Wednesday, February 11, 2026
ADVT 
National

Ejected MLA says Opposition Leader Rustad selling B.C. to 'elite racial minority'

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 07 Mar, 2025 05:52 PM
  • Ejected MLA says Opposition Leader Rustad selling B.C. to 'elite racial minority'

The B.C. Conservatives' former attorney general critic has lashed out at leader John Rustad, suggesting he and Premier David Eby are beholden to "an elite racial minority" after she was ejected from the Opposition caucus in a row over residential schools.

Dallas Brodie was dumped by Rustad on Friday, the day after a showdown in the Conservative caucus room in which Rustad said Brodie challenged colleagues to fire her and asked for a vote on her removal before walking out.

"The truth is a threat to powerful vested interests in the multi-billion-dollar reconciliation industry," Brodie said in a statement later on Friday.

"Politicians like David Eby and John Rustad are willing to sell off British Columbia’s wealth and power, transferring it from the public to an elite racial minority — enriching opportunistic lawyers, consultants, and chiefs along the way."

It was an explosive culmination to the rift between Rustad and Brodie that has been brewing since she posted on social media on Feb. 22 that "zero" child burials had been confirmed at the Kamloops Indian Residential School. 

Brodie also questioned the “apparent mistreatment” of a lawyer who had asked for the rewording of Law Society training material about residential schools.

Brodie defied Rustad's request to delete the post, and later appeared in a video saying colleagues who criticized her belonged in the governing NDP, appearing to single out Conservative house leader A'aliya Warbus, who is Indigenous.

"There's a person in our party who's Indigenous, and she, you know, was super angry and went to town and joined the NDP to call me out," Brodie said in the video posted to social media.

She also said it was important to have "the truth" about residential schools, "not his truth, her truth, my grandmother's truth … this stuff has to stop."

Brodie used a high-pitched singsong voice as she mimicked those she disagreed with.

By Friday, Rustad had had enough.

"As a result of her decision to publicly mock and belittle testimony from former residential school students, including by mimicking individuals recounting stories of abuses — including child sex abuse — MLA Brodie is not welcome to return to our Conservative Party of BC Caucus," Rustad said in a statement.

In remarks aimed directly at the Member for Vancouver-Quilchena, Rustad said he believed strongly in free speech "however, using your stature and platform as an MLA to mock testimony from victims alleging abuse, including child sex abuse, is where I draw the line."

Rustad said later in a phone interview that he tried to talk with Brodie.

"She refused to have that conversation, and so we felt it required to take the step that she will not be invited back into caucus," Rustad said, calling it an "extremely difficult decision."

"I ran on and built this party on one finite principle, that is that we're going to stand for what's right."

He added that Brodie recently talked about leaving politics and that she wasn't happy with the job.

"I don't know if that's still what she's thinking, or whether she's going to stay involved in politics. It is possible there may be some others who support her position and what she did," Rustad said, hinting at divisions in the party.

Brodie had claimed in the video that she had the support of about 20 MLAs who were "100 per cent behind" her.

Peter Milobar, Conservative MLA for Kamloops Centre and finance critic, said in a phone interview that he "absolutely" agreed with Rustad's decision. 

Milobar, whose wife and children are Indigenous, spoke in the legislature last month about residential school denialism.

Rustad said in his statement that Brodie's ejection "has nothing to do with whether or not there are undiscovered remains at Kamloops Indian Residential School, where it is objectively true that no new bodies have been found."

"This is about an elected MLA using her position of authority to mock testimony of survivors of abuse, including child sex abuse," said Rustad, a former minister of aboriginal relations and reconciliation.

B.C. Attorney General Niki Sharma said in a statement that what Brodie put residential school survivors through was "abhorrent."

“It is deeply unfortunate that John Rustad failed to act for two weeks after her initial comment, and again yesterday even after she mocked residential school survivors and attacked members of his own caucus," Sharma said.

She said it was "a relief to see John Rustad finally act."

Conservative Brennan Day had posted a photo with Warbus on Thursday saying he was "proud to stand behind" her.

Day warned in an interview on Friday against "watering down" the conversation about residential schools. He was speaking before Brodie's ejection was announced, but said afterwards that he supported Rustad's decision.

Justin Leifso, assistant professor of political science at the University of Victoria, said in an emailed statement that "there really weren’t a lot of options for Rustad here."

He added that it was "notable" that Rustad's statement "reiterates doubts about residential schools."

"Rustad gets around it by focusing on the dismissive nature of Brodie’s tone rather than her participating in residential school denialism — seems to me that the party is continuing to try to walk a very fine line, even if they’ve now removed Brodie from caucus," Leifso said.

Steve Kooner, Conservative MLA for Richmond-Queensborough, will be the party's sole critic for attorney general after sharing the position with Brodie, Rustad said. 

Brodie's Feb. 22 posts had shared a link to an article about lawyer James Heller, who unsuccessfully pushed last year for the society's training material to say there were "potentially" burial sites at the former residential school in Kamloops instead of using more definitive language.

Heller is now suing the society over what he calls "false and defamatory" imputations of racism that he says the society republished.

The Tk’emlúps te Secwepemc First Nation said in 2021 that ground-penetrating radar provided “confirmation of the remains of 215 children” at the school site but last year said the radar found “confirmation of 215 anomalies.”

Brodie's ejection reduces the B.C. Conservative ranks in the legislature to 43.

 

MORE National ARTICLES

'Tears of joy' at Gaza ceasefire, but protesting groups in Canada say they won't stop

'Tears of joy' at Gaza ceasefire, but protesting groups in Canada say they won't stop
Vancouver resident Nasser Najjar said he cried tears of joy after hearing that a ceasefire had been reached in the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza on Wednesday. Najjar, who lived in Gaza from 1999 to 2015, still has family in the region where the 15-month-long conflict has killed tens of thousands and displaced hundreds of thousands.

'Tears of joy' at Gaza ceasefire, but protesting groups in Canada say they won't stop

Vancouver backyard chickens practise social distancing from wild birds amid H5N1 risk

Vancouver backyard chickens practise social distancing from wild birds amid H5N1 risk
Lumpy Eye the chicken has made plenty of friends in her East Vancouver neighbourhood over the years, said owner Duncan Martin, with passersby regularly greeting her in the yard outside their home. But now the seven-year-old Bovan Brown hen is being kept in isolation in her coop, to prevent her coming into contact with wild birds — and H5N1 avian influenza.

Vancouver backyard chickens practise social distancing from wild birds amid H5N1 risk

Trudeau names ex-premiers, business and union reps to Canada-U.S. relations council

Trudeau names ex-premiers, business and union reps to Canada-U.S. relations council
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has formed a new Canada-U.S. relations council to support the federal government as it deals with the incoming Trump administration's vow to impose tariffs. The 18 members of the council include Steve Verheul, who was Canada's chief trade negotiator during the renegotiation of NAFTA. 

Trudeau names ex-premiers, business and union reps to Canada-U.S. relations council

Liberal endorsements start to trickle in as Carney launches leadership bid

Liberal endorsements start to trickle in as Carney launches leadership bid
Liberal MPs are starting to reveal which candidates they're backing in the race to replace Justin Trudeau, just as the presumed front-runners get ready to declare they're running. Health Minister Mark Holland, Liberal MPs Ben Carr, Ken McDonald and Stéphane Lauzon, and former cabinet minister Randy Boissonnault say they're supporting former finance minister Chrystia Freeland.

Liberal endorsements start to trickle in as Carney launches leadership bid

Resources minister says many Republicans don't know Trump's plans for tariffs

Resources minister says many Republicans don't know Trump's plans for tariffs
Exactly what president-elect Donald Trump plans to do with tariffs on Canada remains a mystery not just to Canada but to most Republicans, Energy and Natural Resources Minister Jonathan Wilkinson said Thursday.

Resources minister says many Republicans don't know Trump's plans for tariffs

Professional association of B.C. bylaw workers releases cheeky top calls list

Professional association of B.C. bylaw workers releases cheeky top calls list
The professional association for B.C. bylaw workers says among its top 10 "interesting" calls received last year included a resident complaining about  a neighbour "purposefully" flatulating in their general direction as a form of harassment. The Local Government Compliance and Enforcement Association of BC released a list of top "interesting, unique and funny calls" received by bylaw departments in the province last year. 

Professional association of B.C. bylaw workers releases cheeky top calls list