Dallas Brodie’s OneBC Post Game Gives Supporters Long-Form Receipts
June 19, 2026 · iVoteOneBC research desk
Dallas Brodie’s latest long-form YouTube update is a useful signal for supporters: instead of relying on short clips or filtered coverage, she is putting the recall fight, town-hall disputes, and post-leadership-race unity questions into a direct public conversation.
What is verified
The Dallas Brodie / OneBC YouTube channel published a video titled “Dallas Brodie on Recall & Kamloops Event Chaos! (OneBC Post Game)” on June 14, 2026. The video description says Dallas Brodie and Wyatt Claypool discussed the recall campaign in Vancouver–Quilchena, the Kamloops event dispute, Kerry-Lynne Findlay as the new BC Conservative leader, whether David Eby is going out as BC NDP leader, and the June 14 Kelowna town hall.
That makes the video a direct movement-communications item, not a rumour. The correct supporter takeaway is narrow and defensible: OneBC is continuing to publish long-form updates around the exact files this site has been tracking — recall, venue fairness, the Backbone of BC Tour, and the unresolved question of broader right-of-centre unity after the BC Conservative leadership race.
Why supporters should care
Dallas Brodie’s strongest advantage is not simply that she is controversial. It is that she is willing to stay in the room long enough to argue the case. A long-form “Post Game” format gives supporters something better than slogan politics: a chance to hear how Brodie frames pressure campaigns, public meetings, conservative unity, and NDP accountability in her own words.
That matters during the recall period. Vancouver–Quilchena voters are being asked to judge more than one headline. They deserve the full record: constituency service, legislative positions, public town halls, policy arguments, and how Brodie responds when opponents try to shut down or discredit the conversation.
The accountable way to track it
- Do credit direct communication: long-form video lets voters evaluate Dallas Brodie without relying only on hostile summaries.
- Do not invent metrics: this article does not claim membership totals, petition signatures, fundraising totals, polling, or alliance terms.
- Keep the watch items separate: the Findlay leadership result is verified; any OneBC–BC Conservative arrangement still needs public terms before anyone claims a deal.
- Keep town halls in view: Kamloops and Kelowna have now produced sourced outcome stories; Prince George remains the cleaner open venue-change file unless new reporting closes it.
The positive read is simple: Dallas Brodie keeps choosing direct public explanation over managed silence. For a new party trying to prove it is more than a protest vehicle, that is the right habit.