Fulmer says B.C. Conservatives must be a grand coalition as he enters leadership race

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VICTORIA - Yuri Fulmer says the Conservative Party of B.C. needs to be a "grand coalition" that refrains from "undisciplined" behaviour if it wants to govern, as he becomes the first high-profile candidate to run for the party's leadership. 

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VICTORIA – Yuri Fulmer says the Conservative Party of B.C. needs to be a “grand coalition” that refrains from “undisciplined” behaviour if it wants to govern, as he becomes the first high-profile candidate to run for the party’s leadership. 

Fulmer, the chancellor of Capilano University who made his fortune with fast food franchises, said that means that the Conservatives have to “welcome a lot of people” into the party who don’t feel comfortable there now — including former B.C. Liberals. 

“Let me be very clear,” he said in an interview. “I’m running to be the leader of the B.C. Conservatives. I am a Conservative. What I will do, though, is welcome into the Conservative tent people who are conservatively minded, and they may have called themselves B.C. Liberals in the past, but their alternative to the NDP right now is the B.C. Conservative Party.”

Yuri Fulmer, BC Conservative Party candidate for West Vancouver Sea-to-Sky, is photographed before the start of a press conference in Squamish, B.C., Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Tijana Martin
Yuri Fulmer, BC Conservative Party candidate for West Vancouver Sea-to-Sky, is photographed before the start of a press conference in Squamish, B.C., Tuesday, Oct. 1, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Tijana Martin

He also said he would not be “dragged down” into a debate about Indigenous land acknowledgments, as he officially launched his campaign on Tuesday, a day after his website went live.

He joins Rossland contractor Warren Hamm as contenders to fill the position once held by John Rustad, who resigned after a caucus revolt last month. The party hasn’t yet released the official rules for the contest, and several big names continue to consider whether to join the race.

Fulmer’s campaign launch includes a video, in which he accuses the NDP of having run B.C. “right into the ground” through “radical, out-of-touch policies.”

The video features images of street disorder and crime, but also lays some blame on the provincial Conservatives. 

“It’s time for a hard truth my friends,” he said. “We have, in a way, enabled them. Every outburst, every undisciplined tweet, we have not been a credible alternative.” 

Fulmer said that lack of discipline has given Premier David Eby what Fulmer called a “perfect distraction” from the NDP’s record.

“We do not need to change our values,” Fulmer said in the video. “We need to change our leadership.” 

The philanthropist and entrepreneur who holds almost three dozen A&W restaurant franchises rejects the suggestion that this profile makes him more of a former B.C. Liberal than a Conservative.

“I have lived my life under conservative values,” he said. “I’m a fiscal conservative, and I agreed to run with the Conservative Party, when we were polling 12 per cent. So in that sense, I’m tried, tested and true B.C. Conservative.” 

Fulmer, who was born in Australia and has a Canadian father, narrowly lost to the B.C. Green Party’s Jeremy Valeriote in the riding of West Vancouver-Sea to Sky in the 2024 provincial election. 

He enters the leadership race amid questions about the party’s ideological cohesiveness. The Conservatives have lost five members since the election. 

“In terms of leading the party, we need to be the big, blue tent,” Fulmer said. “We need to remind British Columbians about conservative values, and we need to learn from conservative values, and we need to make sure that a diverse group of opinions are welcome in the B.C. Conservative Party.”

The tent is already built, they just need to issue more invitations to welcome a lot more people, he said. 

 “If we want to form government, we need people, who voted NDP in the last election to vote for us.” 

His job is to expand the potential pool of voters, Fulmer said. 

The party needs to focus on things that matter to British Columbians, such as affordability, health care, public safety, the economy and the future of private property rights, he said. 

“I think labelling different kinds of conservatives is a tactic used to divide us,” he said. 

Others have deliberately stood apart, including one of Fulmer’s potential competitors, Harman Bhangu. 

The Conservative member of the legislature joined former Conservative MLAs Tara Armstrong, Dallas Brodie and Jordan Kealy in voting for a failed bill to ban First Nations land acknowledgments by public employees.

Fulmer said he is sure that he has done a lot of acknowledgments in his role with Capilano University, including its fall convocation. 

“If some folks want to do land acknowledgments, I think they should be comfortable doing land acknowledgments. If people don’t want to do land acknowledgments, because that is not comfortable for them, I think they shouldn’t.” 

The party needed to stay focused on the issues that British Columbians consider important.

“I’m not going to be dragged down into a discussion, where and when and how we should do land acknowledgments.” 

Fulmer said he announced his candidacy now because he is ready to go, has a team and has raised funding. 

Former grocery executive Darrell Jones and MLA Peter Milobar have said they are seriously considering a run, and Bhangu has said he will most likely run — if he likes the rules. 

Milobar said he would be making a decision in the very near future.

“It’s a massive professional commitment,” he said. “It’s a commitment to the province, but it’s also a massive commitment to your family.” 

Milobar, a former mayor of Kamloops and current finance critic for the party, said the prospect of an open leadership race after Rustad’s resignation had taken a lot of people by surprise. 

“It was only the beginning of December that this all kind of happened,” he said, when asked why the list of formal candidates is so short right now.

Milobar, who has been in the legislature since 2017, said he expected the leadership race to generate excitement. 

“I think as we move through the leadership race and then rally around the new leader, I think the public is going to realize that we’re the real deal, that we’re not to be feared, that as a party we offer a lot to the table to try to get B.C. back on the right course, and that we will be seen as that place for right-of-centre voters to vote with confidence that we will turn the province around.”

Fulmer said he does not know why people are waiting on the sidelines.

This job is too big and too important,” he said. “You are either in or you are out, and I would tell you unequivocally today, I’m in.” 

This report by The Canadian Press was first published Jan. 7, 2026.

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