OneBC Growth Tracker
This page is built to show the movement’s rise in a positive, transparent way. Exact membership counts are not currently public in a verifiable form, so this dashboard tracks verified growth signals now — elected MLAs, listed candidates, public events, and official platform infrastructure — and will add membership numbers when they are published.
Verified momentum indicators
These are public activity indicators, not official membership totals. Current verified platform structure checked July 3, 2026: OneBC’s official priorities page lists 53 numbered planks across 12 categories. Current verified events check July 4, 2026: the official events page does not list a new future event; the previously tracked June Backbone of BC Tour stops in Kamloops, Prince George, and Kelowna remain the latest verified tour arc, with Kamloops proceeding after a venue dispute and Black Press Media reporting the Kelowna town hall proceeded June 14 at Parkinson Recreation Centre’s Apple Room with about 100 attendees and roughly 40 to 50 peaceful protesters outside. Current public social/video metrics checked July 4, 2026: the latest successful X API check remains July 3, when it returned 30,608 followers for Dallas Brodie and 11,093 followers for OneBC; these are live platform metrics and can move. The latest listed long-form Dallas Brodie / OneBC YouTube video, “Dallas Brodie on Recall & Kamloops Event Chaos! (OneBC Post Game),” showed 23,925 views and 1,434 likes when checked by extractor on July 4, 2026, up from 23,896 views on July 3, 23,862 views on July 2, 23,832 views on July 1, 23,712 views on June 27, 23,668 views on June 26, 23,610 views on June 25, 23,531 on June 24, and 23,420 on June 23; this is a live platform metric and can change. Current official candidate-page listing checked July 4, 2026: Jim McMurtry, Delta South. Current official petition/action infrastructure checked July 7, 2026: OneBC’s official sitemap lists 10 petition/action pages. The current list includes “Public Inquiry into Condo Bailout,” “Referendum on DRIPA,” “Protect Property Rights from Aboriginal Title,” “End the Safe Injection Failure—Restore Law and Order with Involuntary Detox,” and “Christianity is Not a Crime / Defend Christian Worshipers,” with no public signature counts shown. Current BC Conservative leadership watch checked July 3, 2026: public reporting says Kerry-Lynne Findlay won the May 30 race; Yuri Fulmer did not win, so the reported Brodie–Fulmer accord path did not activate. New Canadian Press / CityNews reporting says Findlay faces the question of what to do with five former Conservative MLAs, including Dallas Brodie, and said she would discuss the issue with caucus rather than act unilaterally.
What we will update
Membership count
When OneBC publishes official member totals, we will add a line graph showing growth by date and percentage increase.
Candidate tracker
Current official candidate-page listing: Jim McMurtry in Delta South. We will add more ridings as OneBC publishes them.
Party comparisons
If comparable NDP, BC Conservative, Green, or Liberal/United membership data is available, we will compare percentage growth honestly and cite sources.
Petition tracker
Current official action list: OneBC’s sitemap lists 10 petition/action pages, including the public-inquiry petition on the condo bailout, DRIPA, property rights, post-secondary funding, child gender-transition, religious-freedom / worship-access, and drugs/detox items. We will add signature milestones only if OneBC publishes verifiable totals.
Alliance tracker
Current watch: public reporting says Kerry-Lynne Findlay won the BC Conservative leadership race on May 30, 2026. Because Yuri Fulmer did not win, the reported Dallas Brodie / Yuri Fulmer Unite the Right Accord did not activate through that path. The next verified items to track are any public Dallas Brodie / OneBC response, any Findlay outreach to OneBC supporters, any caucus decision on former Conservative MLAs, and whether the June Backbone of BC Tour keeps building OneBC’s independent lane. The Tyee previously reported roughly 42,000 BC Conservative leadership-race signups and roughly 26,000 eligible voters after identity verification; those are BC Conservative figures, not OneBC membership totals.