LOCAL
BC Conservatives Pick a Leader Tomorrow. The Hard Part Starts After the Victory Speech.
Prediction: Caroline Elliott by a narrow margin over KLF.
Political Takeaway: Regardless of who wins, the real story is whether the Conservatives can unite the Rustad coalition and convince centrist voters they’re ready to govern. That—not the leadership vote itself—will determine the next election.
Winners, Losers and One Big Question: Who Will Lead BC Conservatives Into the Next Election?
By tomorrow night, British Columbia’s Conservatives will have a new leader.
After months of campaigning, debates, membership drives, endorsements, and enough internal drama to fill a political memoir, the race is finally coming to an end. What began as a contest to replace former leader John Rustad quickly evolved into something much larger: a battle over the future identity of British Columbia’s fastest-growing political movement.
The next leader won’t simply inherit the largest conservative movement the province has seen in decades. They’ll inherit a party that is still trying to decide what it wants to be.
And that’s why this race matters.
A Race That Exposed Deep Divisions
When Rustad stepped aside, Conservatives faced a challenge they never expected to have so quickly.
Success.
After surging from the political wilderness to become the Official Opposition, the party suddenly found itself wrestling with questions that normally confront governing parties, not insurgent movements. How broad should the coalition be? How disciplined should caucus members become? How much should the party moderate its message to attract suburban voters?
The candidates answered those questions differently.
Iain Black pitched himself as the business-minded pragmatist. Peter Milobar emphasized experience and stability. Kerry-Lynne Findlay highlighted her federal credentials. Yuri Fulmer championed entrepreneurial leadership. Caroline Elliott positioned herself as the candidate capable of expanding the party’s appeal while maintaining its grassroots energy.
Underneath those campaign messages was a much larger debate: should the BC Conservatives remain a populist insurgency or transform into a government-in-waiting?
That debate isn’t ending tomorrow night.
The Biggest Winners
The first winner is obvious: the candidate whose name is announced tomorrow evening.
But politics is rarely that simple.
The biggest winner of the campaign may actually be Caroline Elliott.
Whether she wins or loses, Elliott entered the race as one of the lesser-known candidates and exits it as one of the most recognizable figures in the party. Throughout the campaign she successfully positioned herself as a bridge between the Conservative grassroots and voters who may be considering abandoning the NDP but remain uncertain about the Conservatives.
She managed to become a serious contender while avoiding many of the controversies that consumed portions of the race.
Peter Milobar also leaves stronger than he entered. The Kamloops MLA spent the campaign presenting himself as the experienced hand capable of managing a large caucus. Even if he falls short, few expect him to disappear from the party’s front bench.
The Conservative Party itself also deserves mention.
Despite moments of tension, the race largely avoided the kind of public implosion that has damaged opposition parties elsewhere in Canada. Membership engagement remained high, fundraising remained active, and the party succeeded in keeping itself in the political spotlight.
For a party still building its organizational foundation, that matters.
The Biggest Losers
The biggest loser isn’t any individual candidate.
It’s unity.
Leadership races reveal things parties would often prefer to keep hidden. This race exposed disagreements over ideology, strategy, candidate vetting, caucus discipline, and the future direction of conservatism in British Columbia.
Those divisions didn’t disappear when ballots were cast.
Tomorrow’s winner inherits all of them.
Another loser is time.
For months, Conservatives have been talking to Conservatives. Meanwhile, Premier David Eby and the NDP government have enjoyed a period where the opposition’s focus was directed inward rather than outward.
Leadership contests are necessary. They are also distractions.
The new leader will immediately face pressure to pivot from internal politics to issues voters actually care about: housing affordability, health care access, public safety, economic growth, and the rising cost of living.
Who Will Win?
Political predictions are dangerous business.
Just ask anyone who has covered BC politics for more than five minutes.
That said, leadership races are often won by candidates who successfully combine momentum with organization.
Based on the final weeks of campaigning, Caroline Elliott appears to have both.
Her campaign effectively captured the mood of many members who want to preserve the energy that fuelled the party’s growth while broadening its appeal to voters who remain on the sidelines.
She has positioned herself as a candidate focused less on internal ideological battles and more on the practical challenge of winning government.
That message appears to have landed at the right moment.
If there is a challenger capable of upsetting that momentum, it is likely Peter Milobar, whose organizational strength and caucus experience continue to resonate with members looking for stability.
But heading into the final hours, Elliott appears to have a slight edge.
The Morning After
The most important moment of this race won’t be tomorrow night’s victory speech.
It will be the morning after.
The next Conservative leader will wake up facing the same challenge that has confronted every successful opposition movement in modern politics.
It is one thing to attract frustrated voters.
It is another thing entirely to convince British Columbians that you are prepared to govern.
The Conservatives have already proven they can grow.
They have already proven they can become a major force in provincial politics.
The next leader must prove they can turn that momentum into a credible alternative government.
Tomorrow night decides who gets the opportunity.
The months ahead will determine whether they can seize it.