Independent supporter site · Not authorized by, affiliated with, endorsed by, or funded by OneBC, Dallas Brodie, or any candidate
OneBC / Alliance Tracker / BC Conservative Leadership

Final hours before the accord test: what OneBC supporters should watch

May 28, 2026 · iVoteOneBC research desk

OneBC accord watch graphic for the final hours before the May 30 BC Conservative leadership result

The BC Conservative leadership vote closes Friday, May 29 at 8:00 a.m. PT. Results are scheduled for Saturday, May 30. For Dallas Brodie and OneBC supporters, that makes the next two days simple: watch whether the reported Brodie–Fulmer accord becomes a live unity strategy — and do not guess beyond the public record.

Bottom line: The accord is still conditional. If Yuri Fulmer wins, public reporting says the OneBC / Fulmer unity plan can move from promise to practical election strategy. If another candidate wins, OneBC remains independent and the unity file resets around the new leader.
What is verified now
Vote windowThe BC Conservative FAQ lists voting from May 23 at 8:00 a.m. PT to May 29 at 8:00 a.m. PT, with results announced May 30.
Five-candidate ballotThe party lists Iain Black, Caroline Elliott, Kerry-Lynne Findlay, Yuri Fulmer, and Peter Milobar as contestants.
OneBC statusOneBC’s official site still lists Dallas Brodie as interim leader and Vancouver–Quilchena MLA, plus Jim McMurtry as the listed Delta South candidate.
Tour still activeOneBC still lists June Backbone of BC Tour stops in Kamloops, Prince George, and Kelowna, with venues marked TBA.
Why this matters

Dallas Brodie’s strategic argument has been consistent: British Columbia cannot afford another election where voters who want change split into pieces while the NDP benefits. That is the political purpose of the reported Unite the Right Accord.

Radio NL and CityNews Vancouver have reported that the Brodie–Fulmer agreement would have OneBC stand down in most ridings if Fulmer wins, while Conservatives would step aside in five targeted ridings for OneBC. The reviewed public sources still do not finalize those five ridings, so this site will not name or invent them.

The Tyee reported Wednesday that BC Conservative leadership campaigns signed up about 42,000 members and that roughly 26,000 were eligible after identity verification. Those are BC Conservative leadership-race figures, not OneBC membership numbers. They are still relevant because they show the scale of the vote that will decide whether the accord has a path forward.

The accountability angle

The leadership race is also ending under scrutiny. Business in Vancouver reported unproven allegations involving Kerry-Lynne Findlay’s 2025 federal campaign; Findlay’s campaign disputed the claims and said it had not received documentation of the allegations. That story should be handled carefully, but it reinforces a larger point: unity without accountability is not enough.

That is where Brodie’s supporter case is strongest. The OneBC lane is not just about arithmetic. It is about courage, written commitments, and a willingness to put hard public questions on the table: property rights, DRIPA, parental authority, taxes, safety, government cost, and democratic reform.

What happens next
  1. May 29: voting closes at 8:00 a.m. PT.
  2. May 30: results are scheduled to be announced at the leadership convention.
  3. If Fulmer wins: iVoteOneBC will track whether the reported accord is confirmed, implemented, clarified, or changed.
  4. If another candidate wins: iVoteOneBC will track how that leader treats OneBC voters, Dallas Brodie’s priorities, and the anti-NDP unity question.
No invented numbers: This update does not claim OneBC membership totals, polling, finalized ridings, venue-cancellation claims, or guaranteed alliance terms. It tracks only the official vote schedule, official OneBC pages, and publicly reported accord details.
Independent disclaimer: iVoteOneBC.ca is an independently operated supporter and commentary site. It is not authorized by, affiliated with, endorsed by, or funded by OneBC, Dallas Brodie, Yuri Fulmer, the Conservative Party of BC, or any candidate. Source links are provided for public-interest political commentary.