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Former B.C. MLA candidate says she won’t stop speaking out after car set on fire

Former NDP MLA turned B.C. Conservative Party member Gwen O'Mahony says she may have agitated certain groups
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Nanaimo RCMP are looking for witness and dash cam footage after a compact car was found on fire in the hospital area last week. (Submitted photo)

A Nanaimo-Lantzville political candidate, asked if she had any enemies when her car was set fire, replied that she imagines she’s made a few.

A compact car belonging to Gwen O’Mahony, who ran for the Conservative Party of B.C. in last year’s provincial election, was set fire near her home in the Nanaimo hospital area last week.

According to a police press release, Nanaimo Fire Rescue called RCMP after responding to the intersection of Summerhill Place and Dufferin Crescent at approximately 9:30 p.m. on Feb. 11.

O’Mahony said a police officer at the scene told her that there were logs placed under her car and asked her if she had any enemies, and she mentioned that she had been a political candidate and had been speaking up on a lot of controversial issues.

"There's certainly groups I could have agitated, because I've been very outspoken about safer supply, harm reduction, online I've been called transphobic by people because I was [at the B.C. legislature] for the [vote on the Fairness in Women's and Girls' Sports Act]."

O’Mahony had been interviewed by alternative media earlier in the week about church arsons, calling them anti-Christian hate crimes, and the interview had been posted the day of her car fire.

The former NDP MLA in the Fraser Valley said in all her years in politics, she’s never felt personally threatened, but said there’s a level of animosity now that she’s never experienced before. Calling people names like a “genocider or a hater of a certain group” carries a lot of weight and is a dangerous route to go, she suggested.

“I think that a number of people who have certain political views right now, especially on the left, tend to operate in an echo chamber, so their ideas don’t get challenged,” O’Mahony said. “I think this is a disturbing trend that we’ve seen in B.C. and across Canada. If anybody challenges an idea, they get called a name and it gets personal, rather than addressing the actual issue itself.”

She said the personal attacks haven’t discouraged her from speaking up, and if anything, she’s become better at ignoring them.

“I believe that you stay consistent and true to your message and that’s the best route to go,” she said.

Investigators are asking any motorists in the area to review their dash camera footage and report anything suspicious to the Nanaimo RCMP non-emergency line at 250-754-2345, referring to file No. 2025-4083.

editor@nanaimobulletin.com



About the Author: Greg Sakaki

I have been in the community newspaper business for two decades, all of those years with Black Press Media.
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