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OneCity Vancouver
OneCity Vancouver is a municipal political party in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It was founded in 2014 by independent activists and former members of the left-wing Coalition of Progressive Electors (COPE), including David Chudnovsky and Rafael Joseph Aquino; Aquino was OneCity's first candidate to run for public office.
OneCity first nominated a candidate for office, RJ Aquino, in the 2014 Vancouver municipal election. Aquino placed 22nd.
In the 2017 Vancouver by-election, the party elected its first candidate, Carrie Bercic, who placed eighth in a race for all nine open seats on the Vancouver School Board.
OneCity, together with four other progressive municipal parties (including COPE, Vision Vancouver, and the Green Party), agreed to a deal brokered by the Vancouver & District Labour Council to avoid vote splitting in the 2018 municipal election by limiting each party's number of candidates. In that election, Christine Boyle was elected as the first OneCity member of Vancouver City Council, and Jennifer Reddy was elected to the Vancouver School Board.
Ahead of the 2022 municipal election, OneCity announced the results of its nomination race on March 7, becoming the first municipal party to nominate a slate of candidates for the October 15 election. The party's members re-nominated OneCity councillor Boyle, along with three new candidates for city council: president of the Urban Native Youth Association Matthew Norris, urban planner Iona Bonamis, and health economist Ian Cromwell. The party did not run a candidate for mayor, tacitly supporting incumbent mayor Kennedy Stewart, with whom OneCity had cooperated on municipal legislation.
OneCity fielded three candidates for the Vancouver Park Board: Serena Jackson, Tiyaltelut Kristen Rivers, and Caitlin Stockwell. In addition, OneCity ran five candidates for Vancouver School Board: incumbent Jennifer Reddy, Rory Brown, Kyla Epstein, Krista Sigurdson, and Gavin Somers.
OneCity released its 2022 election platform on September 6 with the campaign slogan "You Belong in Vancouver". The platform committed to addressing the housing crisis with a promise to allow new rental buildings of up to six storeys, including small-scale retail at street level, in all parts of the city. The party also promised to allow new condo developments up to four storeys across the city. Beyond housing, the platform also addressed community safety, harm reduction, Indigenous justice, climate change, arts, economic development, and active transportation.
In the 2022 election, councillor Christine Boyle and school board trustee Jennifer Reddy were re-elected. None of the party's 11 other candidates were successful in their campaigns, but the party increased its vote share by more than 60%. Boyle was left as the sole social democratic councillor after the defeat of mayor Kennedy Stewart and COPE councillor Jean Swanson, but OneCity pledged cooperation with the ABC Vancouver council majority on shared priorities.
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OneCity Vancouver
OneCity Vancouver is a municipal political party in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It was founded in 2014 by independent activists and former members of the left-wing Coalition of Progressive Electors (COPE), including David Chudnovsky and Rafael Joseph Aquino; Aquino was OneCity's first candidate to run for public office.
OneCity first nominated a candidate for office, RJ Aquino, in the 2014 Vancouver municipal election. Aquino placed 22nd.
In the 2017 Vancouver by-election, the party elected its first candidate, Carrie Bercic, who placed eighth in a race for all nine open seats on the Vancouver School Board.
OneCity, together with four other progressive municipal parties (including COPE, Vision Vancouver, and the Green Party), agreed to a deal brokered by the Vancouver & District Labour Council to avoid vote splitting in the 2018 municipal election by limiting each party's number of candidates. In that election, Christine Boyle was elected as the first OneCity member of Vancouver City Council, and Jennifer Reddy was elected to the Vancouver School Board.
Ahead of the 2022 municipal election, OneCity announced the results of its nomination race on March 7, becoming the first municipal party to nominate a slate of candidates for the October 15 election. The party's members re-nominated OneCity councillor Boyle, along with three new candidates for city council: president of the Urban Native Youth Association Matthew Norris, urban planner Iona Bonamis, and health economist Ian Cromwell. The party did not run a candidate for mayor, tacitly supporting incumbent mayor Kennedy Stewart, with whom OneCity had cooperated on municipal legislation.
OneCity fielded three candidates for the Vancouver Park Board: Serena Jackson, Tiyaltelut Kristen Rivers, and Caitlin Stockwell. In addition, OneCity ran five candidates for Vancouver School Board: incumbent Jennifer Reddy, Rory Brown, Kyla Epstein, Krista Sigurdson, and Gavin Somers.
OneCity released its 2022 election platform on September 6 with the campaign slogan "You Belong in Vancouver". The platform committed to addressing the housing crisis with a promise to allow new rental buildings of up to six storeys, including small-scale retail at street level, in all parts of the city. The party also promised to allow new condo developments up to four storeys across the city. Beyond housing, the platform also addressed community safety, harm reduction, Indigenous justice, climate change, arts, economic development, and active transportation.
In the 2022 election, councillor Christine Boyle and school board trustee Jennifer Reddy were re-elected. None of the party's 11 other candidates were successful in their campaigns, but the party increased its vote share by more than 60%. Boyle was left as the sole social democratic councillor after the defeat of mayor Kennedy Stewart and COPE councillor Jean Swanson, but OneCity pledged cooperation with the ABC Vancouver council majority on shared priorities.
