Category Archives: #VanPoli Civic Politics

#VanPoli | A Friendship | Vancouver City Councillor Colleen Hardwick


First term Vancouver City Councillor and 2022 Mayoral hopeful, Colleen Hardwick

In 2013, a group of community activists came together to Save Kits Beach, a community-led environmental response to a Vision Vancouver proposal to run a 12-foot wide asphalt bike path through Hadden and Kitsilano Beach parks.

Although I had known Colleen in the years prior to 2013 — both as an arts reporter writing about the film industry, in which she was involved, as well as working with her father, the late Dr. Walter Hardwick, in the late 1980s / early 1990s on the Livable Region Project — it was not until 2013 that Colleen and I came to know each other better, working on Save Kits Beach, when we first became true friends.

In mid-2016, when I was diagnosed with hilar cholangiocarcinoma, Colleen gave me a call one morning, and in her inimitable, straightforward manner exclaimed boldly to me over the phone, “If you’re going to beat this thing, Raymond, you’re going to need a spiritual element in your life. I’ll be picking you up this coming Sunday morning at 10 a.m. to take you to church!”

During the course of the telephone call Colleen revealed to me that she, too, had earlier been diagnosed with cancer, and that she was still in recovery, as was a good (and mutual) friend of ours, Tina Oliver — who was still receiving treatment. If you know Colleen, you know that there’s no refusing her when she has her mind set, so that next Sunday morning, I dragged myself out of my sick bed, and the two of us headed off to Fairview Baptist Church — where I gratefully attend to this day.

Quite obviously, Colleen was right — for despite my terminal cancer diagnosis, I am still here today, grateful to be alive, and thankful for Colleen’s friendship.

Over the years, Colleen had spoken with me about making a run for Vancouver City Council. In 2014, she created A Better City, the name of the nascent Vancouver political party since “appropriated” for the upcoming 2022 Vancouver municipal election by former Non-Partisan Association President, Peter Armstrong — without permission, of course, with not even a call, text or e-mail posted / made to Colleen.


A Better City, a political party created by City Councillor Colleen Hardwick in 2014

After much thought and discussions with friends, Colleen made the difficult decision not to make a bid for elected office in 2014, under the ABC banner.

All that changed,  however, in 2018, when Peter Armstrong approached and pleaded with Colleen to run for Vancouver civic office under the Non-Partisan Association (NPA) banner — about which she had significant misgivings, not the least of which was the lack of a nomination process.

Having run with the NPA in the 2005 Vancouver municipal election, where she placed 14th after a hard fought campaign, Colleen decided to take Peter up on his offer to fund her civic election campaign, as he all but assured Colleen of her election to Vancouver civic office on October 20.

In fact, Colleen placed a very respectable fifth place in the hard fought 2018 Vancouver civic election, where she would sit as one of five Non-Partisan Association City Councillors — all women —  the others: second term Councillor Melissa De Genova, Lisa Dominato, Rebecca Bligh, and barely squeaking onto Council, former Vancouver Park Board Chairperson, Sarah Kirby-Yung.


Vancouver City Councillor Colleen Hardwick looks askance at a Council colleague

In the five weeks following her election as a City Councillor, then City Manager Sadhu Johnson arranged an orientation for the newly-elected Councillors, during which time the Councillors became intimately familiar with how the city works, with visits to each of the City’s departments, from Planning to Engineering, and Transportation, and beyond, including instruction on City “processes”. During the orientation, the Councillors got to know one another well.

At the Council table, to Colleen’s right sat Christine Boyle, and to her left, Pete Fry. Colleen already knew Pete, but apart from what I had written about Christine during the course of the 2018 Vancouver civic election, was not all that familiar with Ms. Boyle, and what she “brought to the table.” From the outset, Christine let it be known that each and every one of us is living on the stolen lands of the Coast Salish peoples, raising issues of indigenous relations with novice Vancouver City Councillor, Colleen Hardwick.

Quite an education it proved for Ms. Hardwick, who came to like, respect and admire her principled, younger, distaff Council colleague.

As it happens, there was to be no “mutual admiration society” extant between the two nascent Vancouver City Councillors. Christine Boyle implicitly and explicitly let it be known — with a viciousness that Colleen found both perplexing and unsettling — that she despised Colleen and all that she “stood for”, that she would not work with her, had no interest in developing any kind of working relationship with her more mature Council colleague, that she considered Colleen to be a “right winger” and would set about to make Colleen’s life on Council “a living hell.”

And thus the Christine Boyle-created narrative of Colleen Hardwick as a morbid, unredeemable and entirely loathsome “right winger” was born.

As proved to be the case over the next two years, Vancouver City Council’s chief  dissembler — Christine Boyle — was more than true to her word.

Even more, when other of Colleen’s City Council seatmates saw how vicious was the treatment Colleen was being afforded by Christine Boyle, the three men on Council (Mayor Kennedy Stewart, and Green Councillors, Pete Fry and Michael Wiebe) — or as I like to refer to them, the Three Misogynist Musketeers — were only too happy to pile on the train of hate throwing rotten fruit at Colleen, with Christine Boyle handing them the fetid, putrid projectiles.

On two occasions in December 2019, at the end of our regular Sunday church service, Colleen threw herself into my arms, crying and inconsolable, that when I was able to settle her down was told by her that sitting on Council had become too much. The hateful treatment she was afforded at every Council meeting, most particularly by Christine Boyle, but also by Mayor Kennedy Stewart and Councillors Pete Fry and Michael Wiebe, was more than she could bear, it was unrelenting.

Never had she been so miserable, at any point in her life, she cried out.

As it happens, I attended the OneCity Vancouver AGM later in the month of that December, making contact with Christine, telling her how much Colleen had admired her in their early days on Council, how much she had learned from Christine, how grateful Colleen was for the humanity Christine brought to the issue of our relations and collective obligation to our Indigenous peoples.

While staring daggers at me as I made my exclamatory statement, Christine harrumphed, spitting out “I’m not interested,” then briskly walked away.

And this was at a pre-Christmas / Hannukah celebration by a whole passel of OneCity Vancouver members — just about the kindest, most welcoming, generous and socially conscious, as well as activist people you’d ever want to meet.

In March 2020, when a decision was to be made — arising from the demands of the just declared pandemic — Council decided that until further notice that Council meetings would be held virtually through WebEx. Both Councillors Boyle & Fry posted bitter tweets deriding Ms. Hardwick, with Pete tweeting, “At least I don’t have to sit next to that whack job anymore,” referring to Colleen.

A tamped down Pete Fry tweet deriding Councillor Colleen Hardwick

That original tweet has since been deleted. The sentiment and ill-regard remains.

Later, when Christine Boyle — the Chairperson of Council’s Selection Committee — insisted that independent Councillors Melissa De Genova and Sarah Kirby-Yung resign their positions on Council Advisory Committees (which they did … to this day it befuddles me as to why Melissa, by far the toughest person on Council, puts up with Christine’s hateful nonsense, with nary a response to Ms. Boyle’s myriad provocations), and when Ms. Kirby-Yung, Ms. De Genova and Ms. Dominato recommended Councillor Hardwick for a position on the expanded Selection Committee, Christine Boyle cried long and loud that she would not sit on a Selection Committee with … well, let’s not record what the Councillor actually said, but it weren’t pretty, it weren’t kind, and it certainly wasn’t collegial, nor professional.

The Mayor finally had to intervene in response to Councillor Boyle’s childish tantrum, and appointed Councillor Hardwick to the Selection Committee.

All of the above is by way of saying that I’ve had it up to here with the ill treatment Colleen has been afforded on City Council — enough’s enough!

And, no, this is not Raymond Tomlin riding in on his white steed to rescue the damsel in distress. On her most emotionally fraught day, Councillor Colleen Hardwick is 100x tougher than I am, have ever been, or will ever be. Colleen hardly needs my “help” — my friendship and loyalty, maybe, but just that.


Colleen Hardwick and her daughter,  at the 1984 Liberal Party leadership convention 

Let me state for the record: Colleen Hardwick is not a right-winger — as a lifelong member of the Liberal party, and as a multi-term member of the Vancouver Centre Liberal riding executive, Colleen has always been a left-of-centre Liberal, from the time she fought for child care, when in 1984 she attended the Liberal leadership convention, when child care was hardly on anyone’s agenda, but it was on hers, Colleen has always remained a progressive, yet reasonable and centrist Liberal, very much in the mold of former Liberal Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau, a political leader she has greatly admired all of her adult life.

#VanPoli Politics | The Pending Chaos of the 2022 Vancouver Civic Election

In somewhat under a year — Saturday, October 15, 2022 to be exact — the next Vancouver municipal election will take place, when a Mayor and 10 City Councillors will be elected to civic office at Vancouver City Hall in our fair city by the sea.

Although VanRamblings will not commence intensive coverage of Vancouver’s next civic election until sometime in the spring of 2022, there is enough going on politics-wise in our city to comment on the state of municipal political affairs — which is what VanRamblings will set out to do over the next couple of weeks.

Why all the hubbub about Vancouver politics in the autumn of 2021?

When our NDP provincial government brought in legislation governing the conduct of municipal elections — limiting / eliminating third party advertising in the three months prior to the election date, while also limiting the expenditure of monies each civic party, and candidate, could spend towards the goal of achieving civic office — the doors were left wide open to spend any amount of money in the civic arena prior to the exertion of British Columbia’s civic election “restriction date”.

Thus you have A Better City mayoral candidate Ken Sim — who in the 2018 Vancouver civic election ran as Mayoral candidate for the Non-Partisan Association, coming within 1,000 votes of becoming our city’s Mayor — holding a campaign kickoff and fundraiser this past Wednesday at Chinatown’s Floata Seafood Restaurant, where all of Vancouver’s esteemed civic reporters were on hand to nosh on food, and otherwise kibbitz with one another and attendees at this swish municipal affairs soirée. That Peter Armstrong (Mr. Sim’s main financial backer, who introduced Sim to civic politics), he sure does know how to put on a feed.

Current Vancouver Mayor Kennedy Stewart has announced that he’ll seek re-election in 2022. Longtime political fixer and campaign strategist extraordinaire, Mark Marissen, has announced his bid for Mayor, as has current Park Board Commissioner John Coupar. Vancouver City Councillor Colleen Hardwick has also served notice that she will seek the Mayoral nomination with  a reinvigorated TEAM (The Electors Action Movement) civic party — that’s five mayoral candidates.

VanRamblings believes that the 2022 Vancouver municipal election will prove to be the ugliest and most divisive civic election ever waged in our west coast burgh, that there’ll be no end of bad behaviour from the myriad candidates putting their names forward in the hope of gaining office and tenure on Vancouver City Council, that OneCity Vancouver — and more particularly, OneCity Vancouver’s resident ‘mean girl’ Council mainstay, Christine Boyle — will run a vicious campaign of unrivaled and unmitigated class warfare against the parties and candidates OneCity has already successfully defined as “right wing”, with the media buying into this condemnable nonsense hook, line and sinker. Alas — it was always thus. ?

#VanPoli | Vancouver City Council | Wiebe MUST Resign | Pt. 3

The Green Party of Vancouver has proved to be not such a lovely group of coconuts

Today on VanRamblings, the third and final column on Green Party of Vancouver City Councillor, Michael Weibe, and why he must do the honourable thing, and immediately resign his position on Council.

Anything Goes | The Big Cover-Up, and the Trumpian World of the “We Will Not Be Questioned. Don’t TryGreen Party of Vancouver

Vancouver City Councillor Adriane Carr comes to the defense of her colleague Michael Wiebe

Within 57 minutes, less than an hour, long serving Vancouver City Councillor Adriane Carr, following the publication of an article by Charlie Smith, the editor of The Georgia Straight, on the findings of the report of veteran municipal affairs lawyer Raymond Young, mandating that her Green Party of Vancouver City Council colleague, Michael Wiebe, must immediately vacate his office and resign from Council — arising from an egregious, self-dealing Conflict of Interest, where Mr. Young found that the Councillor had placed the interests of two businesses he owns above the interests of the citizens of Vancouver — published the tweet above.

Three-term Councillor Adriane Carr might well be seen to have adopted a “shoot the messenger” political strategy, a troubling extension of the consistently discouraging modus operandi of the U.S. President — who always goes after those who question the veracity of his character — and as is the case with Mr. Trump, the allegations she makes in her tweet are absolutely fact free, and utterly without foundation. Apparently, Councillor Carr is unfamiliar with the central tenets of Crisis Management 101.

For the record, as VanRamblings reported yesterday, when Raymond Young was brought on by City Manager Sadhu Johnston to conduct an investigation of the actions of Councillor Michael Wiebe, arising from a complaint filed by non-practicing lawyer, Michael Redmond, Mr. Wiebe readily agreed to Mr. Young taking on the role of investigator, committing to his full co-operation with the investigation.

Again, as VanRamblings published yesterday, in fact, at no point over the course of the summer did Councillor Wiebe either meet with Mr. Young, or provide answers to any of the questions submitted in writing by Mr. Young to Mr. Wiebe, nor did Councillor Wiebe provide any aid whatsoever to Mr. Young in the conduct of the Code of Conduct complaint that had been lodged against him, and Mr. Young had been hired to investigate.

As one of Councillor Wiebe’s colleagues told VanRamblings yesterday …

“Michael likes to skate by, generally poorly prepared and cavalier in his approach. Certainly, that’s what many of his colleagues in the Green Party have observed, and as Commissioners found during his tenure on Park Board, that’s the way he conducted himself throughout the 2014 – 2018 period. Seems Michael Wiebe didn’t learn very much during his first term of elected office, and if the present circumstance is any indication, still hasn’t. Michael has clearly decided that his best strategy is to hunker down, and play the innocent card. We’ll see how that works out for him.”

In her tweet above, Councillor Carr expresses concern about “no due process”, therein attacking not just the integrity of the process conducted by investigator Raymond Young, but impugning the professional reputation, character and integrity of one of Canada’s most respected jurists, as she once again adopts Donald Trump’s practice to libel the person whose opinion s/he doesn’t agree with. Councillor Carr seems to have learned her Trumpian lesson well: attack, attack, attack — City Manager, Sadhu Johnston; veteran municipal affairs lawyer and UBC professor, Raymond Young; and her colleague, Mayor Kennedy Stewart — and add libel, unrighteous indignation, and character assassination as the cherry on top.

One can only anticipate what the B.C. Supreme Court Justice who rules on the matter of whether to remove Councillor Wiebe from office will have to say, as he reads his ruling in open Court, about Vancouver City Councillor Adriane Carr’s clearly libelous, wrong-headed, & utterly self-serving tweet.

lois-pedley-reply-to-ray.jpg

Councillor Adriane Carr is not alone in adopting Trumpian tactics, although Green Party of Vancouver School Board trustee Lois Chan-Pedley is somewhat more measured and kindly (a fan of Dr. Henry, no doubt) in her Trumpian tactics of obfuscation and misdirection (what can we say? We like being called “Raymond”, Raymond over Ray, although investigator / lawyer Raymond Young prefers Ray over Raymond — and there you have it).

appeal to authority

VanRamblings is mightily pleased that Ms. Chan-Pedley enjoyed her Philosophy 101 course in her early days of university, and that the concept of “appeal to authority” made such an impression on her young mind. VanRamblings, too, enjoyed Philosophy 101, albeit approximately 40 years prior to Ms. Chan-Pedley, and we too retain fond memories of that most important, and even defining, academic course of study.

The above said, we believe she has inferred a fallacious syllogism.

In Logic (a central tenet of the philosophical approach to an argument), Appeal to Authority is an informal fallacy of weak induction. This fallacy occurs when someone uses the testimony of an authority in order to warrant their conclusion, but the authority appealed to is not an expert in the field in question. Tch, tch, Ms. Chan-Pedley.

Raymond E. Young, QC, barrister and solicitor specializing in municipal law, Vancouver, British Columbia

Raymond E. Young, not an authority? Um.

Raymond Young studied at the University of British Columbia, graduating with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Classical Chinese Language and Literature; thereafter, Mr. Young attained a Masters Degree in Community and Regional Planning; and in 1978, a Bachelor of Laws.

Called to the bar in 1979, after articling at Lawson Lundell Lawson and Macintosh, in 1982, Mr. Young established the law firm of Baker Young & Anderson. Ray, in addition to his work as a municipal affairs lawyer, has taught at the University of British Columbia, focusing on Land Use Law in UBC’s Faculty of Law for a period of five years, spending the following decade as a Professor of Municipal Law at the university.

Named a Canada-US Fulbright Scholar, Raymond Young spent a term as visiting Scholar at Georgia State University Law School in Atlanta.

On January 17th, 2011, Raymond Young was appointed as a Queen’s Counsel; carrying the Q.C. designation is considered a mark of prestige.

Raymond Young has practicd law in British Columbia for 40 years, as a barrister and as a solicitor, acting for local governments. Mr Young continues to practice law as a municipal affairs lawyer, to this day.

And now, a bit of a digression, if you will allow such …

The Honourable Madam Justice Francesca V. Marzari of the British Columbia Supreme Court
The Honourable Madam Justice Francesca V. Marzari of the B.C. Supreme Court

On December 29, 2017, Francesca Marzari (pictured above) was sworn in as a justice of the Supreme Court of British Columbia, before a small gathering of family members, colleagues and staff. Francesca’s mother, Darlene, was a member of The Electors Action Movement majority on Vancouver City Council between 1972 and 1980, and then a Member of the Legislative Assembly for Vancouver-Point Grey from 1986 to 1996, during which time, as Minister of Municipal Affairs, she brought in British Columbia’s innovative regional planning legislation.

The younger Ms. Mazari’s legal career was spent entirely at the prestigious law firm of Young Anderson, the British Columbia local government law boutique she joined as an articled student after clerking at the B.C. Court of Appeal, following graduation from UBC Law. At Young Anderson, she “sponged up” the intricacies of local government law from founding partners Raymond Young, Q.C., her principal, and Grant Anderson.

To answer Green Party of Vancouver Board of Education trustee Lois Chan-Pedley’s allegation that VanRamblings has engaged in an untoward and unjust “appeal to authority” in our recognition of Raymond Young — who we have known personally and professionally for 37 years, and who we know to be a person of the highest integrity, personally and in the practice of law — which is to say, that Ms. Chan-Pedley alleges that Mr. Young is not an expert in the field of municipal law … well, Ms. Chan-Pedley, we hope that yours — and your Green Party colleague, Adriane Carr’s — concerns have been both addressed and alleviated. One can only hope that when the matter proceeds to Court, as it most assuredly will, that both Ms. Carr and Ms. Chan-Pedley do not draw the ire of the Court, in questioning the professional integrity of Raymond E. Young, barrister and solicitor, long one of Canada’s most respected jurists, and a Queen’s Counsel who continues to this day his much respected practice in the field of municipal law.

Crisis Management 101. Mandatory Reading for Councillor Michael Wiebe

Crisis Management

From the outset, the response by Councillor Michael Wiebe; the Green Party of Vancouver; Mayor Kennedy Stewart; City Manager, Sadhu Johnston; and Vancouver City Councillors has been botched. It’s almost as if these persons were completely unaware of the concept of “crisis management.”

Here’s what should have happened when Georgia Straight editor Charlie Smith published his blockbuster article last Sunday morning, and didn’t happen: an adherence to the central tenets of crisis management.

Leadership. The Mayor | When things go wrong, citizens look to leaders. At the time of a crisis, the Mayor needs to be seen to be taking charge and providing direction, to take responsibility, to offer reassurance that there will be action, that they will encourage action. They lead.

Michael Wiebe | Should have been available, acted swiftly, and in an authentic manner. Taken responsibility. Admitted mistakes. Promised to do better in the future. Have been responsive and transparent in responding to the media. Listened, and spoken with gravitas when answering questions and addressing issues, and with humility. Answered all questions that were put to him. Not lost his cool, ever. Be of the mindset that “perception is reality” — this is a question of his humanity, not necessarily of right or wrong. Disclosed all bad news up front. Never said, “no comment.”

Emphasize what he’s doing to remedy the situation in which he finds himself embroiled, as well as what preventative measures he will employ in the future, so there’s no re-occurrence of a perceived impropriety. And, under no circumstance, assess “blame” to others.

Sad to say, none of the advice above was adhered to. Michael Wiebe, the City, the Mayor, and elected Vancouver City Councillors have lost control of the narrative. Aggrieved citizens taking the matter to the British Columbia Supreme Court is, inevitably, the next logical step toward resolution of the current inauspicious circumstance involving Councillor Michael Wiebe.

There is a great deal more that VanRamblings would wish to write respecting the issue we have addressed three days of this week, how the dysfunction of our current Council has led to the current circumstance involving Councillor Wiebe, an expansion and insight into the issues Georgia Straight editor Charlie Smith published yesterday, involving the role Mayor Kennedy Stewart’s office may have played in Mr. Wiebe’s decision to vote on patio permits, the source of the current pickle in which he finds himself.

We will, however, leave these matters for the moment, with this …

The audio broadcast of the interview with Councillor Wiebe, conducted by CBC Early Edition host Stephen Quinn the morning of September 21st, where Mr. Wiebe babbles incessantly and can’t quite seem to shut up, disallowing the host from asking questions (which, most assuredly, raised Mr. Quinn’s hackles, leaving questions to be asked on another day);

Councillor Michael Wiebe’s statement in response to the recently completed Conflict of Interest probe; and …

The 39th always glorious and life-enhancing annual Vancouver International Film Festival gets underway today — that, and our current provincial election, will be VanRamblings’ focus over the coming fourteen days.

But make no mistake, Mr. Wiebe is not out of the soup with VanRamblings, not by a long shot. We’ll return to this subject again and again and again.

#VanPoli | Vancouver City Council | Wiebe MUST Resign | Pt. 2

Green Party of Vancouver elected officials on Council, School Board and Park BoardSay Goodbye | Green Party of Vancouver elected officials currently sitting on City Council, School Board and Park Board (save David Wong, pictured lower right)

Continuing from Part One of our three-part series on why Vancouver City Councillor Michael Wiebe must resign his position on Council …
Stalemate | Aggrieved Citizens Head to the B.C. Supreme Court

Supreme Court of British Columbia | Law Courts, Vancouver

With receipt of the investigator’s report written by respected municipal affairs lawyer and UBC professor, Raymond E. Young, submitted on September 12, 2020 to Vancouver City Manager Sadhu Johnston, and Mayor Kennedy Stewart, mandating that Green Party of Vancouver City Councillor Michael Wiebe is duty bound to resign his seat on Council, arising from an egregious Code of Conduct violation and undeclared Conflict of Interest, and that Mr. Wiebe not further be allowed to run for office for any elected body in the period prior to the next municipal election (in the autumn of 2022), and the subsequent refusal — thus far — by Councillor Wiebe, or any of his Green Party of Vancouver colleagues, to validate Mr. Young’s findings and recommendation, the question arises …
Where do the good citizens of Vancouver, and Mr. Wiebe’s colleagues on Vancouver City Council go from here, what comes next in the process of resolution respecting the scandalous fiasco that currently consumes both the attention of Vancouver’s beleaguered City Councillors, and citizens? Vancouver City Councillor Sarah Kirby-Yung muzzled, cannot publically respond to fellow Councillor code of conduct violationVancouver City Councillor Sarah Kirby-Yung states in the tweet above, posted on the morning of September 21st, 2020, that she and other Councillors have a legal obligation that precludes our elected Councillors from speaking on an “open code of conduct investigation.” In point of fact, there is no “open” code of conduct investigation — that investigation came to a conclusion on the morning of Saturday, September 12th, when investigator and lawyer Raymond E. Young submitted his completed report to Vancouver City Manager Sadhu Johnston, and to the office of the Mayor, Kennedy Stewart.

Readers should know that on Monday morning, September 21st, 2020, Francie J Connell, the City of Vancouver’s longtime Director of Legal Services, posted an e-mail to Mayor and Council advising our elected officials that they may not discuss the matter of the recommendation made by Raymond E. Young mandating that their fellow Councillor Michael Wiebe must resign his office — neither with each other, nor most particularly in the public weal, lest they themselves find that they are charged with a Code of Conduct violation. Such order by the city’s top legal official effectively muzzles our elected officials. Wonder why you haven’t heard boo from Lisa Dominato, Colleen Hardwick, Rebecca Bligh, Christine Boyle, Mayor Kennedy Stewart, and the remaining members of Council in the current circumstance involving Councillor Wiebe? Now, you know why.

Vancouver City Council, 2018 - 2022 | Sarah Kirby-Yung, Christine Boyle, Pete FryVancouver City Council, 2018 thru 2022, left to right: Councillors Rebecca Bligh, Christine Boyle, Colleen Hardwick, Pete Fry, Adriane Carr, Mayor Kennedy Stewart, Melissa De Genova, Jean Swanson, Michael Wiebe, Lisa Dominato, and Sarah Kirby-Yung.

There is an option open to Vancouver’s City Councillors to bring a motion forward to Council mandating that their colleague, Michael Wiebe, resign his seat on Council, requiring a two-third vote of Council in favour of such a motion. Were such a motion to pass, there would be no force of law behind it, as the Municipal Affairs Act of British Columbia does not allow for the removal of an elected official by her or his fellow Council colleagues.

Protesters rise up demanding Michael Wiebe's resignation from Vancouver City Council

The only other avenue of redress should Councillor Michael Wiebe choose not to voluntarily resign as a City Councillor in the city of Vancouver, would be for 10 citizens / registered voters within the city of Vancouver to take the matter to the British Columbia Supreme Court, asking the courts to enforce the recommendation of the authorized investigator hired by the City of Vancouver, to enforce the investigator’s mandated recommendation: that Councillor Wiebe be ordered by the Court to vacate his Council seat.
VanRamblings is advised that such a process is now underway.

B.C. Supreme Court chaos could result if conflict of interest case involving Councillor Michael  Wiebe goes to court

Not to get too deep into the woods, but quite honestly Michael Wiebe and City of Vancouver Councillors, and the Mayor do not want this matter proceeding to the courts. Why not?
Any time one goes to court, not only can the outcome of the court proceeding not reasonably be predicted, the Supreme Court Justice could very well expand the scope of the proceedings, and rule in ways that Councillors and the City might find injurious, substantively limiting the power and authority of elected officials and staff at The Hall going forward.
A digression. Here’s an example of how things can go awry. In 2006, the Board of Variance sued the Mayor and Council for their unprecedented decision to remove all of the appointed members of the Board, to be replaced by individuals associated with the majority party in civic office. Respected jurist George McIntosh — then considered to be one of the top 25 lawyers in Canada, and at present a British Columbia Supreme Court Justice — was hired to argue the City’s case. The position of the City prevailed — a new Board was appointed by Mayor Sam Sullivan’s Council.
Although the matter had not been raised during the court proceeding, in his ruling, the Supreme Court Justice who heard the matter, found that a central provision of the mandate of Boards of Variance in British Columbia was ultra vires, ordering the revocation of the authority of Boards of Variance to hear “third party appeals” — which is to say, from that day forward Boards of Variance, as they had done for 55 years, could no longer provide a forum for aggrieved citizens to argue that the city (or more particularly, developers) must not move forward with a development citizens believed was contrary to the best interests of, or was detrimental to, the citizenry of a neighbourhood within the city where they reside.
Here’s what VanRamblings believes will happen when the matter of Councillor Michael Wiebe’s resignation from Vancouver City Council, arising from an egregious conflict of interest, and self-dealing, is heard by the Court: the Court will order Mr. Wiebe to vacate his Council seat forthwith.
VanRamblings believes, however, that the Justice will not limit her / his jurisdiction in the matter to the simple removal of Mr. Wiebe from office. Rather, we believe that the complainants will be awarded court costs, such that Mr. Wiebe — and the Green Party of Vancouver — will be liable for tens of thousands of dollars for having brought the matter forward to the Courts, when the simplest resolution to the matter would have been for Councillor Wiebe to abide by the recommendation of the investigator.
In addition, it is probable that the Justice will revoke the provisions of the Code of Conduct of the City of Vancouver, a code that serves to prevent Councillors from properly carrying out their responsibilities to the citizens of Vancouver who elected them to office. Even more, it is highly probable that the Justice will effectively re-write existing provincial municipal affairs law that precludes members of an elected body from removing an elected official who has engaged in conduct detrimental to the interests of the citizenry — going forward, then, any elected official who “acts out” in an unparliamentary fashion, be it on Council, School Board or - in Vancouver - Park Board, may be removed from office, either by a two-thirds vote of her / his colleagues, or arising from an investigative report recommendation that the elected official be removed from office.
Faux Vancouver Sun headlines involving Vancouver City Councillor Michael Wiebe

Further, VanRamblings believes it to be entirely likely that, sooner than later, the province of British Columbia will step in to bring resolution to matters respecting Councillor Wiebe’s removal from Vancouver City Council. Although there is a provincial election underway, and Ministers of the Crown are now candidates, and not officials of the government carrying out their ministerial responsibilities, it is entirely likely that British Columbia’s Deputy Minister of Municipal Affairs, Kaye Krishna, could ask the Deputy Minister for the Attorney General, Richard Fyfe, to appoint a Special Prosecutor to investigate the particular circumstance involving Councillor Michael Wiebe.