Vaughn Palmer: Amelia Boultbee jumping B.C. Conservative ship gives David Eby breathing room
Floor-crossing to B.C. NDP caps a week of good news for the premier.
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VICTORIA — Premier David Eby acquired some breathing room Friday with the announcement that Amelia Boultbee, a former Conservative MLA turned independent, is joining the NDP government caucus.
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Boultbee’s floor-crossing gets the NDP to 48 seats, three more than the combined B.C. Conservatives, Greens and remaining independents.
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Vaughn Palmer: Amelia Boultbee jumping B.C. Conservative ship gives David Eby breathing room Back to video
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It means Eby will have less need to rely on Speaker Raj Chouhan to cast tie-breaking votes on budget legislation and other designated matters of confidence.
Boultbee quit the Conservatives last year, saying she had lost confidence in then-leader John Rustad. This year, she hinted she might return to the Opposition caucus under a new boss.
On Friday, she said she was going with the NDP because of the Conservatives’ hard-right turn under new leader Kerry-Lynne Findlay.
“What was promised as a big-tent party is getting smaller every day, with a new leader consumed with divisive Donald Trump-style populism than with the things that actually matter to people,” she told reporters.
Eby paid tribute to Boultbee for “standing up for principle” and for her constituents in the riding of Penticton-Summerland.
Her voting record in the recent legislative session is difficult to square with her sudden embrace of the NDP.
Take what happened with the enabling law for the government’s landmark treaty with the K’omoks First Nation. Some Conservatives voted with the New Democrats on that one, but Boultbee did not.
Boutbee also angered the Conservatives by supporting a government procedural motion to cut off debate on legislation to water down the Freedom of Information law.
Then on final vote on the bill, she abandoned the NDP and sided with the Opposition parties, necessitating another tie-breaking vote from the Speaker.

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Boultbee cast her most telling votes with the Opposition parties and against the NDP budget and related legislation — confidence matters by definition. Both times, the Speaker was pressed into service.
She denounced the NDP budget and fiscal plan in scathing detail.
“This budget asks British Columbians to accept a projected $13-billion-plus deficit as business as usual. It asks families to accept mounting debt as inevitable. And it asks small businesses, already struggling under inflation, rising input costs and public safety challenges, to accept new taxes on the very services they rely on to survive.
“This is now one of the largest deficits in British Columbia’s history. Debt is climbing. Interest payments, money that does not build a single hospital bed or hire a single police officer, are consuming billions of dollars that could otherwise go to front-line services. That is not sustainable, it is not compassionate, and it is not responsible.”
“A responsible budget should provide confidence, confidence to investors, to entrepreneurs and to families planning their futures. Instead, Budget 2026 creates uncertainty — uncertainty about the sustainability of our finances, about the long-term tax burden, and about whether this government truly understands the pressures facing ordinary British Columbians.
“British Columbians deserve a government that lives within its means, that protects essential services without layering on new taxes and that understands economic growth is not a talking point. This budget does not meet that standard. I cannot support it.”
She said all that less than six months ago. On Friday, there she was, praising those same New Democrats for “leadership that is thoughtful, principled and determined” and declaring “my confidence is with this premier and this caucus.”
Such feckless flip-flopping in Canada’s national parliament prompted the federal New Democrats to introduce a bill last month to require MPs who leave one party and join another to first resign their seats and run in a byelection.
Eby was asked if he could square that statement of principle from the federal wing of his party with his own more — shall we say — “flexible” stance on Boultbee?
“She did not last long with the B.C. Conservatives,” he replied. Actually, some of the recent federal floor-crossers switched sides even sooner than Boultbee, who stuck with the party she was elected to represent for an entire year.
The premier provided a second demonstration of his mastery of situational ethics when he assured reporters that he had made no promises and offered Boultbee no rewards for coming over to the NDP side of the house.
Other members of the NDP caucus get premium pay, above and beyond the base MLA salary of $122,000, via appointments as ministers, caucus functionaries, parliamentary secretaries, committee chairs and the like.
Was the premier really suggesting that Boultbee would be the lone member of government caucus who would be relegated to base MLA pay with no top-up?
Not quite. Initially, said Eby, Boultbee would be expected to spend some time “learning how we do things.” Then “at some point, I hope she’ll take on additional responsibilities.”
At which point, Eby’s newest recruit may gain a deeper understanding of how the NDP does things.