Ravi Singh Parmar (born November 15, 1994) is a Canadian politician who was elected MLA for Langford-Juan de Fuca in a by-election in 2023.[1] He succeeded former NDP premier John Horgan, who resigned from the seat.[2] Currently, Parmar is the youngest MLA in the British Columbia Legislature. [3] He is also the Parliamentary Secretary for International Credentials, with the Ministry of Post-Secondary Education and Future Skills. [4]
Prior to his election as MLA, Parmar served as a School District 62 Sooke Board Trustee from 2014 to 2017, before becoming Board Chair.[5] [6] Parmar also worked as a Ministerial Advisor and Chief of Staff to various provincial ministers, including the Minister of Jobs, Economic Recovery, and Innovation and the Minister of Forests.[7]
In the early 1990s, Parmar's parents immigrated to Canada from their home country of India. Both his mother and father worked in the healthcare sector while raising Parmar and his two younger siblings in the city of Langford, British Columbia. Both parents experienced severe job insecurity due to the active privatization of the healthcare sector, resulting in difficult times for the family. Parmar cites this as his inspiration for entering government and politics.[8]
In 2005, while in middle school, Parmar wrote an extra credit class assignment on that year's provincial election. For this project, he had reached out to then-MLA John Horgan to invite him to his class. Horgan obliged, igniting a longstanding mentor-mentee relationship between the two that has persisted ever since.[9]
Parmar got his earnest start in community politics while still a teenager. He attended Belmont Secondary School where he authored a student petition and led a campus-wide walkout, both as means to get two new secondary schools approved for the West Shore region.[10] The movement was successful, and the two schools came in the form of Royal Bay Secondary School in Colwood and an updated Belmont Secondary School on Langford Lake Road.
After graduating from Belmont, Parmar went on to study Political Science at the University of Victoria, earning his Bachelor of Arts. It was during his post-secondary studies that Parmar was first elected to the Sooke School District 62 Board of Education as a Trustee. At the time of his election to the Board in 2014 he was only 20 years old, making him the youngest school board trustee in Canada. Parmar ran on the promise that he would bring to this role the perspective of a recent consumer of the public education system. [11]
Two years later Parmar was elected Chair of the Board, again the youngest in Canada to hold such position. His priority as Chair was the opening of new schools in the western communities. As such, he oversaw a 2,600 seat expansion of the local school system, the largest of its time. These seats came via the newly constructed PEXSISEṈ Elementary School and Centre Mountain Lellum Middle School, both of which are situated in the West Hills area of Langford. [12]
It was also in this early period of his life when Parmar had his first formal entry into government work, serving under former Premier John Horgan as a constituency assistant in his MLA office and as a campaign manager for several BC NDP candidates. Additionally, it was at this time that he garnered early experience working with the Westshore Chamber of Commerce.
Following his graduation, Parmar went on to work for the Government of British Columbia in various capacities. Most notably he was Chief of Staff to the Minister of Jobs, Economic Recovery, and Innovation, at the time Ravi Kahlon. Parmar was a key architect of the Stronger BC Economic Plan, which aimed to support small business and recuperate BC's economy following the COVID-19 pandemic.[13]
Parmar's central role with Minister Kahlon came following work across various other ministries, including a position as Senior Ministerial Advisor in the Office of the Minister of Forests.[14] During his time with Forests, Parmar worked closely with then-Minister Doug Donaldson on the development and rollout of BC's Mass Timber Action Plan.[15]
In March of 2023 after announcing his intention to step down as MLA, Premier, and BC NDP Party Leader, then-Premier John Horgan formally resigned from his seat as MLA for Langford-Juan de Fuca. A by-election to fill the now vacant seat was thereafter called by succeeding Premier David Eby. Parmar won the nomination to run as John Horgan's replacement, as the BC NDP candidate for the riding.[16]
On June 24, 2023, Parmar was successful in the by-election, winning 53% of the vote. He thus became the MLA for the riding of Langford-Juan de Fuca, the youngest in British Columbia. One month later on July 28, he was officially sworn in as MLA alongside fellow BC NDP by-election victor Joan Phillip.[17]
In February 2024, Parmar was officially appointed to be Parliamentary Secretary for International Credentials with the Ministry of Post-Secondary Education and Future Skills, serving alongside Minister Lisa Beare.[18] In this role, Parmar has led the implementation of the BC Government's recent International Credentials Recognition Act, intended to streamline the pathway for professionals to enter the BC labour force with non-Canadian professional qualifications.[19] Premier David Eby has also assigned him to oversee the intake of international students in BC, with Parmar becoming an advocate for those seeking educational opportunities within the province. Since taking on this file, Parmar has implemented BC's International Education Framework.
Parmar was acclaimed in June 2024 to seek re-election in the new electoral district of Langford-Highlands, as the BC NDP candidate and incumbent MLA. As the candidate, he will be competing to maintain his seat in the fall provincial election. [20]