Michelle Mollineaux 莫米雪

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Michelle Mollineaux 莫米雪

Michelle Mollineaux 莫米雪

@Michelle4BC

Entrepreneur | Working Mum | Passionate about innovation, politics, & youth advocacy | Believer in creating, inspiring, and driving positive change

British Columbia Canada Katılım Ağustos 2022
1.8K Takip Edilen854 Takipçiler
Michelle Mollineaux 莫米雪 retweetledi
Rob Shaw
Rob Shaw@RobShaw_BC·
NEW - Richmond Mayor Malcolm Brodie is calling on the Cowichan Nation to "renounce in a form that is legally binding any claim to private property in Richmond arising out of the recent Court ruling regarding Aboriginal title." Says has caused "significant uncertainty" to ppl/biz
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National Post
National Post@nationalpost·
On Wednesday evening, if all goes according to plan, Canada’s Jeremy Hansen will be part of humanity’s first trip to the moon in over a generation, with the launch of Artemis 2 nationalpost.com/news/space/can…
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NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman
Tomorrow, we launch. At sunset tonight, Artemis II waits on the pad, ready to carry astronauts potentially farther than any humans have traveled in more than half a century. The next era of exploration begins.
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Michelle Mollineaux 莫米雪
@PeterM66557 We should be more concerned about the BC NDP as I don't think Eby will last long. I have heard that some NDP MLA's are already building up campaign teams for a leadership race. So, We need to look at the BC NDP machine and their woke ideology vs one awful leader.
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Peter M., AKA Mr M (The Professor)
@Michelle4BC BC politics are in complete disarray. Voters are likely confused about even which parties are in the running. Eby will be taking advantage of this and present himself as the stable anchor despite having turned the province into a fiscal disaster.
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Michelle Mollineaux 莫米雪
The reported partnership between Yuri Fulmer and OneBC should concern anyone serious about forming government in British Columbia. Let’s be clear about what this represents. OneBC is not a unifying force. It emerged out of internal division and has been widely characterized as occupying the far-right space, with policies and rhetoric that appeal to a narrow segment of voters—not the broad coalition required to win in this province. At a time when British Columbians are looking for stability, economic leadership, and credible alternatives to the NDP, this kind of alignment raises serious questions about judgment, priorities, and electability. Because the reality is simple: You do not win British Columbia from the edges. You win from the centre and radiating outwards. We have already seen what happens when the vote fractures. The centre-right and right coalition collapses, the vote splits, and the NDP walks back into power—not because they earned it, but because the alternative failed to unify. This is not theory. This is experience. Forming alliances that alienate moderate, fiscally responsible, pragmatic voters—business leaders, families, working professionals, and community builders—does not strengthen the movement. It weakens it. It sends the wrong signal: - That ideology is being prioritized over governance - That division is being tolerated instead of addressed - That winning is secondary to internal alignment and personal gain British Columbians are not looking for a protest movement. They are looking for a government-in-waiting. That requires a big tent—one that welcomes centre, centre-right and right voters, that respects diverse perspectives, and focuses on practical solutions: ✅ Affordability ✅ Economic growth ✅ Public safety ✅ Healthcare ✅ Opportunity for the next generation ✅ Support for seniors, families and small businesses ✅ Private Land protection This leadership race is not about personalities—it’s about who can actually form government and represent ALL BRITISH COLUMBIANS with transparency, honesty, diplomacy, and commitment. And that is why the real choice is becoming clearer. Candidates like Caroline Elliott and Iain Black understand what it takes to build a coalition broad enough to win. They bring different strengths, but both recognize a fundamental truth: You cannot defeat the NDP by shrinking your base. You defeat them by expanding it. British Columbia needs leadership that unites—not fragments. Builds trust—not controversy. And focuses on outcomes—not ideology. Because if we get this wrong, the result is predictable. More division. More vote splitting. And another four years we cannot afford. biv.com/news/commentar… #bcpoli @NVanCaroline @iainblackbc @CPBCCaucus @Conservative_BC
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Michelle Mollineaux 莫米雪
Yes I was a candidate, and lost due to vote splitting by an independent who claimed he was a conservative and yet he is a liberal. We need VOTERS by the numbers and voters who are truly concerned about the future of British Columbia, our communities and affordable living. We need candidates and elected officials who are willing to work together vs being confrontational and disruptive to fellow colleagues. Bottom line - we need to fix BC before it completely crashes. I hope you want to see this as well? If not then how do you envision the future of BC?
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Shareaware Canada
Shareaware Canada@ShareawareCdn·
I see Michelle is a candidate!? Here's an uncomfortable truth: Dallas Brodie might well have the power to choose the next leader of the BCCP (if she wants to). The BC Liberal/United leadership contestants hate this move because Fulmer is brilliantly tapping into a large and highly motivated pool of Conservatives they can't access. Sucks for them. This party belongs to grassroots Conservatives, not BC Liberal opportunists. Polling over the next couple days/weeks will be interesting. 👀
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Michelle Mollineaux 莫米雪 retweetledi
Larry Neufeld - MLA Peace River South
Forestry is the backbone of communities across Peace River South. When the Canfor sawmill closed in 2023, our region lost 135 direct jobs and many more across the local economy. In the North, mill closures impact entire communities. Forestry workers deserve a future in BC.
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Michelle Mollineaux 莫米雪
You’re right to raise this—FASD has not received the level of awareness, prevention, and support it deserves in Canada, despite its significant and lifelong impact. We need to approach this with both urgency and care: Fetal Alcohol Spectrum Disorder (FASD) is entirely preventable, and public awareness must be much stronger. Clear, consistent messaging matters: if you are pregnant—or could become pregnant—the safest choice is not to drink alcohol. Even small amounts can affect brain development and lead to permanent challenges. At the same time, this is not just about awareness—it’s about support. Many families affected by FASD are navigating complex social, economic, and health realities. That means we need: Better education in schools, healthcare settings, and public spaces Early screening and diagnosis Long-term support systems for children, youth, and adults living with FASD Resources for families and caregivers It’s also important to approach this conversation without stigma. Blame does not solve the problem—education, prevention, and support do. And you’re right to point out the distinction: autism and FASD are very different conditions. Autism is not preventable and still not fully understood, while FASD is preventable—yet often overlooked. Canada needs a more balanced approach—one that ensures FASD is no longer ignored, and that prevention and support become a national priority alongside other developmental conditions.
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Michelle Mollineaux 莫米雪
Social Media post announcement: On World Autism Day, BC families are raising serious concerns. New funding changes could leave up to 10,000 children with reduced support, limiting access to essential therapies like speech, occupational, and behavioural services. Families are not just frustrated—they are feeling abandoned, disqualified, and disrespected. This is about real children, real families, and real futures. We need policies that support—not set families back. Read more: michelle4bc.substack.com @BCPoli #SupportFamilies #AutismServices #SupportOurKids @AutismBC
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Michelle Mollineaux 莫米雪 retweetledi
CFIB - British Columbia
Today, 7,092 BC small business owners had their voices heard at the @BCLegislature through CFIB’s petition on the rising cost of doing business in BC. 📢 Small businesses are doing their part. Government is making it harder. Rising taxes, mounting costs and weak relief are leaving owners to carry the load. Thank you MLA @gavindew for presenting the petition. #bcpoli Watch👇
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Michelle Mollineaux 莫米雪
April 2 is World Autism Day. A day meant to raise awareness, promote inclusion—and demand better. Because right now in British Columbia, families are not being supported. They are being left behind. Read more: michelle4bc.substack.com
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Michelle Mollineaux 莫米雪 retweetledi
Chris Hadfield
Chris Hadfield@Cmdr_Hadfield·
What does it cost to launch something into orbit? This starts with @NASA Apollo Saturn V and projects forward to @SpaceX Starship. The exact figures are debatable, but it clearly shows huge progress, especially recently with commercial reusable rockets. Orbital data centres become viable at around $250/kg: we're getting there. Also fun that I've flown 2 of the rockets on the chart :) Amazing progress in such a short time!
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Chris Hadfield
Chris Hadfield@Cmdr_Hadfield·
If schedule holds, these 3 giant rockets will launch in the next 3 weeks. From left to right: New Glenn - satellite launch now, planned for the Moon Starship - test flight 12 now, planned for the Moon Artemis - to the Moon and back with 4 crew aboard Pushing the very edge of our capability as we learn how to more safely & cheaply reach space, to explore all that exists beyond. @nasa @SpaceX @blueorigin
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Geoff Russ 🍁
Geoff Russ 🍁@GeoffRuss3·
Whatever differences exist on the right regarding the role of government, we can surely agree that a corrupted, bloated bureaucratic state should never be the goal. "Businesses already pay taxes so the state can protect them from bad actors. The province has abandoned that mission and then adds insult to injury by taxing businesses who hire outside help." Very glad to have @BindaCarson of the Canadian Taxpayers Federation @taxpayerDOTcom in @WDiminishment today. withoutdiminishment.com/publish/post/1…
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Latest in space
Latest in space@latestinspace·
BREAKING 🚨: NASA says Artemis II is a 'GO' with zero technical issues reported ahead of Wednesday's historic Moon launch FOUR ASTRONAUTS WILL FLY AROUND THE MOON FOR THE FIRST TIME SINCE 1972 Liftoff set for April 1st!
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Michelle Mollineaux 莫米雪
Anna, you are absolutly right! Public and staff safety should never be negotiable and it is time to ask what happened to protecting the public? See my new blog: When Ideology Replaces Common Sense - it relects what you have been demanding in the legislature and the NDP completely ignoring Public Safety! open.substack.com/pub/michelle4b…
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Michelle Mollineaux 莫米雪 retweetledi
Dr Anna Kindy
Dr Anna Kindy@DrKindyMLA·
Please look at my 2025 estimates (transcripts or video) when I question the Minister of Health regarding the HPOA, the bill passed by this NDP government with virtually no consultation with stakeholders. This bill will fundamentally change how ALL of healthcare is regulated. Not only could the minister not answer my question as to the evidence, any evidence that the HPOA was and is necessary or beneficial to health and safety of British Columbians but she stated that one of the goals of the HPOA is to DEPOLITICIZE the disciplinary process in healthcare. The Doctors of BC representative stated recently that a major concern is the potential that this bill will politicize discipline in all aspects of healthcare. Under the HPOA - College boards will all be appointed by a politician (Minister of Health) who will than appoint the registrar. -The new positions of the Health Occupations Director and the Superintendent of Discipline are appointed by government. - The Superintendent of Discipline will appoint the professional members including the Disciplinary Tribunal. So that means all of discipline will be directed by government and their appointees and there is no judicial mechanism of appeal. Decisions are final. Furthermore, the Minister of Health may by order, direct with almost supreme power. So when a process is completely driven by government and government appointees, how is this not POLITICISATION?
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Michelle Mollineaux 莫米雪
Very cool Kirk! Congratulations and wishing you all the best!
Kirk LaPointe@kirklapointe

Some personal news: I am running to be mayor of West Vancouver in the Oct. 17 municipal election. Kirk LaPointe Announces Candidacy for Mayor of West Vancouver Says community needs stronger financial discipline, better consultation, and a clearer plan for the future WEST VANCOUVER, BC — Veteran journalist, business executive and community board member Kirk LaPointe is seeking the office of Mayor of West Vancouver, launching a campaign focused on restoring public trust, bringing greater discipline to taxes and spending, strengthening village centres and local business, planning responsibly for housing and infrastructure, and giving West Vancouver a stronger voice at Metro Vancouver. Learn more, and how to support, at kirklapointe.ca “We need to manage public money more carefully, support a healthier local economy, and make sure West Vancouver speaks with a stronger voice regionally,” LaPointe said. “Above all, we need to rebuild confidence that local government is working with the community, not simply presenting decisions to it. People want to know their voice matters before decisions are made, not after.” LaPointe said he is entering the race because local government has become too reactive, too costly, and too disconnected from the people it serves. He said West Vancouver needs leadership that listens earlier, explains decisions more clearly, and works with the community on a practical long-term plan. LaPointe has spent decades in journalism, business, and public life, leading major national and local news organizations, serving in senior business and communications roles, acting as an ombudsman, teaching at the university level, and serving on community not-for-profit boards. He said those experiences have been grounded in public accountability, sound judgment, and helping people understand complex issues and institutions. “My career has been about asking tough questions, listening closely, and ethically holding institutions to account,” LaPointe said. “I want to bring that same seriousness, openness, and respect for the public to the mayor’s office.” LaPointe said West Vancouver needs a more disciplined approach on taxes, spending, infrastructure planning, and service delivery with greater burdens looming and many residents feeling they are being asked to pay more without enough clarity, consultation, or long-term vision. He said the community also needs a practical economic plan to strengthen village centres, support local business, and broaden the tax base over time. He said West Vancouver must plan thoughtfully for changing housing needs, including gentle densification that respects neighbourhood character and protects livability. He said the community must be more welcoming to seniors, families, workers, and younger generations who want to build their lives here. LaPointe said recent controversies, including the paid parking debate, have reinforced a growing public concern that consultation too often comes late in the process, after key decisions have effectively been shaped. He said decisions affecting daily life, neighbourhood character, and local business must be grounded in meaningful public engagement and clear public justification. He also said West Vancouver needs stronger accountability at Metro Vancouver, where major decisions on spending, infrastructure, and regional priorities have significant local consequences. He would not accept additional compensation from the Metro Vancouver board. “This is a community with deep strengths, high expectations, and a strong sense of place,” LaPointe said. “It deserves leadership that is prudent, consultative, and prepared to work with residents on a real plan for the years ahead.” Further details of LaPointe’s campaign for the October 17 election will be announced in the coming weeks.

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Michelle Mollineaux 莫米雪
Healthcare in British Columbia is not just under strain—it’s failing to deliver care when people need it most. And instead of fixing it, this government is doubling down on ideology, centralizing control, and ignoring the very professionals who keep the system running. Public and staff safety should never be negotiable. It’s time to ask: what happened to protecting the public? 👉 New blog: When Ideology Replaces Common Sense open.substack.com/pub/michelle4b… #bcpoli #HealthcareFailure #Bill36 #BCPoli #PatientFirst #SupportHealthcareWorkers @DrKindyMLA @ToorJody @jodyvance @CPBCCaucus @Conservative_BC
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