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A final look at the candidates and key issues for tomorrow’s by-election
We’ve got a round-up of where candidates stand on key election issues, what it all means for the politics of city council, and all the details you need to ensure a smooth voting experience on Saturday.

Good morning,
Nate back with you today. Today’s newsletter is an extravaganza of election-themed info to get you prepared for tomorrow’s voting day. I know it’s not everyone’s thing but I always get excited to go vote in an election. There’s just something scholastic about those corrugated plastic dividers and overhead fluorescent lighting that makes me feel like a kid again.
But there’s nothing childish about making an informed decision for who you want representing you in local government. We’ve tried to make that process a bit easier with the candidate profiles we’ve done over the past few months. You can check those out along with some of the top election issues in today’s main story. We’re following that up later in the newsletter with all the information you need to ensure a smooth voting day on Saturday.
Personally, I’m planning to meet up with friends and make a day of it. Taking your friends and family along to vote together can be a fun, novel outing, and a great way to pass the time if you have to wait in line.
With that, let’s get into today’s newsletter.
— Nate Lewis, Vancity Lookout

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WEATHER
Friday: 13 🌡️ 7 | ☁️
Saturday: 16 🌡️ 10 | 🌤️
Sunday: 12 🌡️ 8 | 🌧️
Monday: 11 🌡️ 4 | 🌧️
BY-ELECTION NUMBERS
✅ 1: Day until the general voting day in the city council by-election, taking place on Saturday.
🗳️ 25: The number of polling locations where you can vote tomorrow, April 5 [COV]
📈 7,671: Ballots cast in the by-election over the first two days of advanced voting, an 84 per cent increase from advanced voter turnout in 2017 for the previous civic by-election. [CBC]
BY-ELECTION
A final look at the candidates and key issues in tomorrow’s by-election

Party candidates from left to right: Annette Rielly (Greens), Sean Orr (COPE), Lucy Maloney (OneCity), Ralph Kaisers and Jaime Stein (ABC), Colleen Hardwick and Theodore Abbott (TEAM)
What happened: It’s Election Day tomorrow, Saturday, April 5. The civic by-election is a chance for Vancouverites to choose two new city councillors to represent them at City Hall for the next year and a half.
The candidates: There are 13 candidates running for two seats on city council. Seven of those candidates have been nominated by the big municipal political parties and have extensive platforms outlining their priorities and policies.
Vancity Lookout also interviewed and put together profiles on these seven candidates – focusing on their personal background, motivations to run for office, and approach to governance – over the past two months.
Here’s a list of those candidates with links to their platforms and our profiles, in the order they were interviewed:
If you prefer to listen, Cambie Report has you covered, with an episode coming directly from some of the candidates.
The six Independent candidates are Jeanifer Decena, Guy Dubé, Charles Ling, Rollergirl, Karin Litzcke, and Gerry McGuire. An independent candidate hasn’t been elected to City Hall since 1988, according to CBC.
Referendum on ABC: This by-election campaign, as many are, is being framed largely as a referendum on the governing party. In this case, voters are being asked to reflect on the record of Mayor Ken Sim and his ruling ABC Party, which has held a large majority on city council since winning a huge electoral victory in 2022.
ABC candidates Ralph Kaisers and Jaime Stein have primarily run on the governing party’s priorities to date, including reducing permitting regulations, looking for efficiencies and revenue opportunities in the city’s budget, and increasing funding for police and fire services.
On housing, ABC has reduced regulation, including around permitting and the city’s view cone policies – the latter which has spurred plans for taller buildings in northeast False Creek and downtown. They’ve also approved expanding the scope of the Broadway Plan to allow further high-rise and hotel development in the plan area.
Good governance: Candidates from opposition parties – particularly Sean Orr (COPE), Annette Rielly (Green), and Lucy Maloney (OneCity) – have focused on improving government transparency and accountability in their campaigns.
They’ve highlighted the ABC majority council’s decisions to eliminate the elected park board and the renter’s office, freeze support for new supportive housing, and attempts to halt the work of the city’s integrity commissioner, as examples of bad governance. Orr, Rielly, and Maloney say they would try to restore and strengthen these institutions and policies if elected.
Broadway Plan: The biggest and most complex policy issue is housing, with the Broadway Plan being a major focus. The area development plan was approved by the previous city council — including Green, OneCity, and current ABC councillors — and expanded by the current council, with Green councillors Adriane Carr and Pete Fry opposing and abstaining from further zoning changes.
TEAM candidates Theodore Abbott and Colleen Hardwick, who voted against the Broadway Plan as a councillor in 2022, are campaigning to pause and rethink the city-wide area plans like the Broadway and Vancouver Plan.
TEAM’s platform calls for these current planning structures to be reconsidered “under a new neighbourhood-based process, with meaningful involvement of local residents and businesses, resulting in local area-based plans.”
COPE’s Sean Orr is opposing demovictions caused by the plan, where renters in existing apartment buildings are evicted from their homes in order for new projects to be built. Orr hasn’t explicitly said he’d try to stop the Broadway Plan, but his COPE predecessor and mentor Jean Swanson voted against it in 2022.
Rielly, the Green’s candidate, said it’s a big misconception that pausing the plan would stop rezonings and evictions – pointing out that many of the rezonings allowed in the Broadway Plan will soon be mandated by the province’s Transit Oriented Development legislation. Rather than fight change, we should protect residents, Rielly told the Vancouver Sun.
Renter protections: OneCity’s Lucy Maloney and Rielly are not opposing the Broadway Plan, instead campaigning for a city-wide expansion of the significant renter protection policy already included for most tenants in the plan area. Orr is also looking to strengthen and expand that policy, while the policy is not mentioned in TEAM’s platform.
Between 80 and 90 per cent of renters in buildings undergoing rezoning in the plan area are eligible for enhanced relocation protections (though that still leaves out some). However, eligible tenants are still exposed to the stressful upheaval and uncertainty of a non-voluntary move.
Dig deeper: While tenant protections under the Broadway Plan and in neighbouring Burnaby are strong on paper, it really comes down to compliance and enforcement in uncharted waters, according to Storeys.
What it means: All the non-ABC candidates we spoke with emphasized how their role will mostly be as advocates, speaking their mind at council, doing their best to represent what they stand for, while being able to pass their own motions only when they can gain the support of other councillors.
The reality is, on most votes, if the six current ABC councillors plus the mayor vote as a block, they will be able to control which motions are passed at City Hall. That control will be reinforced if either one or both of the ABC candidates are elected.
However, if voters fill both council seats with non-ABC councillors to join Pete Fry and newly independent Coun. Rebecca Bligh, it would only take two defections from ABC’s caucus to swing a contentious motion – as happened when Coun. Bligh, Lisa Dominato and Peter Meiszner voted against their colleagues on the gas ban issue.
There have already been five resignation or removals of elected officials from the ABC party this term, meaning there’s a realistic possibility of further party shakeups this term. Dominato seems to be the most likely of ABC’s current councillors to fall out with the party, as she recently spoke out and voted against Mayor Sim’s successful move to freeze supportive housing.
While any prospective new councillor not named Kaisers or Stein will be limited in their ability to set their agenda and pass their policy priorities, tomorrow’s vote could send a clear message about how Vancouver voters view the current council. And, the new composition of council will set the tone for the remaining year and a half of this term and beyond.
Are you planning to vote in this by-election? |
THE AGENDA
🪧 It could be a chaotic day at City Hall this Saturday. In addition to by-election voting, there will be a rally held there at 11 am, organized by Vancouver Aquatic Centre user groups in protest of the recent park board decision to proceed with a new, smaller pool for the planned renewal of the facility. The group is calling on city council not to approve the additional $22 million for the project that’s been requested by the park board, and instead work with the board to deliver a 50-metre pool in the new facility. You can get more background in our previous coverage, including the significant cost of this request. [Vancity Lookout]
🪵 Stanley Park tour guide operator and BC Big Tree Committee member Colin Spratt is raising the alarm about several living old-growth trees — specifically the oldest-known red alder in Canada and several cedars — that have been cut down or otherwise been damaged as part of the ongoing tree removals in Stanley Park. Vancity Lookout has previously reported that 8,530 trees have been removed or treated during the first two phases of work, while the Stanley Park Preservation Society is pursuing legal action to stop further tree-cutting. [Colin Spratt, Vancity Lookout]
🛑 A Surrey-based trucking company has had their entire 92-vehicle fleet grounded by the province, as officials launch a safety investigation after one of the company’s truck trailers did significant damage to bus trolley lines on East Hastings on Wednesday night. The trailer load was over one metre above the maximum allowable height. [VIA]
🧓🏼 A pilot program — which provided transportation for low-income seniors in Vancouver — has been cut by the province. The funding decision leaves the charity that administered the program, and the at-risk seniors who relied on it, surprised and scrambling to adjust to a 30 per cent budget cut and resulting reduction in services. Meanwhile, the province is increasing monthly payments by $145 from its seniors’ renter subsidy. [Vancouver Sun]
📊 It’s a mixed bag when it comes to the health of downtown businesses, according to a new report from the local BIA. Major events, tourism, and low office vacancy rates are trending in the right direction for the area, while fewer visits from locals and high retail vacancy rates, especially on Granville St., are among downtown’s business challenges. But the BIAs CEO is hopeful about the future plans to revitalize Granville by shifting it into a pedestrian zone. [Global]
🔑 This insightful personal account from Yuriy, a Ukrainian refugee trying to find housing in Vancouver, is worth your time today. Without a job or references, Yuriy was rejected from dozens of places and got schooled on a shady bank statement bluff before finally finding suitable housing through a personal connection. Two other points stood out: Yuriy noticed most Vancouverites are either tenants or landlords, and, unlike here, in Ukraine almost no one lives in basements. [The Tyee]
BY-ELECTION
Get ready to vote tomorrow, April 5th
Where to vote: On Saturday, you can vote at any polling location. Most of these are located in community centres around the city, plus City Hall. You can use this map of voting locations to find the most convenient one for you.
Voting hours for all locations are 8 am to 8 pm.
Voter registration: If you voted in the 2024 provincial election, then you’re already registered to vote. If you’re not sure you can quickly double-check your registration status with this handy tool from the city.
If you’re not registered yet you can still vote! You’ll just need to register in-person at the voting location with two pieces of ID – both showing your name, one showing your address, and one that has your signature.
You can also register in person if you have no fixed address or only one piece of ID. Under the “Register to vote” section, you can find more information about registering to vote and examples of acceptable ID.
Voter eligibility: To be eligible to vote, you must live in Vancouver, be a Canadian citizen aged 18 or older, and have lived in B.C. for six months before registering to vote.
However, you can still vote if you own property in the city and meet all the other conditions except living in Vancouver.
City councillors, advocates, and at least one candidate are pushing to revisit the case for Vancouver to expand voter eligibility to permanent residents in future elections, according to BIV. The current rules exclude nearly 65,000 permanent residents who live, work, and pay taxes in Vancouver.
While over 45 countries and several municipalities have granted permanent residents the right to vote, the province has twice rejected local government requests to do so.
ARTS GUIDE
Theatre
It’s the final weekend to catch Niall McNeil’s Beauty and The Beast: My Life at the Cultch’s historic theatre. An original performance for all-ages, audiences are transported into a vibrant realm of whimsy that blends Niall’s fantasy and reality. Tickets $29+
Burning Mom, an inspiring comedy about one woman’s journey to a famed desert festival — and her process of self-discovery along the way – hits the stage for a spring run, now until April 24. Showtimes and tickets $45.
Music
The Vancouver Bach Family of Choirs, alongside three soloists and the West Coast Symphony Orchestra, will be performing Benjamin Britten’s 1962 composition War Requiem – a celebrated choral cry for peace – at the Orpheum on April 5. Tickets $40+ with half-price for students
Blossom Block Party is a one-day all-ages outdoor music and dance event kicking off Public Disco’s 2025 slate of block parties. They’ll have a licensed bar, donuts, and a kid’s zone, so bring the whole family. It’s happening downtown from 2-9 pm on April 5. Free.
Plateau 1 is a relaxing evening of ambient music and visuals at your friendly neighbourhood tattoo shop on Main. April 11, 7 pm. Tickets $12.
Movies
This weekend at VIFF, there are a series of captivating international films from 2024 to take in, including On Becoming a Guinea Fowl, Julie Keeps Quiet, and Misericordia. Showtimes and dates vary, tickets $16.
Over at the Rio, they’re screening a trifecta of recent films today. You can take in a matinee with Timothée Chalamet as Bob Dylan in A Complete Unknown, while Academy Award winners No Other Land and The Brutalist bookend the day. Tickets $15.
Art
First Saturday Open Studios is back on April 5 from noon to 5 pm. Eastside Atelier and Parker Street Studios are two great spots to see a bunch of artists’ studios under one roof, but the options are extensive. More info
In case you’ve missed it, this is the final month to see the Multiple Realities exhibit at the Vancouver Art Gallery, which surveys experimental art made in the Eastern Bloc during the Cold War. Geoff visited the exhibit recently and had some thoughts on the differences between that social and political climate and our own. Tickets $29, or check out VAG’s Free First Friday Night program.
PHOTO OF THE DAY
Someone snapped this stunning shot of a Navy submarine as it sailed under the Lions Gate Bridge on the way to docking in North Vancouver.
FOOD REVIEW HIGHLIGHTS
Geoff is a connoisseur of the mall food court. His latest trip to International Village didn’t disappoint [Vancity Lookout]
If there was a perfect Izakaya outside Japan, it might be Oku [Vancity Lookout]
Tradition and excellence at this humble sushi spot [Vancity Lookout]
SalaThai’s legacy lives on at Jay Nok [Vancity Lookout]
GAME TIME
Today’s on-theme wordle should be an easy one. Can you work out what it is?
What did you think of today's newsletter? |