Federal Opposition Leader Pierre Poilievre urges Prime Minister Mark Carney to prioritize fee simple property rights above all others in the ongoing Aboriginal title debate. During a news conference in British Columbia, Poilievre calls for federal lawyers to emphasize private property precedence in the appeal of the recent Cowichan Tribes case.
Cowichan Tribes Ruling Sparks Homeowner Concerns
The B.C. Supreme Court decision establishes Aboriginal title as senior to fee simple rights, raising fears among Richmond homeowners about their property futures. The B.C. NDP government has appealed the ruling.
Premier Eby Criticizes Poilievre’s Intervention
Premier David Eby dismisses Poilievre’s comments as unhelpful. “It’s not helpful to have a federal politician drop into town for a YouTube clip and a headline, to distract from members of his caucus leaving his team,” Eby states, pointing to recent Conservative MP defections to the Liberals.
First Nations Leaders Respond
Terry Teeggee of the First Nations Leadership Council accuses Poilievre of “dog-whistling and fear-mongering to rile up his base.”
Emergency Meeting on DRIPA Plans
First Nations leaders convene an emergency meeting to address Premier Eby’s proposal to pause sections of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act (DRIPA). The legislation played a key role in a recent court decision favoring Indigenous rights in a mining dispute.
Robert Phillips of the First Nations Summit indicates all options remain open. “Like any multi-pronged approach or strategy, everything is on the table,” Phillips says. “Things have really soured in terms of not trusting what the premier’s going to do next.”
Business Sector Weighs In
Jen Riley of the B.C. Chamber of Commerce endorses reconciliation efforts while supporting a pause or full repeal of DRIPA, as proposed by B.C. Conservatives. Such measures would offer greater certainty for businesses. “Anything that’s moving in the direction of making it easier for businesses in the communities across the province to feel like they have certainty in their own local communities, on how they can run their businesses is a good thing,” Riley affirms.

