Elliott pouring scorn on land acknowledgments and those who give them. And Elliott was supposed to be one of the moderates.
Now, Dr. Steve is well aware that land acknowledgments can draw eye rolls from people in all parts of the political spectrum, albeit for different reasons. But the prominent focus on them certainly suggested that the Conservative leadership race was coalescing around a common theme, and it wasn't overpriced tomatoes.
Five candidates were on the first ballot as the Conservatives began the essential process of winnowing. One of the candidates was relatively moderate and, unlike the others, had a seat in the legislature. Right, then — out goes the trash. MLA Peter Milobar was bounced on the first ballot like a mongrel at the Westminster Kennel Club.
Three quick ballots later, the winner was Findlay, former federal cabinet minister in the Harper government and wife of Surrey South MLA and rhetorical arsonist Brent Chapman. The margin of victory over runner-up Elliott was 51 per cent to 49 per cent, which is probably nothing to worry about. Everything will be fine.
"I will take the fight to grassroots British Columbians who've had enough of being pushed around," the 71-year-old Findlay told the crowd in her victory speech. "I am leading to take this province back."
Sort of an anti-land acknowledgment, then. Under a Conservative Party of BC government every event could start with the singing of "This Land Is My Land," an edited Conservative version that goes: "This land is my land, your land is my land, their land is my land..." etc. Maybe they can book Kid Rock for the gigs.
Findlay, the former parliamentarian, closed her speech by shouting "Allons-y!" — perhaps forgetting where she was for a moment. Findlay should quickly explain that she was just saying "Hi" to her old friend Allan Zee. You don't want these people thinking you're bilingual — they'll suspect you are talking in globalist code.
It's interesting that Findlay was the clear choice of the party's right wing, despite the fact that even Elliott was jumping on the First Nations-bashing bandwagon. It seems the voters knew the difference between a real extremist and a wannabe. Part of that may be Findlay's now infamous debate moment in which she claimed Milobar had a conflict of interest because he was married to an Indigenous woman.
It may also be because Findlay supporters thought they were voting for a package deal — sort of All in the Family, if Archie Bunker had married Margaret Thatcher. Her better half Chapman famously described Palestinians as "little inbred, walking, talking, breathing time bombs... figuratively and literally" and suggested coexistence with Muslims is impossible. After the final ballot results were announced, Tyee reporter Jen St. Denis asked Findlay if she'd reached out to the Muslim community. Findlay said she and her husband had some thoroughly wonderful meetings ...
Dear Dr. Steve,
B.C. Conservatives held their leadership vote on the weekend. The new leader is former Stephen Harper cabinet minister Kerry-Lynne Findlay.
Did the party choose well?
Signed,
Connor
Dear Connor,
As the final ballot result was announced on Saturday evening, you could surely hear the sound of champagne corks popping. But enough about the headquarters of the BC NDP. Findlay's team must have been happy too.
It was a lively gathering of B.C. Conservatives at the Rocky Mountaineer Station. The event began with a solemn land acknowledgment of the unceded territory of the Musqueam, Squamish and Tsleil-Waututh nations.
Ha ha, Dr. Steve makes a little joke there. They'd be just as likely to kick things off with a dozen kazoos playing "Solidarity Forever."
Land acknowledgments were a big topic in this campaign. By some algorithmic fluke, Dr. Steve's Facebook page was regularly blessed with campaign videos from candidate Caroline Elliott. Every clip showed Elliott pouring scorn on land acknowledgments and those who give them. And Elliott was supposed to be one of the moderates.
Now, Dr. Steve is well aware that land acknowledgments can draw eye rolls from people in all parts of the political spectrum, albeit for different reasons. But the prominent focus on them certainly suggested that the Conservative leadership race was coalescing around a common theme, and it wasn't overpriced tomatoes.
Five candidates were on the first ballot as the Conservatives began the essential process of winnowing. One of the candidates was relatively moderate and, unlike the others, had a seat in the legislature. Right, then — out goes the trash. MLA Peter Milobar was bounced on the first ballot like a mongrel at the Westminster Kennel Club.
Three quick ballots later, the winner was Findlay, former federal cabinet minister in the Harper government and wife of Surrey South MLA and rhetorical arsonist Brent Chapman. The margin of victory over runner-up Elliott was 51 per cent to 49 per cent, which is probably nothing to worry about. Everything will be fine.
"I will take the fight to grassroots British Columbians who've had enough of being pushed around," the 71-year-old Findlay told the crowd in her victory speech. "I am leading to take this province back."
Sort of an anti-land acknowledgment, then. Under a Conservative Party of BC government every event could start with the singing of "This Land Is My Land," an edited Conservative version that goes: "This land is my land, your land is my land, their land is my land..." etc. Maybe they can book Kid Rock for the gigs.
Findlay, the former parliamentarian, closed her speech by shouting "Allons-y!" — perhaps forgetting where she was for a moment. Findlay should quickly explain that she was just saying "Hi" to her old friend Allan Zee. You don't want these people thinking you're bilingual — they'll suspect you are talking in globalist code.
It's interesting that Findlay was the clear choice of the party's right wing, despite the fact that even Elliott was jumping on the First Nations-bashing bandwagon. It seems the voters knew the difference between a real extremist and a wannabe. Part of that may be Findlay's now infamous debate moment in which she claimed Milobar had a conflict of interest because he was married to an Indigenous woman.
It may also be because Findlay supporters thought they were voting for a package deal — sort of All in the Family, if Archie Bunker had married Margaret Thatcher. Her better half Chapman famously described Palestinians as "little inbred, walking, talking, breathing time bombs... figuratively and literally" and suggested coexistence with Muslims is impossible. After the final ballot results were announced, Tyee reporter Jen St. Denis asked Findlay if she'd reached out to the Muslim community. Findlay said she and her husband had some thoroughly wonderful meetings ...
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