Thursday, June 4, 2026
ADVT 
National

Eby's NDP cabinet 'bloated, expensive,' says B.C. Conservative leader John Rustad

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Nov, 2024 05:06 PM
  • Eby's NDP cabinet 'bloated, expensive,' says B.C. Conservative leader John Rustad

British Columbia Conservative Leader John Rustad says Premier David Eby's new cabinet appears to be a taxpayer-funded loyalty program that rewards NDP caucus.

Eby introduced his new cabinet this week, which includes 23 ministers, four ministers of state and 14 parliamentary secretaries. 

He also announced postings for caucus chair, deputy caucus chair, government whip, deputy government whip and nominees for deputy Speaker, Speaker and committee of the whole deputy chair.

Rustad says in a statement that Eby's appointment of 42 of 47 MLAs to a cabinet or parliamentary secretary postings appears to be a "loyalty program for a premier desperate to cling to power."

Members of the legislature earn an annual basic salary of more than $119,500, with cabinet ministers getting an extra $59,766, which is the same salary boost Rustad receives as Opposition Leader.

Forests Minister Ravi Parmar says in a statement that while Rustad is making claims about an expanded cabinet and promising to force an election, Eby and his team "gets to work on the priorities of British Columbians, like creating good-paying jobs, strengthening health care and delivering a $1,000 middle-class tax cut."

Eby's New Democrats were elected last month with 47 members, a one-seat majority in B.C.'s 93-seat legislature.

MORE National ARTICLES

Surrey Police to replace RCMP in Fall

Surrey Police to replace RCMP in Fall
Solicitor General Mike Farnworth says the deal sees the RCMP being replaced by the independent Surrey Police Service on Nov. 29 as part of a $250-million, 10-year agreement. 

Surrey Police to replace RCMP in Fall

Canadians feeling the financial heat this summer as housing pain intensifies; few see prices for essentials falling

Canadians feeling the financial heat this summer as housing pain intensifies; few see prices for essentials falling
As the mercury rises across the country, inflation has reportedly cooled, leading many Canadians to hope that better financial days lie ahead. Those days, however, are not yet here.

Canadians feeling the financial heat this summer as housing pain intensifies; few see prices for essentials falling

Feds invest $15M in health-care AI development through Vancouver tech cluster program

Feds invest $15M in health-care AI development through Vancouver tech cluster program
Champagne says the funding will be invested through the ministry's Vancouver-based technology cluster program in five medical tech companies, creating technology that automates certain tasks to enhance care.

Feds invest $15M in health-care AI development through Vancouver tech cluster program

Active wildfires tick up in central B.C., risk of lightning coming to the north

Active wildfires tick up in central B.C., risk of lightning coming to the north
There are two wildfires of note, meaning they are either highly visible or pose a threat to public safety, located in northwestern B.C. The wildfire service's map shows a cluster of about two dozen new fires sparked in the Cariboo.

Active wildfires tick up in central B.C., risk of lightning coming to the north

Targeted shooting in Surrey

Targeted shooting in Surrey
Police say they're investigating after a man turned up at the Surrey Memorial Hospital to receive treatment for minor gunshot injuries. R-C-M-P say officers were in the middle of responding to shots-fired reports along 66 Avenue near 127 Street when the man showed up at the hospital.

Targeted shooting in Surrey

Baby killed in crash

Baby killed in crash
Police say it happened early yesterday morning when the family's car collided with a tractor trailer. The two adults in the front were pronounced dead at the scene, while the baby was airlifted to hospital only to die a few hours later.

Baby killed in crash