Category Archives: Politics

Vancouver Votes 2018 | Make Vancouver Great Again

Early Wednesday afternoon, VanRamblings received correspondence from the 10th Vancouver civic party that will offer candidates in the 2018 Vancouver municipal election, the newly registered Restore Vancouver.
Catricide: A New Vancouver Political Party Enters the Fray

Steffan Ileman, mayoralty candidate with Restore Vancouver

Make of the following what you will (all grammatical and syntactical errors are Mr. Ileman’s). Here’s what Restore Vancouver party founder and Vancouver’s newest municipal election mayoralty candidate Steffan Ileman posted to us yesterday afternoon (graphics inserted by VanRamblings) …

Steffan Ileman, the new candidate in the mayoralty race in Vancouver, British Columbia calls it ethnic cleansing of Canadians as more property owners sell out to Asian millionaires and leave the city. He says this is not only ethnic cleansing, but cultural cleansing as well since many businesses are also forced to shut down or leave due to exorbitant rents or property taxes. He says this massive foreign financial intrusion into Vancouver real estate is depriving Canadians and their children of a future in Canada’s Pacific port. As mayor he will do everything possible under the city’s legal jurisdiction, including expropriation, to stop this process.

George Owell. All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others

An entrepreneur with extensive experience in international trade and the air passenger sales business, Ileman came to media attention last summer when he led a protest movement against the proliferation of concrete-separated bike lanes that created traffic gridlocks. He says the bike lanes were a diversion from the real issue: build as many cubicles in the sky as possible for sale in Asia. The city council has turned Vancouver into a toxic concrete jungle unprecedented in the city’s history. As Mayor, Ileman will declare a two-year moratorium on development and renovation permits.

Ileman experienced first-hand the ill effects of an ill-advised city council decision when he personally had to endure a renovation permit issued by the city for replacement of windows with all tenants inside. His two cats died in the toxic environment created by the construction in the building due to government negligence with respect to the safety of tenants. It turned out that through an ill-advised new city bylaw his new windows can only open 4 inches at the bottom, blocking 90-percent of fresh air intake for his suite in the 60-year-old building. Ileman says Vancouver condos built or renovated under this bylaw are unhealthy and unfit for human habitation. He has asked BC Premier John Horgan to rescind this bylaw, and the city’s authority to pass its own building code.

Resist bigotory, racism, xenophobia, homophobia, misogny, hatred, fear

Steffan Ileman is running under the banner Restore Vancouver, a municipal party he created. He will field other candidates for Councillors in the October election. He says the main objective of Restore Vancouver is to create a referendum system using digital technology, a first in Canada, for real, participatory democracy. Ileman also intends to lobby for the people of Vancouver in the federal and provincial capitals. He says carbon tax is a scam that will do nothing to protect the environment.

Gosh, VanRamblings was concerned that in the coming election, voters would have only two choices in Wai Young’s Coalition Vancouver and Fred Harding and Jesse Johl’s Vancouver 1st party for which to cast a ballot if they were opposed to those toxic concrete jungle-creating bike lanes.
Thank goodness that Steffan Ileman and Restore Vancouver have come onto the scene to offer voters a third alternative to ensure that those durn, dastardly, health-creating, environmentally responsible, and wildly popular bike lanes are taken down, and blown to smithereens! More cars we say!

Tanya Paz, HUB Vancouver and Mobi Bike Share are committed to cyclists and cycling

We’re pretty sure that longtime City Hall Active Transportation Policy Council Chairperson and current and VDLC-endorsed Vision Vancouver City Council candidate Tanya Paz will sleep better tonight knowing that Mr. Ileman is on the case to ensure that her work, and the work of her committee members, will have come to naught should he be elected Mayor.
We’re pretty sure, too, the folks at HUB and mobi bike share will be darned thrilled with Mr. Ileman. Or maybe not. Who knows? It’s all so confusing.
And don’t get us started on Mr. Ileman’s use of the term “ethnic cleansing.”
And maybe he’s on to something when he argues for “a two-year moratorium on development and renovation permits.” Of course, that would mean no affordable housing construction — but, heck, who needs that sorta thing anyway, y’know? Take us back to a time that never was, bring the Trump revolution to Vancouver, and be sure to vote Restore Vancouver. Not!

Vancouver Votes 2018 | The Re-Emergence of COPE

Win the City We Need. Vote COPE on October 20th in the Vancouver municipal election.

The 2018 Vancouver municipal election has been full of surprises, but none more revelatory than the Coalition of Progressive Electors’ (COPE) re-emergence as serious contenders at all three levels of civic governance.
COPE: the must party for which to cast a ballot for those among us who want real, palpable change — which is to say, a municipal political party dedicated to the construction of thousands of units of truly affordable “social” housing, ranging from democratically-run housing co-ops, co-housing, supportive housing, modular housing, rental housing, town homes, and environmentally sound low-rise apartment buildings and townhouses in every one of Vancouver’s twenty-three neighbourhoods.
COPE’s progressive City Council candidates Anne Roberts, Derrick O’Keefe and Jean Swanson are laser-focused on the provision of affordable housing for all of us, to reclaiming Vancouver for working people across all of our diverse neighbourhoods, in all of our diverse communities.

Adriane Carr and Pete Fry, Green Party of Vancouver 2018 candidates for City CouncilAdriane Carr & Pete Fry working with COPE + OneCity Vancouver to build the city we need

Working with OneCity Vancouver’s Christine Boyle and Brandon Yan, and the Green Party’s Adriane Carr and Pete Fry, together these Council candidates of conscience would constitute the working majority at City Hall post October 20th, where they would set an agenda focused on ensuring that all families would be afforded safe, secure housing at affordable rates.
Sound like a pipe dream? Not on your life.

Derrick O'Keefe, Jean Swanson and Anne Roberts, 2018 COPE candidates for Vancouver City Council

In COPE candidate for City Council Derrick O’Keefe, Vancouver now has our very own articulate, inspiring and winning social justice fighter, kin to Seattle’s much-beloved Kshama Sawant, New York City’s wildly popular Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Victoria’s Ben Isitt — someone who will stand up for you, for the planet, and for the folks who live in your neighbourhood.
All elections are crucial, but none more so than Vancouver’s 2018 municipal election. Derrick, Jean Swanson and Anne Roberts not only promise change, each is committed to achieving and accomplishing change for the better that is fair, just and serves the interests of the many over the few.
Surely, heading into the 2018 Vancouver civic election, you don’t want more of the same, the politics of meanness and scarcity, the continuing ugliness of the depletion of our city’s physical and social environment, made even more grave and consuming of our every waking thought by the grip of Vancouver’s ever-worsening affordable housing crisis, a ruinous city and province where the redistribution of money from hardworking British Columbians like you and me serves only to line the pockets of the idle and undeserving, at the continuing insupportable expense of our families.
The Vancouver Non-Partisan Association, Yes Vancouver, Wai Young’s so-called Coalition Party and Fred Harding’s Vancouver 1st civic parties promise only austerity, wont and increased social and economic anxiety, and a tragic political paradigm that promises an even more virulent attack on the social and economic interests of working people, in order that the interests of the economically privileged few might be better served.

Christine Boyle, Brandon Yan and Sarah Blyth, must-elects in the 2018 Vancouver civic election

The 2018 Vancouver civic election is about nothing less than the survival of our community, how going forward we will we organize our communal life and rule ourselves compatible with our economic and social interests.
In 2018, the choices we will make at the ballot box are stark: a vote for COPE’s Anne Roberts, Derrick O’Keefe and Jean Swanson, OneCity Vancouver’s Christine Boyle and Brandon Yan, and the Green Party’s Pete Fry and Adriane Carr — complemented, perhaps, by Rob McDowell, Sarah Blyth and Sarah Kirby-Yung — or the irrecoverable ruination of our city and our physical environment. October 20th: the choice will be yours to make.

Vancouver Votes 2018 | Non-Partisan Association

2018 Vancouver Non-Partisan Association candidates for City Council and Park BoardThe happy, smiling 2018 NPA crew seeking office for Mayor, Council and Park Board

Two months ago, VanRamblings would have told you that the Vancouver Non-Partisan Association was all but a lock to become the majority party at Vancouver City Hall come the evening of October 20th. Not anymore.
When the NPA announced its candidate slate on July 31st, initially we were impressed: six of nine of their candidates for Council are women! When three of the four Green Party candidates for Council are men, and with most of the other parties (save COPE) offering mostly men for office, the surfeit of accomplished women running for Council with the NPA reinforces the notion that the 2018 Non-Partisan Association is not your ma and pa’s NPA, but a decidedly more progressive centre-right civic governance party.
The more women in civic government, the happier VanRamblings will be.
But, alas, VanRamblings believes that all is not well on the NPA front when it comes to electing a surfeit of candidates to City Council this autumn (no reflection on the candidates, most of whom we know, like, respect and admire), so as to gain their much sought after majority at City Hall. Even though it’s still too early to predict, we continue to believe Ken Sim to be the odds on favourite to secure the Mayor’s chair come October 20th.
Where, then, has the NPA “gone wrong”, and how have they managed to hurt their chances to secure their much cherished majority on Vancouver City Council? Read on and we’ll tell you …

  • Outsized slate. With left-of-centre parties running shortened slates, with OneCity Vancouver offering two candidates for Council, the Greens 4, and COPE 3, how in tarnation did the NPA think that running a near full Council slate would do them at all well when it comes to the vote this upcoming October? Vancouver voters are not slate voters — you’d think the NPA, which ran shortened slates in 2011 and 2014, would know better than to run a near full slate, and risk splitting the vote among their ‘far too many’ Council candidates. Apparently not. Alas.

    We’ve heard from various sources within the NPA that it was NPA apparatchik Peter Armstrong and mayoralty candidate Ken Sim who wanted to run a full slate. Peter, sophisticated politico that he is oughta know better, and Ken Sim — well, maybe, he’s just a tad over-confident.

    Whatever the case, with some 50 candidates for Council running with nine different Vancouver civic parties (if you include Jamie Lee Hamilton’s IDEA party), and at least a few independents whose candidacies for Council could succeed (think Rob McDowell and Sarah Blyth), running nine candidates for Council is akin to the NPA shooting itself in the foot even before the election has properly gotten underway.

  • Division and dislike. Three of the NPA’s female Council candidates have a visceral dislike, bordering on hatred, for one another (and, no, we’re not going to say who those three are), which oughta make for fun times on the hustings and at all-candidates meetings in September and October, and not so much fun in the NPA caucus over the next 9 weeks.

  • Rob McDowell. In the 2014 Vancouver civic election, the NPA’s Rob McDowell secured 53965 hard-fought-for and well-deserved votes, has long sat as a member of the NPA Board, came up with the new purple colour scheme and the New Progressive Association nomenclature for the party. Rob — an incredibly bright man of much accomplishment, and someone we have long admired — is one of the most respected politicos in town, and is much loved, respected and admired within the party. And yet, and yet, Rob did not secure an NPA nomination for Vancouver City Council! How can that be? For VanRamblings, not putting Rob McDowell on the ballot beggars belief — and we are far from alone in believing that both within and outside of the Non-Partisan Association. Rob is now running as an independent — not out of a sense of pique, but because of his broad support in the community across the political spectrum.

Too many Council candidates, candidates “not on the same page” politically or policy-wise, and without Rob McDowell in the mix, the NPA would seem to be hewing to an overcrowded (far) right politically in the 2018 Vancouver civic election. All of which smacks of a hubris that won’t serve them well.
Still and all, VanRamblings has every intention of endorsing Sarah Kirby-Yung for Council (and writing recommendable things of at least two more), will support John Coupar and Casey Crawford for Park Board (and probably more NPA Park Board candidates), and will most assuredly endorse our friend Christopher Richardson for Vancouver School Board.
We know each of these very fine people mentioned above well, believe them to be great and good public servants of the first order, and believe, as well, that the electorate will be well-served by casting a vote for each.

Vancouver Votes 2018 | VanRamblings’ Election Coverage Resumes

2018 Vancouver Civic Election, My City My Vote. October 20 2018.

Two months from today, British Columbians will go to the polls to elect civic governments in their municipalities to four year terms of office.
As is always the case in a democracy, voting is crucial to our future — look what happened down south when not enough Democrats and independents got out to the polls in 2016 to cast a ballot for Hillary Clinton.
Commencing on Tuesday, August 21st, VanRamblings will take a look at where we are election-wise in Vancouver nine weeks out from election day, Saturday, October 20th, each day taking an in-depth, non-partisan look at each of the civic parties offering candidates for office.
On the right, there’s the Vancouver Non-Partisan Association, Wai Young’s Coalition Party, YES Vancouver and Vancouver First, and on the left, you’ll find a renewed Coalition of Progressive Electors, OneCity Vancouver (star candidate, Christine Boyle), Vision Vancouver, and Pro Vancouver.
All but one of the civic parties running candidates in the 2018 Vancouver municipal election have announced their candidates for City Council, Park Board and School Board, including eight serious-minded, well-funded charismatic candidates who have announced for Mayor, each of whom will be seeking your vote when the advance polls open on Wednesday, October 10th, through until 8pm ten days later when the polls close.