The two-MLA OneBC party is in upheaval as leader Dallas Brodie insists she remains in charge, while the party’s board and MLA Tara Armstrong say she has been ousted, with both sides airing their dispute publicly.
OneBC was designated an official party in June after Brodie was ejected from the B.C. Conservative caucus. Brodie took on the role of party leader while Armstrong was the party’s House leader.
“Due to my loss of confidence in Ms. Brodie and her removal as OneBC’s party leader, I will not be caucusing with her, and will be writing to the Speaker to advise him of that,” Armstrong wrote. “After days of silence by the leader, and the sudden removal of the very people who helped build OneBC - without conversation, explanation, or accountability, I was left with a profound sense of sadness and disbelief.”
Armstrong said that the “unauthorized data breach” was acknowledged to her in writing and crossed a red line for her.
She said she uncovered new information about online and offline perspectives being shared by a party contractor last week that she found inappropriate. That, in addition to existing disagreements she had with him, led her to demand he be removed from any position with her caucus and the party, she said.
However, Brodie said when she tried to terminate the contractor she was undermined by former chief of staff Tim Thielmann and interim director Paul Ratchford. She said, instead, Thielmann fired a different member of the team for also voicing concerns about the contractor Brodie had let go. That contractor was later revealed to be American political consultant Othman Mekhloufi.
Staff Weigh In
OneBC communications and policy advisor Wyatt Claypool told the Epoch Times that Brodie is still leader and said he expects the party to be able to recover from the split.“I think this was all just a move out of spite, to hold us up,” he said in a Dec. 15 phone interview.
He alleged that Brodie yelled at Mekhloufi as well as other staff and was annoyed that he was “not sufficiently deferential to her.”
Thielmann said he and Ratchford had asked her to treat staff better and not to fire Mekhloufi.
Mike Harris, who had put himself forward as a OneBC candidate for the Langford-Highlands riding, announced he was withdrawing his candidacy as a result of the “soap opera” going on in the party.
Parties require at least two elected members in order to get official party status in the B.C. legislature.
The turmoil in OneBC comes two weeks after John Rustad’s resignation as leader of the B.C. Conservatives.
Brodie and Armstrong didn’t respond to a request for comment by publication time.







