Tuesday, June 9, 2026
ADVT 
National

Vancouver council votes against sanctioning Mayor Ken Sim after harassment finding

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 03 Jun, 2026 09:11 AM
  • Vancouver council votes against sanctioning Mayor Ken Sim after harassment finding

Vancouver's city council has voted not to sanction Mayor Ken Sim after he was found to have misused the influence of his office and harassed a councillor.

All six of Sim's ABC party members voted on Tuesday against acting on the findings of the Integrity Commissioner's investigation into Sim's actions against Councillor Sean Orr.

The other four councillors, including Orr, voted for sanctioning Sim, while the mayor did not vote after declaring a conflict in the matter.

The investigator's report released in May centred on a news conference by Sim at City Hall in April 2025 and a social media post by the mayor later that year, which represented Orr as antisemitic.

The report found Sim's criticisms violated the council's code of conduct as they were akin to a personal call-out of Orr rather than protecting Vancouver's Jewish community.

The investigator, Jamie Pytel, recommended that council to ask Sim to apologize, or to consider possible sanctions, but Sim said he disagreed with the findings and his comments were part of his duties to "stand shoulder-to-shoulder" with the Jewish community.

Sim is being sued for defamation by Orr over a different news conference at City Hall in which he falsely claimed Orr had handed out drugs on Christmas Day.

Picture Courtesy: THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck

MORE National ARTICLES

'More pleasant': Canadian Muslims mark first full winter Ramadan in years

'More pleasant': Canadian Muslims mark first full winter Ramadan in years
Canadian Muslims are marking the start of Ramadan on Wednesday, but one thing will be new about the most festive and holiest month in Islam.

'More pleasant': Canadian Muslims mark first full winter Ramadan in years

Prime Minister Carney returning to B.C. one week after mass shooting

Prime Minister Carney returning to B.C. one week after mass shooting
Prime Minister Mark Carney is returning to B.C. today less than a week after he attended a vigil honouring the victims of a mass shooting in Tumbler Ridge, B.C.

Prime Minister Carney returning to B.C. one week after mass shooting

Tough sell for B.C. budget featuring tax hike, record deficit and construction delays

Tough sell for B.C. budget featuring tax hike, record deficit and construction delays
British Columbia's finance minister has started to sell her "tough" budget, but at least one business leader says Brenda Bailey should have made deeper cuts because of the "scary" deficit numbers. 

Tough sell for B.C. budget featuring tax hike, record deficit and construction delays

B.C. budget eyes staffing but finance minister says no big service cuts or tax hikes

B.C. budget eyes staffing but finance minister says no big service cuts or tax hikes
The British Columbia government won't be making big service cuts or raising taxes in the 2026 budget, even as it faces a projected $11.2 billion deficit.

B.C. budget eyes staffing but finance minister says no big service cuts or tax hikes

Janice Charette to be Canada's top trade negotiator during CUSMA review

Janice Charette to be Canada's top trade negotiator during CUSMA review
Canada's former top public servant Janice Charette will serve as the country's chief trade negotiator to the United States during a crucial review of the North American free-trade pact, Prime Minister Mark Carney's office announced on Monday.

Janice Charette to be Canada's top trade negotiator during CUSMA review

Carney strategy for defence industry pledges 125,000 jobs, sweeping policy changes

Carney strategy for defence industry pledges 125,000 jobs, sweeping policy changes
The Liberal government is making sweeping changes to the way it approaches supporting the domestic defence industry, as Canada looks to transition away from overreliance on the United States for military gear.

Carney strategy for defence industry pledges 125,000 jobs, sweeping policy changes