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Research leaked by political rivals highlights B.C. Conservative candidates' climate conspiracy posts

#66 of 66 articles from the Special Report: Climate of denial

John Rustad, the party's leader, has long downplayed the impacts of climate change, going so far as to question its existence. Several of his candidates also have a long history of climate scepticism, according to a document tracing the social media history of Conservative Party of B.C. candidates posted to X on Thursday. Photo: Ethan Cairns/Canadian Press

Several Conservative Party candidates running in the B.C. election have spent years spreading climate conspiracy theories online, highlighting the extent to which climate misinformation infiltrates the party. 

The social media clips were compiled in a document tracing the social media history of Conservative Party of B.C. candidates and posted to X last week. It reveals widespread support among candidates for debunked right-wing conspiracy theories, from the false claim that climate change is an authoritarian plot by shadowy elites to the debunked idea Canada's record-breaking wildfires were set by arsonists. 

John Rustad, the party's leader, has long downplayed the impacts of climate change, going so far as to question its existence. While he backed off from that stance in the leadup to the provincial election, he maintains the problem "is not at a crisis level," telling CBC earlier this month that "there are many things that are far more important." 

"[These] weird, scary, bizarre and dangerous tweets and posts and comments from John Rustad and his candidates are deeply, deeply concerning," Ravi Parmar, the B.C. NDP candidate for Highlands-Langford said in an interview. "This all starts with John Rustad…if he wants to be premier of this province, he needs to be held accountable."

Posts in the document show several candidates repeating common climate conspiracy theories rooted in so-called "climate authoritarianism," which is the false idea that climate policies and disasters are designed to control people, not tackle an existential crisis. They include false claims that supposed arsonists — like the CBC and Unifor — deliberately set B.C.'s 2023 wildfires; that "there is no climate emergency" and any efforts to tackle the problem are "alarmism"; and that climate activists are "dangerous to health." 

Beyond Rustad, whose history of climate skepticism and conspiratorial thinking is well-documented, the most prominent climate skeptics on the list include: 

  • Chris Sankey, candidate for the North Coast-Haida Gwaii. Sankey is an oil and gas industry consultant, and last year made several posts on X repeating the false conspiracy theory B.C.'s wildfires were started by arsonists. He attacked the mainstream media for not covering the conspiracies and posted the false claim that the World Economic Forum is trying to "depopulate" the planet with climate policies.
  •  He also repeatedly attacked former federal environment minister Catherine McKenna for her climate action, going so far as to threaten her with a "world of pain." Screenshots of these Tweets are in the document posted to X, but it now appears to have been deleted from the platform.  
  • Paul Ratchford, candidate for Vancouver-Point Grey. A former investment banker, Ratchford also repeated false conspiracy theories that wildfires were set by arsonists. He posted that "pro carbon is pro humanity" and calls climate activists "cultists." The document posted to X contains screenshots of the posts, but they now appear to have been deleted from the platform. 
  • John Koury, candidate for Cowichan Valley. Koury is a career businessman and falsely claimed on X that B.C.'s wildfires were started intentionally by the CBC and labour union UNIFOR. He also reposted a tweet that suggested the media were not covering a protest by German farmers over climate policies, in order to prevent people from hearing about them. But the original post was misleading — the images it contained were from an earlier event and the protest had not yet happened when it was posted. (They were covered extensively.)
  • Marina Sapozhnikov, candidate for Juan de Fuca-Malahat. Sapozhnikov is a doctor; she posted on X the false claim that "there is no climate emergency." She minimized concerns about excessive greenhouse gas emissions by saying that "CO2 is plant food" — falsely suggesting that the current, excessive concentrations of the gas in the atmosphere are not a threat — and that extreme cold is more dangerous than extreme heat. Extreme heat killed 619 people in B.C. during the 2021 heat dome.

Canada's National Observer reached out to the four candidates and the Conservative Party of B.C. None responded to a request for comment. 

Should the Conservative Party of B.C. win in the next election, it would put people who have embraced false conspiracy theories and climate skepticism in a position to control the province's response to major problems like wildfires and the climate crisis, Parmar emphasized. 

Several conservative candidates running in the B.C. election have spent years spreading climate conspiracy theories online, highlighting the extent to which climate misinformation infiltrates the party.

He also slammed Rustad's decision to run candidates who were eager to amplify conspiracy theories about the province's record-breaking 2023 wildfires being set by arsonists. Very few of Canada's wildfires are deliberately set — most are caused by lightning or human error — and suggesting otherwise "is offensive to all the communities in British Columbia that have been fighting wildfires,” Parmar said. 

PressProgress reported Friday that candidates have also embraced conspiracy theories unrelated to climate change, on topics from the January 6 insurrection to ideas about the New World Order and 15-minute cities. 

When asked about the leak by a reporter during a campaign stop Saturday, Rustad said he is confident in his candidates and that the B.C. legislature needs "fresh people" who "stand up, say things and be themselves."  

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