Christy Clark
Meet John Horgan, leader of British Columbia's NDP
He may be the only candidate in the 2017 provincial election who can lead a party to beat Premier Christy Clark.
B.C. government returns $25 million to public schools after outcry
The Ministry of Education is finally answering the call of B.C. school boards, faced with closures due to insurmountable budget shortfalls.
B.C. premier says it's time feds approve LNG but denies linkage to oil pipelines
Clark’s demand ups the pressure on the Trudeau Liberals, who have avoided hard choices on resource projects being squeezed between pro−development premiers and environmental and indigenous opponents.
Andrew Weaver says Christy Clark made 'utterly bizarre' comments about global warming
Climate change scientist and British Columbia Green Leader Andrew Weaver said Christy Clark's concerns about wildfires and her promotion of fossil fuels don't add up.
Extreme weather is "face of climate change," says Premier Wynne
The premiers of Ontario and British Columbia, Kathleen Wynne and Christy Clark, both cautiously linked climate change to the Fort McMurray fires
Fazil Mihlar, former Fraser Institute director, tapped as B.C.'s deputy climate minister
“Enviros should stop their hysteria," Mihlar once tweeted.
Frustration boils over as residents speak about Vancouver's housing crisis
By 2025, it estimated that the housing crisis will lead to a major "brain drain" in Vancouver as doctors, teachers, nurses, police officers and more move to more affordable communities.
Key architects of Great Bear Rainforest agreement reflect on its lasting impact
The Great Bear Rainforest is now protected, but the threats of climate change and pipeline development still loom in the region.
Meet the wolves targeted in B.C.'s controversial kill
What you need to know about grey wolves targeted by B.C.'s government in an effort to protect caribou
Clark and Harper know forest fires linked to climate change. Why won't they do anything about it?
While Clark says climate change is influencing fires, and Harper says they might, both seem to have their fingers crossed behind their backs.