Federal Federally, the electorates in the Greater Vancouver region elect
Conservative,
New Democratic, and
Liberal members of Parliamentsthe region is an important bedrock of left-of-centre support in conservative-leaning Western Canada; along with the NDP's strength on Vancouver Island, coastal BC often accounts for over half of left-of-center MPs west of Ontario in most parliaments. After the
2011 election, the Conservatives and NDP emerged as the two strongest parties in the region, with Conservative support concentrated in the suburbs around Vancouver (e.g. North Vancouver, West Vancouver, and Richmond), and NDP support strongest on the east side of Vancouver, Burnaby, Coquitlam, and New Westminster. In 2011, the Liberals were reduced to two seats, both located in Vancouver. However, in the 2015 election, a reversal of fortunes led to the Liberals taking most of the seats in the region away from the Conservatives; the 2019 election had the Conservatives gain some seats back in Richmond, Langley and southern Surrey; many of these swung back to the Liberals in the 2021 election.
Provincial Greater Vancouver, like the rest of British Columbia, is divided between
BC United and the
BC NDP. While BC United are not formally affiliated with any federal party, they tend to draw support from those who vote for either the
Liberal Party of Canada or the
Conservative Party of Canada, while the BC NDP provide a centre-left alternative, and is formally affiliated with the
New Democratic Party of Canada. Polling from the
2013 provincial election showed that supporters of the BC Liberals were almost evenly split between federal Liberals and federal Conservatives. Despite this trend, former NDP premier
Ujjal Dosanjh ran federally for the Liberals in the
2004 election, and some NDP supporters have drifted to the
Greens in recent years. In terms of political geography, Greater Vancouver is not as polarized between urban core and suburban areas as metropolitan areas in other parts of the country are. However, the BC NDP tends to draw greater support from ridings on the east side of Vancouver, Burnaby, the Tri-Cities, and parts of Surrey. By contrast, the BC Liberals are stronger on the west side of Vancouver, the North Shore, the Fraser Valley, and held every seat in Richmond from 1991 to 2020. Ridings in Central Vancouver, like
Vancouver-Fairview and
Vancouver-Point Grey, and Surrey tend to be swing ridings, with close races between the two parties. Vicki Huntington, an Independent member of the Legislative Assembly, has represented the riding of Delta South since 2009. Between 1986 and 2013, every premier of British Columbia (other than
Dan Miller from August 25, 1999, to February 24, 2000) represented a riding from within Greater Vancouver. After
Christy Clark lost her seat in
Vancouver-Point Grey in the
2013 provincial election, and until
David Eby succeeded
John Horgan in 2022, premiers represented ridings outside Greater Vancouver. Premier Eby is the MLA for Vancouver-Point Grey.
Minority representation Due to the region's ethnically diverse population, there is also diverse government representation. Federally, there are five MPs of visible minority origin: three of South Asian descent, one of Chinese descent, and one of Trinidadian descent. Provincially, there are six South Asian, three Chinese, one Japanese, and one Filipino MLAs. The Greater Vancouver region has many "electoral firsts".
Rosemary Brown was the first black woman elected to political office, becoming an MLA in 1972, and the first woman and first black person to run for a party leadership in 1975.
Emery Barnes, a football player elected to the Legislature alongside Rosemary Brown in 1972, and stayed in that capacity until 1996, serving as the Speaker from 1994. Former Indo-Canadian premier
Ujjal Dosanjh was the first non-white premier of the province, while
Douglas Jung was the first Chinese-Canadian to become a Member of Parliament.
Yonah Martin is the first Korean-Canadian to hold federal public office.
Jenny Kwan was the first Chinese-Canadian provincial cabinet minister in Canada.
Naomi Yamamoto and
Mable Elmore are respectively the first Japanese and Filipino MLAs in the province. Furthermore,
Stephanie Cadieux is the first quadriplegic MLA, while
Svend Robinson was the first openly gay Canadian MP.
James Atebe was the first black mayor in
Mission, British Columbia. == Notes ==