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Pages in category "British Columbia New Democratic Party MLAs" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 214 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. (previous page) *
Unionist Party of British Columbia: 1933 Conservatism: 1933–1937 British Columbia Social Constructive Party: 1936 Reformism, Social Democracy: 1936–1937 United Party of British Columbia: 1986 Progressive Democratic Alliance: 1993 Centrism: 1993–1997 Reform Party of British Columbia: 1983 Right-wing populism: 1994–1997 Democratic Reform ...
The 2020 British Columbia general election resulted in an NDP majority government under John Horgan. 57 NDP MLAs were elected, a net increase of 16. 22 new NDP MLAs were elected. Nathan Cullen, former NDP MP, Stikine, 2020—present; Brittny Anderson, Nelson-Creston, 2020—present; Roly Russell, Boundary-Similkameen, 2020—present
The other component of Parliament is the lieutenant governor of British Columbia. The assembly has 93 elected members [2] and meets in Victoria. Members are elected from provincial ridings and are referred to as members of the Legislative Assembly (MLAs).
The New Democratic Party of British Columbia [a] (BC NDP) is a social democratic [4] political party in British Columbia, Canada.The party sits on the centre-left [5] [6] of the political spectrum and is one of the two major parties in British Columbia; since the 1990s, its rival was the centre-right BC United (formerly known as the BC Liberals) until the Conservative Party of British Columbia ...
The 2024 British Columbia general election was held on October 19, 2024, to elect 93 members (MLAs) of the Legislative Assembly to serve in the 43rd parliament of the Canadian province of British Columbia. The election was the first to be held since a significant redistribution of electoral boundaries was finalised in 2023. The Legislative ...
Vancouver-Strathcona is widely considered one of the safest NDP seats in all of British Columbia, with the NDP routinely winning by over 40 points. Even during the 2001 landslide victory for the BC Liberals, Vancouver-Mount Pleasant (as it was then named) was one of only two electoral districts to return an NDP MLA.
Contemporary elections in British Columbia use a relatively unique system of handling absentee ballots. [10] While all jurisdictions in Canada allow for absentee voting through advance communication with the appropriate federal or provincial election agency, British Columbia is unique in allowing same-day absentee voting at any polling station in the province; ballots so cast are not counted ...