Brodie’s Bill 20 Warning Puts Eby’s Treaty Agenda Back Under the Spotlight
Dallas Brodie’s new Bill 20 video gives the K’ómoks Treaty Act a fresh political frame: land, money, jurisdiction, overlap and consent.
Read More →DRIPA articles and source-linked coverage from iVoteNDP.com.
Posts examining B.C.’s DRIPA/UNDRIP framework, consent politics, land-use uncertainty and how the Eby NDP’s approach affects property rights, resource development and democratic accountability.
Dallas Brodie’s new Bill 20 video gives the K’ómoks Treaty Act a fresh political frame: land, money, jurisdiction, overlap and consent.
Read More →Reports about renewed discussions involving Pacific Spirit Regional Park show why B.C. needs transparent rules before public land, reconciliation policy and park access collide.
Read More →UBCM, UDI, AME, MABC and ICBA rejected non-disclosure agreements tied to B.C. Heritage Conservation Act reforms, raising transparency concerns around land-use rules.
Read More →Angus Reid reports the BC Conservatives lead the governing NDP 46 to 36, while David Eby’s approval has fallen to 33 per cent amid DRIPA and land-rights uncertainty.
Read More →Northern Beat reports the BC Cattlemen’s Association is seeking intervenor status in a constitutional challenge against DRIPA, citing uncertainty around private land, grazing tenures, water rights and democratic accountability.
Read More →The PHARA DRIPA challenge and BC Cattlemen intervention are pushing B.C.’s land-use uncertainty into public view, with private property, dock tenures, ranching and democratic accountability all on the table.
Read More →theBreaker.news reports public emails obtained under FOI showed 177 writers opposed the Cowichan title ruling and urged Premier David Eby to appeal, while four supported it.
Read More →A Property Rights Canada reel featuring lawyer Thomas Isaac has reignited the extinguishment question: if governments can defend fee-simple private property, why are British Columbians still getting vague answers?
Read More →A new Leaders on the Frontier discussion with Tom Isaac and Bruce Hallsor puts plain-language questions around Aboriginal land claims, DRIPA and private property uncertainty in British Columbia.
Read More →A May 6 BCBC survey says 98% of respondents are very concerned about DRIPA implementation and 74% report decreased B.C. investment plans.
Read More →OneBC leader Dallas Brodie stood up in the BC Legislature and dared David Eby to call a referendum on DRIPA. If the NDP won't, she says, let British Columbians do it themselves. A petition is circulating now — and the NDP is silent.
Read More →The Sinixt Confederacy and Southeast Alaska Indigenous Transboundary Commission are citing BC's Gitxaała DRIPA decision in lawsuits to force consultation on mines and resource projects. Critics call it a 'sovereignty crisis.'
Read More →For the second time, BC's NDP government is barrelling ahead with Heritage Conservation Act amendments despite a wall of opposition from UBCM, the Urban Development Institute, the Business Council, and the ICBA — all developed in secret under DRIPA co-governance.
Read More →The NDP is forcing through two new Indigenous treaties over the objections of multiple First Nations who say they weren't consulted. Wei Wai Kum is threatening to blockade a BC Hydro dam that provides half of Vancouver Island's power. The NDP: full steam ahead.
Read More →BC Regional Chief Terry Teegee — one of the architects of DRIPA — confirmed on CKNW radio that 200 First Nations are now co-governing BC. When the Opposition pressed Eby three times for a yes or no, he refused to answer. The man who built DRIPA says it's co-government. The Premier who must implement
Read More →On April 20, 2026, David Eby was preparing to suspend DRIPA. By Sunday evening, he had surrendered completely — abandoning his own plan without telling his cabinet, while Indigenous leaders merely agreed to 'talk.' Vaughn Palmer called it a hostage statement.
Read More →A $2.5-billion Aboriginal title ruling in Richmond. 150+ homeowners facing uncertainty. Haida Gwaii residents at risk. And the man who drafted DRIPA in 2019 is now the Premier who can't figure out what to do with it.
Read More →The BC NDP's third attempt to rewrite the Heritage Conservation Act has hit a wall. UBCM, the Urban Development Institute, and the ICBA all say the revised plan still creates chaos for development — with permits taking hundreds of days and private property rights more uncertain than ever.
Read More →As the BC NDP rushes to ratify the Kitselas and K'ómoks treaties, neighbouring First Nations say 80% of treaty lands overlap their own territories. The NDP is proceeding anyway — and embedding UNDRIP inside constitutionally protected agreements nobody can undo.
Read More →The BC Court of Appeal has rejected the argument that a Wet'suwet'en hereditary chief could breach a court injunction by citing Indigenous law. The ruling draws a clear line — one that cuts directly against the expansive interpretation of DRIPA that Indigenous advocates have been pushing.
Read More →Multiple First Nations leaders gathered in Victoria on April 28 to oppose two NDP treaty bills — and warned they are prepared for litigation and on-the-ground action. The government that invented DRIPA may be violating its own reconciliation framework.
Read More →Two NDP treaty bills — the K'omoks Treaty Act and Kitselas Treaty Act — are drawing fierce opposition from neighbouring First Nations who say the treaties claim up to 90% of their traditional territories without consent. UBCIC is warning of court action and "direct action on the ground."
Read More →Canada's 30x30 biodiversity plan commits $3.8 billion to protect 30% of the country's lands and waters by 2030 — with Indigenous-managed territories at the centre. What this means for BC's mining, forestry, and resource industries.
Read More →MLA Dallas Brodie's documentary Making a Killing exposes how unverified grave claims triggered a massive government spending spree — with zero confirmed remains.
Read More →David Eby backed down from suspending DRIPA because NDP MLA Joan Phillip — wife of Grand Chief Stewart Phillip — told him she couldn't vote for it. One person's personal conviction rewrote the government's legislative agenda. The conflict of interest writes itself.
Read More →Stewart Phillip runs BC's most powerful Indigenous lobby. His wife Joan sits in the NDP government that funds it. His organization helped write the law her government enforces. No recusal on record.
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