1. The Conflict at the Centre
Stewart Phillip has been President of the Union of BC Indian Chiefs (UBCIC) since 1998.
Joan Phillip is his wife โ and a sitting BC NDP MLA and Parliamentary Secretary.
Stewart's organization is funded by Joan's government.
His organization helped write the law her government enforces.
His organization publicly celebrated her election and expressed desire to "work together" with her.
No recusal on record. No conflict of interest declaration. No public scrutiny.
The question nobody in BC media has asked: Has Joan Phillip ever recused herself from a vote on Indigenous funding or UBCIC-related policy? Based on public records: No.
๐ The Feedback Loop
- BC Government funds UBCIC (through Ministry of Indigenous Relations)
- UBCIC lobbies the BC Government on policy and legislation
- UBCIC helped shape DRIPA โ the law that gives it formal consultation rights
- DRIPA mandates the BC Government consult UBCIC (via the FNLC) on future legislation
- UBCIC's president's wife sits inside that government as an MLA and Parliamentary Secretary
- UBCIC formally celebrated her election and said they "look forward to working together"
- Loop continues โ funding increases, influence grows
๐ Ministry Budget: Before and After NDP
| Period | Ministry Budget |
|---|---|
| Liberal era (pre-2017) | ~$75โ80M/year |
| NDP era (post-2017) | ~$200โ225M/year |
| Change | Nearly tripled |
The Declaration Act Secretariat โ a new central government agency โ was established with dedicated Budget 2022 funding to coordinate DRIPA implementation with organizations like UBCIC.
โ๏ธ The Historical Parallel
Imagine if the president of the BC Teachers' Federation were married to the NDP's Minister of Education โ and if the BCTF had publicly celebrated that minister's election and said they "look forward to working together."
The inherent conflict would be obvious. Every political journalist in BC would be asking questions. When it involves Indigenous policy, the same standards don't seem to apply.
2. The Phillip Family
Grand Chief Stewart Phillip
Born: November 17, 1949, Penticton, BC
Nation: Syilx/Okanagan (Penticton Indian Band)
Title: Grand Chief, President of UBCIC (since 1998)
- Raised by a white foster family โ did not learn his Indigenous identity until age 23
- Entered activist politics in the mid-1970s; sober since 1987
- Former Chief, Penticton Indian Band (1994โ2008)
- Elected UBCIC President 1998 โ held role continuously for 26+ years
- Arrested at least 5 times in civil disobedience actions (Oka solidarity 1990, Burnaby Mountain 2014, Kinder Morgan gates 2018, and others)
- Aligned with NDP policy positions since the 1970s
- His organization receives provincial government funding while his wife sits in government
"She's my kindred spirit. She's the most incredible person you will ever want to meet."
โ Stewart Phillip on Joan, Georgia Straight, 2018
"The number one principle is Joan's: we have to do the right thing. No matter what. No matter what the risk."
โ Georgia Straight, 2018
Joan Phillip, MLA
Born: June 12, 1952, North Vancouver, BC
Nation: Tsleil-Waututh
Notable family: Granddaughter of Chief Dan George; sister of author Lee Maracle
- NDP supporter since approximately 1972 (Dave Barrett's era)
- Activist since age 16; member of the Native Alliance for Red Power (NARP)
- Led 18-person delegation to People's Republic of China in 1975 โ before diplomatic normalization
- Met Stewart Phillip at Vancouver Indian Centre Society board meetings in the mid-1970s
- Lands Manager, Penticton Indian Band โ retired September 2019
- Previous provincial and federal NDP runs before winning a 2023 by-election
- June 24, 2023: Won Vancouver-Mount Pleasant by-election with 67.79% โ became only the second First Nations woman ever to serve in BC's Legislative Assembly
- November 18, 2024: Appointed Parliamentary Secretary for Community Development and Non-profits by Premier David Eby
"I've been involved in politics since I was about 16 years old."
โ Georgia Straight, 2018
When Joan Phillip was sworn in as MLA, the First Nations Leadership Council โ the umbrella organization that includes UBCIC, led by her husband โ issued a formal celebratory press release on July 28, 2023.
UBCIC Vice President Chief Don Tom stated:
"We are extremely proud of Joan's accomplishments and her entry into the Legislative Assembly. This achievement represents a significant step forward in our collective journey towards meaningful representation and rights-recognition. With her leadership, we are confident that our shared vision can be realized."
โ Chief Don Tom, UBCIC Vice President, July 28, 2023
This is the same organization her husband leads. The same organization her government funds. The same organization she has never recused herself from voting on behalf of.
3. Terry Teegee โ The Man Who Wrote the Law He Benefits From
๐ค Who Is Terry Teegee?
Title: Regional Chief, BC Assembly of First Nations (BCAFN)
Nation: Takla Nation (Dakelh, Gitxsan and Sekani descent)
In office: Regional Chief since approximately 2017 (now in third term)
- Previously Tribal Chief, Carrier Sekani Tribal Council (2012โ2017)
- Holds a Bachelor of Science in Natural Resources Management (Forestry)
- Lives on the Lheidli T'enneh Shelley Reserve, 22 km from Prince George
- AFN Chair, UNDRIP Implementation Committee
- AFN Chair, Chiefs Committee on Economic Development
- Co-Chair, BC Business Council Champions Table
โ ๏ธ The Conflict โ In His Own Org's Words
The BCAFN's own official biography of Terry Teegee states:
"As Regional Chief, he was an instrumental voice in the development and historic passing of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act (DRIPA)."
โ BCAFN official website, bcafn.ca
This is a direct admission from his own organization:
- He helped write DRIPA
- DRIPA gives his organization formal consultation rights
- His organization continues to lobby for broader DRIPA implementation
- He celebrated Joan Phillip's election โ the MLA whose husband co-leads the same legislative framework
Terry Teegee issued a statement on July 28, 2023 celebrating Joan Phillip's swearing-in as MLA:
"Today, we celebrate a historic moment as Joan takes her oath as an MLA. Her journey exemplifies the resilience and strength of First Nations women, who have been at the forefront of social, cultural, and political advancements within our communities. We look forward to working together to promote the advancement of Indigenous rights."
โ Terry Teegee, Regional Chief BCAFN, July 28, 2023
He helped write the law. He benefits from the law. He then publicly celebrated the election of the MLA whose husband leads the other major organization that also benefits from the law. And he expressed a desire to "work together" with her.
4. The Funding Circle
The relationship between the BC government, Indigenous advocacy organizations, and the Phillip family isn't a conspiracy โ it's a structural conflict that was built in plain sight, piece by piece.
๐ How the Loop Works
| Step | What Happens | Who Benefits |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | BC Government funds UBCIC, BCAFN, FNS through Ministry of Indigenous Relations | Indigenous advocacy organizations |
| 2 | UBCIC/BCAFN/FNS lobby BC Government on legislation and policy | These organizations gain influence |
| 3 | DRIPA passes (2019) โ partly shaped by UBCIC and BCAFN | All three organizations gain formal consultation rights by law |
| 4 | DRIPA mandates BC Government must consult FNLC (UBCIC + BCAFN + FNS) before passing laws | These organizations now have statutory lobbying rights |
| 5 | Joan Phillip (wife of UBCIC President) is elected NDP MLA and appointed Parliamentary Secretary | UBCIC has direct access to government via spousal relationship |
| 6 | FNLC celebrates Joan's election; Teegee says he "looks forward to working together" | The network consolidates |
| 7 | Ministry of Indigenous Relations budget nearly triples under NDP ($75-80M โ $200-225M) | Funding for these organizations increases |
| 8 | Return to Step 1 | Loop continues |
๐ฐ The Funding โ What We Know
- UBCIC receives provincial government funding through the Ministry of Indigenous Relations โ exact dollar amounts not publicly disclosed; FOI requests required
- BCAFN receives both federal (AFN/ISC) and BC provincial government funding
- First Nations Summit (FNS) also receives provincial and federal funding
- The Declaration Act Secretariat โ established Budget 2022 โ coordinates DRIPA implementation with FNLC organizations
- Provincial Indigenous reconciliation spending has nearly tripled since 2017
๐ The Budget Trajectory
- Pre-2017 (Liberal era): ~$75โ80M/year โ UBCIC was in opposition to government
- 2017: NDP takes power; Eby becomes AG; reconciliation declared priority
- 2019: DRIPA passed โ creates new spending obligations
- 2022: Declaration Act Secretariat established with dedicated Budget 2022 funding
- 2023โpresent: ~$200โ225M/year โ nearly triple the Liberal era
- Correlation: The budget tripled after the same organizations that advocated for DRIPA gained formal statutory rights under DRIPA
5. David Eby's Inner Circle
๐ค David Eby โ The Path to Premier
Born: July 21, 1976, Kitchener, Ontario
Premier: November 18, 2022โpresent
- Was Attorney General when DRIPA was passed in November 2019
- Swearing-in ceremony led by the Musqueam First Nation โ a symbolic act of deference to Indigenous authority
- Photographed at NDP rallies alongside both Stewart and Joan Phillip (documented, cited in Joan Phillip Wikipedia article)
- Was Housing Minister during the period when Atira funding escalated 307% (see also: rich.html)
- Under his premiership, DRIPA's Action Plan implementation accelerated
- In 2026 โ under pressure from court cases expanding DRIPA's scope โ proposed suspending the act "for up to three years," drawing criticism from Indigenous leaders
๐ค Murray Rankin โ The Architect
Former Minister of Indigenous Relations and Reconciliation (2020โ2024)
- Harvard Law School (LLM, summa cum laude); King's Counsel
- Appointed BC's reconciliation representative for Wet'suwet'en in February 2019
- As Minister, oversaw BC's DRIPA Action Plan โ the first of its kind in Canada
- June 2022: Tahltan Central Government and Province entered the first consent-based decision-making agreement under DRIPA
- Has been a consistent NDP political advisor since the 1990s
- Announced he would not stand for re-election in June 2024; succeeded by Christine Boyle
"We must make the province a place where the human rights of Indigenous Peoples are respected, celebrated and finally implemented in every aspect of society."
โ Murray Rankin as Minister of Indigenous Relations
6. Who's In the Room
| Person | Role | Key Connection |
|---|---|---|
| Stewart Phillip | Grand Chief, UBCIC President since 1998 | Married to Joan Phillip (NDP MLA); his org is funded by her government; his org helped write DRIPA |
| Joan Phillip | BC NDP MLA (Vancouver-Strathcona); Parliamentary Secretary for Community Development and Non-profits (since Nov 2024) | Married to UBCIC President; granddaughter of Chief Dan George; NDP supporter since 1972; no recusal on record for UBCIC-related votes |
| Terry Teegee | Regional Chief, BC Assembly of First Nations (third term) | "Instrumental" in passing DRIPA (his own org's words); celebrated Joan Phillip's election; said he "looks forward to working together" |
| David Eby | BC Premier (Nov 2022โpresent); former AG (2017โ2022) | AG when DRIPA passed; sworn in at Musqueam ceremony; photographed at NDP rallies with Stewart & Joan Phillip |
| Murray Rankin | Former Minister of Indigenous Relations (2020โ2024) | Oversaw DRIPA Action Plan; longtime NDP advisor; former BC treaty negotiator |
| Cheryl Casimer | Political Executive, First Nations Summit | Part of FNLC; celebrated Joan Phillip's election; said she will "witness the positive impact she will surely have on advancing the interests of First Nations" |
| Don Tom | UBCIC Vice President | Issued statement celebrating Joan Phillip's election on behalf of UBCIC |
| Christine Boyle | Current Minister of Indigenous Relations (since Nov 2024) | Succeeded Rankin; overseeing ongoing DRIPA implementation |
๐๏ธ The Organizations โ And Their Relationships
| Organization | Type | Key Role |
|---|---|---|
| UBCIC (Union of BC Indian Chiefs) | Indigenous advocacy org; government-funded | Led by Stewart Phillip; co-shaped DRIPA; formal FNLC consultation rights under DRIPA |
| BCAFN (BC Assembly of First Nations) | Indigenous advocacy org; government-funded | Led by Terry Teegee; "instrumental" in DRIPA; formal FNLC consultation rights |
| FNS (First Nations Summit) | Indigenous advocacy org; government-funded | Represents nations in treaty process; formal FNLC consultation rights |
| FNLC (First Nations Leadership Council) | Umbrella of UBCIC + BCAFN + FNS | Primary formal Indigenous political body with statutory consultation rights under DRIPA |
| Declaration Act Secretariat | BC Government central agency (est. 2022) | Coordinates DRIPA implementation; mandated to work with FNLC organizations |
7. The Question Nobody Asks
Has Joan Phillip ever recused herself from a vote on Indigenous funding or UBCIC-related policy?
The answer, based on public records: No.
No public record was found of Joan Phillip ever recusing herself from votes related to UBCIC, the FNLC, or Indigenous funding broadly. This does not necessarily mean no recusal occurred โ but it means none has been publicly noted, reported, or disclosed.
The BC Legislature's Members' Conflict of Interest Act requires MLAs to recuse from matters where they have a direct financial interest. The test for spousal advocacy organizations is less clearly defined. No public documentation of any recusal declaration or Commissioner ruling exists in Joan Phillip's case.
๐ The Full Picture
- Joan Phillip's husband leads UBCIC โ a provincially-funded lobbying organization
- UBCIC publicly endorsed Joan Phillip's election and expressed desire to "work together"
- Joan Phillip is a Parliamentary Secretary directly subordinate to Premier Eby
- UBCIC is part of the FNLC, which has statutory consultation rights over legislation that Joan Phillip votes on
- The Ministry of Indigenous Relations budget โ which funds UBCIC โ has nearly tripled under the NDP government Joan Phillip serves in
- No opposition challenge or media investigation of this structural conflict has been found on record
๐ฐ What The Media Has Not Asked
Despite the above documented facts โ all drawn from public sources including Wikipedia, UBCIC press releases, and CBC News โ no major BC media outlet has published a story directly examining Joan Phillip's conflict of interest as an MLA with a spousal connection to UBCIC's leadership.
No Hansard searches have returned any record of an opposition MLA raising the conflict directly. No Commissioner of Conflicts of Interest has issued a ruling. No recusal has been documented.
The question has not been asked. Perhaps it should be.
Wikipedia: Joan Phillip, Stewart Phillip, Murray Rankin, David Eby, BC Assembly of First Nations, Union of BC Indian Chiefs;
BCAFN official website โ Terry Teegee biography (bcafn.ca);
UBCIC/FNLC press release, July 28, 2023: "First Nations Leadership Council Celebrates Joan Phillip Being Sworn in as Member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia";
Georgia Straight, Travis Lupick, May 14โ17, 2018: "The People's Chief" โ two-part profile of Stewart Phillip;
CBC News: Kinder Morgan/Trans Mountain pipeline protests (2014, 2018);
BC Laws: Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act (SBC 2019 Chapter 44);
BC Government: Declaration Act Secretariat page;
Business in Vancouver, April 30, 2023: Joan Phillip profile.
All claims drawn from public sources. Research compiled April 2026.