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Councillor Rebecca Bligh launches mayoral campaign and a new political party
The former ABC councillor's announcement sets up a showdown with Mayor Ken Sim, plus we've got an interview with Bligh from a guest contributor.

Good morning,
It’s been a whirlwind almost four years here at the Lookout. And now we’re taking another huge step — we’re looking to expand our team of journalists. A big thank you to all our paying members, without whom none of this would be possible.
We’re looking for a senior editor to join our team and help lead our editorial operations. If you think you might be a good fit, or know anyone who might be interested, please send them the job link. These are critical roles here at the Lookout as we continue expanding our journalism.
Now let’s get to Nate’s (and a guest writer’s) story today.
— Geoff Sharpe
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WEATHER
Wednesday: 17 🌡️ 11 | ☀️
Thursday: 14 🌡️ 9 | ☁️
Friday: 14 🌡️ 12 | 🌧️
CITY HALL
Councillor Rebecca Bligh launches mayoral campaign and a new political party

Rebecca Bligh announced her mayoral candidacy and her new political party outside City Hall on Monday, standing in front of a few dozen of her supporters / Nate Lewis
By Nate Lewis
In an early start to next year’s Vancouver municipal election campaign, current city councillor Rebecca Bligh has announced she’ll run for mayor, while launching a new municipal political party.
Mayor Ken Sim is expected to run for Vancouver’s top job again in 2026, setting up a contest between the former colleagues. Bligh and Sim were elected together as ABC party members in 2022, but have become political rivals after Bligh was removed from ABC earlier this year.
Bligh, who now sits as an independent, is a credible candidate to challenge Sim, given her two terms of experience on council and role as President of the Federation of Canadian Municipalities (FCM).
Sim’s former chief of staff Kareem Allam has said he’ll also be running for mayor under the newly formed Vancouver Liberal banner, while OneCity Vancouver, responding to Bligh’s announcement, said they’ll announce a mayoral candidate in the “coming weeks.”
Bligh said her new party — Vote Vancouver — will focus on three things the city needs most: vision, trust, and service.
For Bligh, vision means long-term planning around tricky issues like housing and improving living conditions in the Downtown Eastside, while “backing Vancouver’s innovators” to grow the economy.
In terms of trust, Bligh said she would “rebuild real consultation so residents shape decisions,” work with the city’s integrity commissioner, and lead a council that works in public. The last two points are clear shots at the ABC party led by Sim. ABC has attempted to undermine the role and decisions of the integrity commissioner, who found Sim, ABC councillors (including Bligh), and ABC park board commissioners had breached open meeting requirements.
The service aspect – which involves speeding up permitting, keeping taxes “reasonable,” and reviewing city services to keep costs down – sounds quite similar to ABC’s platform that was enthusiastically endorsed by the electorate in 2022.
“I stand by most, if not all, of the platform that I ran on in 2022. I'm going to be the mayor that can actually deliver,” Bligh said, pointing to unfocused leadership by Sim as the problem.
Vote Vancouver will be running candidates for city council, park board, and school board, Bligh said, but wasn’t ready to share any names. The party is asking potential candidates to put their names forward to represent the party and run for office in 2026.
The timing of Bligh’s announcement was a surprise but the content was not. Rumours of Bligh’s mayoral campaign have been floating around essentially since she was booted from the ABC party in February.
In anticipation of a mayoral campaign, we’ve been working on a profile of Bligh with Denise Goodkey, one of our readers who is a former Prince George city councillor herself. Monday’s announcement has undoubtedly changed the context of that conversation. When Denise spoke with her in August, Bligh was non-committal about running, saying there were bigger problems to focus on. Those problems remain, but that hasn’t stopped Bligh from throwing her hat in the ring.
With that caveat in mind, let’s get to Denise’s interview, which includes a bit of extra context from me.
By Denise Goodkey
When I met Rebecca Bligh for coffee in August, she was coy when I tried to pin her down about her mayoral ambitions next fall. She called the then-rumour of her candidacy a reflection of Vancouver having a “small town, big city” character.
“I haven’t ruled anything out,” Bligh said at the time, adding that a mayor needs to be a good listener, be open-minded to other people’s ideas, and have a strong work ethic. “It’s a lot of work. It’s totally doable, but it’s a lot of work,” she said, adding that the amount of time and effort that can go into the job is limitless if you really see yourself as being in service to others.
“I know this seems like the time to be discussing [a mayoral run], but I think we have a lot of challenges to solve right now,” she said.
“How do we make sure that Vancouver is a place where people can get their work done, raise their families, access housing, and enjoy the community? That’s what I’m focusing on right now,” Bligh said, emphasizing the need to improve housing affordability and make it easier for the city to come alive with events, business, and arts.
Bligh was recently elected as President of the Federation of Canadian Municipalities at their annual meeting in June. Having attended many FCM meetings during my time on Prince George’s city council, I knew this was a huge deal. Although several Vancouver mayors have held that position at FCM, she is only the second Vancouver councillor in more than 70 years to achieve the honour of representing every municipal elected official in the country.
Born in New Zealand, Bligh has lived in Canada since she was ten, and in Vancouver for more than 20 years. As a young adult she was a single mom and a renter. More recently, she and her partner, Laura bought a small townhouse condo, but Bligh said she has not forgotten the joys and sorrows of being a renter.
“What you see is what you get,” she said, when I asked about the “real” Rebecca. “Politics is fun, what are you talking about!” she said jokingly, in response to my question if she ever gets away and has fun.
As Bligh explained it, a lot of her fun, relaxed time happens outside, whether it’s road cycling on her very fast bike, playing tennis, swimming, or walking the city’s greenways with her partner, Laura. Bligh is also a well-seasoned paddleboarder, and has an appreciation for opera, which she learned in New Zealand from her grandfather.
Bligh has worked for local businesses, including Providence Security, and eventually formed her own consulting firm, BLACKPiiN, which specializes in leadership development. That position led her to facilitate leadership training here and in Africa, where she worked with NGOs to bring education to rural parts of Ethiopia and sustainable farming practices in Mozambique.
Speaking of leadership, Bligh told me she wants to bring back pragmatic decision-making at City Hall, with a greater focus on outcomes and less time spent on ideology and theatrics.
“I believe in cross-partisan collaboration and policy-making. When you’re putting sewers in the ground nobody cares about your views on geopolitical issues …if you are left or right. They just care if the sewer goes into the ground,” she said.
Bligh’s “naive, perhaps” view when she ran in 2018 with the now-defunct Non Partisan Alliance (NPA) was that municipal politics should be non-partisan. When that perspective was challenged in 2019, Bligh quit the NPA to sit as an independent city councillor. Bligh left the NPA due to the “surge of far-right groups that had taken over the board and elected themselves to the executive,” she said, adding she could tell very quickly that their values did not align.
Bligh was not alone in leaving the NPA. Councillors Lisa Dominato, Sarah Kirby-Yung, and Colleen Hardwick all left the party in 2021 over the board’s “secret backroom decision” in choosing a mayoral candidate for 2022. Bligh, Dominato, Kirby-Yung, and Sim – the latter a former mayoral candidate for the NPA – then all joined the newly-formed A Better City (ABC) party, and were elected in the 2022 election.
Bligh said she and Sim were “getting along fine,” until Sim announced, without warning, that the city would no longer allow any net new supportive housing. “I found out essentially while he was making a speech in public,” Bligh said.
Bligh said she had been working, with others to develop housing policies to address homelessness. When the surprise decision came down, she publicly expressed her confusion with the new policy and said it didn’t make a lot of sense. “The next thing I know they asked me to leave the party,” Bligh explained to me.
“Time and again, Councillor Bligh has shown that she is not a core value fit with ABC Vancouver. Rather than working with caucus to find common ground and advance solutions, she has chosen to put her own views ahead of the collective work of the team,” ABC President Stephen Molnar said in a statement explaining Bligh’s dismissal at the time.
Bligh hasn’t been one to stay quiet when she feels something is amiss, whether that’s been because of diverging social views or policy positions. Now with Vote Vancouver, Bligh has her own party to put her priorities, policies, and leadership style on full display. What remains to be seen is if that’s something Vancouverites will vote for.
THE VANCOUVER NUMBER
$7,500
That’s the average special levy that 135,000 condo owners in B.C. will face this year, according to estimates by one Vancouver tech company. They advise that condo owners budget $2,000 towards savings each year for the next decade to prepare for special levies, or $3,000 per year for owners of units in older buildings. Read more. [BIV]
THE AGENDA
🏠 Lu’ma Native Housing Society’s new study of unhoused people in Metro Vancouver found that people become homeless because they get evicted, and most evictions occur because people can’t make enough money to pay rent. The study also found a significant overrepresentation of homelessness among Indigenous people, especially Indigenous youth. Read more. [Vancouver Sun]
👮 Police are warning that sex offender Randall Hopley intends to live in Vancouver and that there is a significant risk he will violate the conditions of his statutory release from prison. Read more. [CBC]
🎻 Vancouver Symphony Orchestra musicians could go on strike as early as Friday. Read more. [City News]
💰 Former Vancouver City Manager Paul Mochrie could continue to collect up to two years of salary and benefits - including pension contributions - after “mutually agreeing” with Mayor Ken Sim to leave his job. In 2024, Mochrie earned $387,110. Read more. [BIV]
🌊 Researchers and residents are working together to study water pollution in False Creek. Read more. [CBC]
✈️ With the suspension of Air Canada’s direct flight between Vancouver and the UAE, Western Canadians will now have to travel through Toronto to get to Dubai. Read more. [Daily Hive]
HOME OF THE WEEK
It’s a very grim situation for affordable two-bedrooms in Vancouver. Trust us, we’ve looked.
So when we say this one seems like the best mix of affordability, plus having actual windows (yes, there’s a two-bedroom with basically no windows available), and a nice layout, you can trust we’ve done the research.
It doesn’t have the best layout, but it does have a solarium and one parking space.
VANCOUVER ARTS GUIDE
Calling all arts, theatre and performance organizations! We’ve just launched a brand new space to advertise your show (which you’re reading right now). if you’re looking to reach 29,000 Vancouver locals who love attending events, reach out to the advertising team to learn more.
Performance
Poetry fans should check out D.M. Bradford’s poetry reading session at SFU on Oct. 2. It also happens to be free!
Studio 58 at Langara is showcasing The Time Machine, a theatrical performance of H. G. Wells’s world-famous story, from Oct. 2-12.
Until Oct. 4, you can catch Women of the Fur Trade at Touchstone Theatre, a historical satire of survival and culture through the fur trade.
Art
Love, love, love this idea of a cafe focused on local art. Yar Cafe has yet to be launched in real life, but you can sign up online if you’re a local artist to have the art featured. [Vancouver is Awesome]
We’re huge art crawl fans here at the Lookout, so we’d be remiss not to recommend the North Shore Art Crawl on Oct. 4-5. It will feature 100+ artists in 70 locations across West and North Vancouver. The full map will be published at a later date.
Looking for something a little less mainstream? The 9th Annual Vancouver Outsider Arts Festival is on from Oct. 10-12 at the Roundhouse Community Arts and Recreation Centre, at no cost.
Music
Indigenous singer and composer Jeremy Dutcher (he’s also a Juno and Polaris Prize winner) is performing a free concert with the Vancouver Symphony Orchestra on Sept. 28 at 4 pm at the Orpheum Theatre.
The Vancouver New Music Festival for 2025 focuses on “whispered folds” using sound as a medium to explore relationships, with three days worth of shows from Oct. 16-18.
Beatles fans will want to check out Martin Sexton, a one-man band performing a reinterpretation of the Beatles’ album Abbey Road. You can catch the show on Oct. 7 at Capilano University.
Three reasons to become a Lookout member before Sept. 30

You’ve seen the messages. Heck, you’re probably super annoyed with them by now! So before you skip past, here are three reasons why you should become a member:
1) Your membership funds hyper-local journalism here in Vancouver. Those big publications? They’ve got shareholders, executives and investors who take a cut.
2) You save 21% off your first year and unlock extra membership benefits. That is, until Sept. 30. And then we turn off this discount. As a member, you get access to all our exclusive journalism, as well as our archive of stories.
3) A membership ensures we don’t need to run clickbait stories. Other publications are chasing page views, but not us. Since we’re mostly reader-funded, we slow down, take our time and produce high-quality journalism, without the need for clickbait content.
Become a member today and save 20% off the first year of your membership.
COMMUNITY HIGHLIGHTS
From Intimate to Infinite With Writer, Creator Jenny Lumet | The Rio Theatre | Oct 9, 5:30PM | Are you a Star Trek fan? Go behind the scenes with creator Jenny Lumet in her VIFF Talk. | Learn more [Sponsored]
The Seawall has changed a lot over the past 30 years. [Vancouver Magazine]
Local designer Alexandra Dean is proving that you can be functional and look fashionable. [Georgia Straight]
Here are six local spots to check out the fall colours. [Vancouver is Awesome]
Winter is coming, and so is an early sunset. [Curiocity]
Vancouver authors dominated in the 2025 B.C. and Yukon Book Prize. [Times Colonist]
This weekend’s Interior Design Show features some great local creations. [Vancouver Magazine]
GAME TIME
Today’s Wordle is the sport that Team Canada is playing at a world-class level right now. Once you work out what it is, don’t forget to tune in on Saturday morning!
PHOTO OF THE DAY

Nate Lewis
I appreciated the kind words from folks about my story of my sweet dog Sola giving me a scare. But I realized I’ve never included a photo of her! Here’s one of my favourite shots of my expressive pup doing her famous side-eye look 👀 🐕🦺
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