B.C. Conservatives seek inquiry into votes from mental health and drug facility
The B.C. Conservatives are seeking a commission of inquiry into alleged election irregularities in a riding they lost by a razor-thin margin last year, including claims of improper voting at a mental health and drug treatment facility, voting by non-residents and a case of double voting.
The NDP’s 22-vote win in Surrey-Guildford pushed the party over the line to give it a one-seat majority in the fall election, but Conservative Leader John Rustad told a news conference on Thursday that his party had evidence of 45 suspicious votes in the riding.
They include 21 mail-in ballots Rustad said were cast at the Argyll Lodge residential care home, with the Conservatives sharing what it said were statutory declarations by residents outlining concerns about the process.
“I was rushed into marking the ballot, I do not know who I have voted for,” says one of the declarations, which were redacted of names and signatures.


