Image: Teri Westerby
Chilliwack by-election

Emotions run high after Chilliwack by-election, as SD33 trustee labels winner ‘career politician’

Mar 3, 2025 | 9:39 AM

CHILLIWACK — Emotions ran high in the aftermath of Saturday’s Chilliwack by-election, with one current SD33 trustee labeling the by-election winner a “career politician.”

According to the text of a social media post Saturday night, roughly two hours after Laurie Throness won, current SD33 trustee Teri Westerby said the nearly 3,800 votes Throness received did not reflect Chilliwack.

“3,800 votes do not define Chilliwack. They do not determine the heart of our community, the strength of our diversity, or the deep commitment so many of us have to inclusion and human rights,” Westerby said. “Because look at how close we came—just 800 votes separated a career conservative politician from a parent who represents the people actually raising children in our schools. 800 votes. That’s the razor-thin line between concentrated power and collective power.”

Throness doesn’t exactly embody a career politician. He served seven years as a democratically elected MLA representing Chilliwack, the same manner in which Westerby was elected in 2022 – by the voters of Chilliwack. Throness has not served as an elected official anywhere else in Canada previously. Of the people currently occupying seats on the Chilliwack Board of Education, Willow Reichelt and David Swankey have served for over six years and are coming up on their seventh year as elected officials later this year, the same amount of time that Throness served as an MLA in Chilliwack.

Interestingly enough, section 130 of the Chilliwack School District’s governing bylaws pertaining to trustee conduct states that trustees commit to “work with fellow Trustees in a spirit of collaboration.” It’s doubtful Westerby’s comments reflect the code of ethics as it relates to collaborating with fellow trustees.

Westerby also criticized the outcome of Saturday’s by-election.

“Chilliwack is a place where people stand up for what’s right, where we fight for every student to feel safe, and where we don’t let a small fraction of voters get to dictate the future of all our children,” Westerby wrote in his Facebook post. “They do not represent us all. This election result does not mean that hate or exclusion have won the day. That should tell us something.”

In contrast to Westerby’s online comments, Throness thanked fellow candidates Katie Bartel and Shane Kooyman for running.

Image: Laurie Throness

“Well, the voters have decided and it is a privilege to be chosen to serve the community of Chilliwack once again. A big thank you to the people of Chilliwack!” Throness wrote at 9:07 p.m. Saturday night, only 40 minutes after the voting results were counted. “I also want to thank Katie Bartel and Shane Kooyman for putting their names forward and running dynamic campaigns. They did a service to the public by offering realistic choices to voters.”

Katie Bartel did issue congratulations to Throness for winning, and said she hoped to educate him about SD33 schools.

Image: Katie Bartel

“Congratulations to Laurie Throness on his win. I look forward to seeing him at his first school board meeting and educating him on the public education system and the role of a school trustee when I return to my role as the DPAC Chair, ensuring that he and the board remember who they serve: students, not personal agendas. See you at the table Laurie Throness,” Bartel wrote on her Facebook page.