What the B.C. Conservatives just endorsed
At the end of April, the Association for Reformed Political Action (ARPA) Canada was welcomed into the Hall of Honour at the BC Legislature by BC Conservative MLA Heather Maahs. According to Church for Vancouver, ARPAѻýs Executive Director, Mike Schouten, received the honour in recognition of the groupѻýs 20 years of ѻýChristian political engagement.ѻý But behind the photo op lies a concerning agenda that deserves scrutinyѻýnot celebration.
ARPA claims that Canada was ѻýfounded on Judeo-Christian principles,ѻý a phrase often used as a moral wedge to justify policies rooted in a narrow interpretation of Christian doctrine. On the surface, it sounds like a benign historical nod. In practice, however, itѻýs a political strategy designed to assert Christian dominance over public life and policy. Whatѻýs worse, this ideology is increasingly framed within a victim narrativeѻýthe idea that ѻýreformedѻý Christians are being pushed out of government and public discourse for simply expressing their beliefs.
Letѻýs be clear: religious freedom is protected in Canada. Christians are free to worship, gather, speak, and organizeѻýjust like every other faith group. But freedom of religion does not mean freedom to impose religious beliefs on everyone else. ARPAѻýs brand of advocacy seeks to re-center Christian values as the moral compass of Canadaѻýs institutions, while marginalizing communitiesѻýparticularly 2SLGBTQIA+ peopleѻýwho do not conform to that worldview.
In fact, much of ARPAѻýs work, along with groups like Action4Canada, is overtly hostile to 2SLGBTQIA+ rights. These groups repeatedly argue that recognizing gender diversity, protecting trans youth, or supporting same-sex marriage is an ѻýattack on Christian values.ѻý Ironically, they claim to champion diversity while advocating for the erasure of anyone who doesnѻýt fit into their strict religious mould.
This is where the implications become dangerous. When politicians align with groups like ARPA or give them space in the peopleѻýs houseѻýthe Legislatureѻýit signals that one set of religious values should have disproportionate influence in shaping our laws. Thatѻýs not religious freedom. Thatѻýs theocracy-lite.
This fundamentalism also poses a problem for John Rustad and the BC Conservatives, who enjoyed a meteoric rise in the last election. With that rise comes an uncomfortable truth: theyѻýve become a magnet for political extremists who see the party as their best shot at mainstream influence. Within six months of gaining traction, the BC Conservatives are already grappling with internal rifts, as more moderate conservatives grow uneasy with the hardline social views of some of their MLAs and supporters.
The welcoming of ARPA into the Legislature wasn't just a photo opѻýit was a signal. And for many British Columbians, especially 2SLGBTQIA+ folks, religious minorities, and secular voters, it was a chilling one.
Canadaѻýs history is diverse and complex. Yes, Christian institutions played a role in our foundingѻýbut so did colonialism, exclusion, and cultural genocide. To say that Canada was founded on Judeo-Christian principles without acknowledging the harm done in the name of those principles is not just misleadingѻýitѻýs a rewriting of history that serves a political agenda.
In a democracy, no religion should hold the reins of power. Our laws must reflect universal rights, not theological preferences. If your beliefs require denying others their identity or rights, the issue is not your religious freedom being under attackѻýitѻýs your refusal to share space in a pluralistic society.
~ Wilbur Turner is a political strategist and community advocate based in Kelowna, British Columbia, with deep roots in Alberta. With experience on the ground in federal and municipal campaigns, and a passion for civic engagement, Turner offers sharp, accessible insight into the political issues shaping our region and country. He was selected by the University of British Columbia for an Honorary Doctor of Laws for his significant contribution to the community.