Conservative Grassroots Work Means Helping Members Vote

The strongest political movements are not built only on speeches and slogans. They are built when real people sit down with neighbours, answer questions, help members through the process, and make sure supporters can actually cast a ballot.
A social post from Yuri Fulmer’s BC Conservative leadership campaign says Fulmer spent the afternoon in Chilliwack connecting with BC Conservative Party members and helping people get verified ahead of the vote. The post points members who need help with verification to the campaign’s verification page.
That is practical grassroots politics. It is not glamorous, but it matters. If conservative members cannot navigate the verification process, their voice can disappear before the debate even begins.

Why this matters
Leadership races test more than personalities. They test organization. A party that wants to defeat the NDP has to be able to do basic things well: identify members, help them verify, answer questions, show up in communities and keep the process clear.
Conservatives should welcome that kind of ground game from any serious leadership team. Whether members support Fulmer, Findlay, Elliott, Brodie, Rustad, or another conservative voice, the principle is the same: participation beats apathy.
Helping people vote is not a small administrative detail. It is the foundation of democratic legitimacy.
For iVoteConservative.ca, this is the message worth amplifying: conservative politics works best when it is local, organized, respectful and member-driven. The goal is not just to win an internal contest. The goal is to build the discipline needed to defeat the NDP and restore common-sense government in British Columbia.
Bottom line: more community rooms, more verification help, more face-to-face organizing. That is how a movement becomes real.