Ken Sim

Ken Sim
沈觀健
Sim in 2024
41st Mayor of Vancouver
Assumed office
November 7, 2022
Preceded byKennedy Stewart
Personal details
BornKenneth Sim
(1970-10-18) October 18, 1970
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
PartyABC Vancouver (municipal)
Other political
affiliations
Non-Partisan Association (2018)
SpouseTeena Gupta
Alma materUniversity of British Columbia
ProfessionBusinessman
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese沈觀健
Simplified Chinese沈观健
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinShěn Guānjiàn
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationSám Gūn-gihn
JyutpingSam2 Gun1-gin6
other Yue
TaishaneseSim2 Gon1-gen5

Kenneth Sim (Chinese: 沈觀健; Cantonese Yale: Sám Gūn-gihn; born October 18, 1970)[1][2][3][4] is a Canadian politician and businessman who has served as the 41st mayor of Vancouver since 2022.[5][6] Sim is the first Chinese Canadian elected Mayor of Vancouver.[7][8]

Early life

Born in Vancouver to Hong Kong immigrants Francis Sim (d. 1999) and Maria Theresa Kim (1932–2016),[9][10] Sim attended Magee Secondary School, Sir Winston Churchill Secondary School, and the UBC Sauder School of Business, graduating with a BComm in finance in 1993. He also holds a FCPA and FCA accounting designation.[11]

Sim co-founded Nurse Next Door Home Healthcare Services in 2001, and has founded multiple businesses since then.[12][3]

Early political career

Sim first ran for mayor of Vancouver with the Non-Partisan Association in the 2018 Vancouver municipal election and finished the runner-up to Kennedy Stewart.[13]

Mayor of Vancouver

Sim was elected mayor of Vancouver, running under the ABC Vancouver party banner, on October 15, 2022. He is the first challenger to defeat a sitting mayor of Vancouver since 1980, when Mike Harcourt upset incumbent Jack Volrich.[14]

Tenure

Sim's ABC Vancouver faced defeat in the 2025 Vancouver City Council by-election, with his party's candidates placing sixth and seventh, respectively. In addition, his former chief of staff and 2022 campaign manager, Kareem Allam, formed the Vancouver Liberals after a dispute with the mayor.[15] 2022 ABC Vancouver elected officials Victoria Jung, Christopher JK Richardson, Rebecca Bligh, Brennan Bastyovanszky, Laura Christensen, and Scott Jensen have all either been ejected or have resigned from the party.[16]

Homelessness and housing

In March 2023, during Sim's mayoral term, a homeless count was commenced by the Homelessness Services Association of BC, the first since the beginning of the pandemic. The results of the count were released in October 2023.[17] A local non-profit serving the population expects the results to show increases given their increased demand for services.[18][19]

Sim's plan to address the homeless crisis in Vancouver has centred on partnership with Provincial and Federal government programs. Within his first 45 days in office Ken Sim and the ABC-dominated Council expedited work camp-style housing in partnership with BC Housing that implemented 90 units on City property.[20] On March 27, 2023, Sim and Provincial Housing Minister Ravi Kahlon announced a plan to open 330 additional units by June, 2023.[21] In addition, ABC Vancouver have repeatedly stated their intent to decrease permit processing times as additional means to stimulate the development of new, permanent housing.[22]

In early April 2023, news outlets began reporting on the City of Vancouver's efforts to bring the East Hastings encampment to a close. Sim remarked that the conclusion of the encampment is part of a larger effort of "finding empathetic ways to get people off the streets and into housing that they need."[23]

On April 5, 2023, Sim announced the encampment would be brought to a close.[24] By the end of the April 5, city workers removed most of the encampment on Hastings, disposed of much of the debris left by the encampment, and offered residents temporary re-homing to shelters while the city awaits new more permanent housing to arrive in June.[25] As part of the operation April 5 and 6, crews took down 94 “entrenched structures” and removed 50 propane tanks from the encampment zone. More than 70 totes for storage were also provided to individuals and stored off-site.[26]

Park board

On December 6, 2023, three ABC Vancouver Vancouver Park Board commissioners left the party to sit as independents after Sim introduced a motion to ask the provincial government to change the Vancouver Charter to dissolve the park board.[27] While remaining independent, they have indicated they will form a majority bloc with Green Party commissioner Tom Digby.[28][29][30]

Mental health

During the 2022 campaign, Sim promised he would hire 100 nurses to join the previously established Car 87 program, alongside 100 new police officers.[31] On February 14, 2023, Vancouver City Council voted to allocate $2.8 million to Vancouver Coastal Health, to hire 58 mental health workers "to support people who are suffering from mental illness combined with lack of stable housing and substance abuse issues."[32][33]

City finances

Mayor Ken Sim announced in April 2023 that he would create a task force with a mandate to review the city's operating and capital budgets and recommend ways tax dollars can be spent more efficiently and responsibly.[34]

Sim's major campaign promises included increases to the budget of VPD and a commitment to pay for these budget increases without cutting services or increasing property taxes.[35] Despite campaign promises, in a council meeting early in his term, he suggested that the Vancouver Public Library should look into "potential revenue opportunities" to fund operations.[36]

Vancouver City Council increased property taxes by 10.7% during Sim's first year in office. The property tax increase resulted in the average condo owner paying an additional 33 cents per day and the average home owner paying an additional 83 cents per day in property taxes. Council also voted to eliminate the controversial 25 cent "cup fee" on single-use beverage cups.[37][38][39][40]

Sim and his council increased property taxes by an additional 7.5% in his second year. In December 2025, he proposed a motion that would explore the city converting some of its reserves into bitcoin.[41]

Controversies

Sim was criticized by members of the Green Party of Vancouver for converting a boardroom at Vancouver City Hall into a personal gym.[42]

Foreign interference allegations

In 2023, The Globe and Mail published allegations from an anonymous Canadian Security Intelligence Service source claiming that China interfered in the 2022 Vancouver municipal election.[43][44][45] Of the allegations, Sim stated "If there's proof of foreign interference in our election, I want to know about it because I'm a Canadian … but right now there are a bunch of insinuations."[46]

Sean Orr drug hoax

In February 2026, Vancouver mayor Ken Sim alleged at a Chinese-language media briefing on 6 February that COPE councillor Sean Orr had distributed illegal drugs on Christmas Day. CBC News reported that the allegation was unsubstantiated and that Orr denied it, stating he had been visiting family on the Sunshine Coast at the time.[47]

Sim apologized to Orr by phone and addressed reporters on 27 February, stating that he had spoken with Orr and apologized but declined to answer further questions.[48]

On March 3, 2026, Sim held a press conference stating that his comments were based on an unverified photograph shown to him by a member of the public. Orr said the apology was insufficient and stated he was considering a defamation lawsuit and a complaint to Vancouver's integrity commissioner.[49]

Personal life

Sim resides in West Point Grey with his wife and their four sons.[50] He has said that his children's inability to see "a future for themselves in Vancouver" was a primary reason for his involvement in politics.[51]

Hong Kong politician Bernard Charnwut Chan is a first cousin.[45] Sim's father was Chan's maternal uncle.[52][53] Canadian intelligence analyst Scott McGregor and journalist Ina Mitchell noted in their book, The Mosaic Effect, that Bernard's father, Robin Chan, who is Sim's uncle, held the role of vice chairman of the All-China Federation of Returned Overseas Chinese (ACFROC), a top-ranking organization in the Chinese Communist Party's united front network.[54]

Sim has taken training programs held by Landmark Worldwide, described by some as a large-group awareness training organization, crediting the training with teaching him how to have "authentic conversations" and giving him the confidence to run for mayor.[55]

Electoral record

2026 Vancouver municipal election: Mayor
The 2026 municipal election will be held on October 17.
Party Candidate Votes % Elected
Liberal Kareem Allam
OneCity William Azaroff
Vote Vancouver Rebecca Bligh
Green Pete Fry
ABC Vancouver Ken Sim (incumbent)
Total number of voters
Rejected ballots
Turnout
Eligible voters
2022 Vancouver municipal election: Mayor
Party Candidate Votes % Elected
ABC Vancouver Ken Sim 85,732 50.96 Y
Forward Together Kennedy Stewart (incumbent) 49,593 29.48
TEAM for a Livable Vancouver Colleen Hardwick 16,769 9.97
Progress Vancouver Mark Marissen 5,830 3.47
NPA Fred Harding 3,905 2.32
Independent Leona Brown 1,519 0.9
Independent Ping Chan 1,154 0.69
Independent Françoise Raunet 1,116 0.66
Independent Satwant Shottha 994 0.59
Independent Imtiaz Popat 411 0.24
Independent Lewis Villegas 363 0.22
Independent Mike Hansen 314 0.19
Independent Gölök Buday 195 0.12
Independent Ryan Charmley 183 0.11
Independent Dante Teti 142 0.08
ABC Vancouver gain from Forward Together Swing +11.02[a]
"2022 Election results - list view". results.vancouver.ca. City of Vancouver. Retrieved June 8, 2025.
  1. ^ Calculated using Ken Sim's and Kennedy Stewart's 2018 results.
2018 Vancouver municipal election: Mayor
Party Candidate Votes % Elected
Independent Kennedy Stewart 49,705 28.71 Y
NPA Ken Sim 48,748 28.16
Independent Shauna Sylvester 35,457 20.48
Coalition Vancouver Wai Young 11,872 6.86
Yes Vancouver Hector Bremner 9,924 5.73
Vancouver 1st Fred Harding 5,640 3.26
ProVancouver David Chen 3,573 2.06
Independent Sean Cassidy 1,536 0.89
IDEA Vancouver Connie Fogal 1,435 0.83
Independent Mike Hansen 951 0.55
Independent Jason Lamarche 695 0.40
Independent Rollergirl 686 0.40
Independent Ping Chan 653 0.38
Independent John Yano 510 0.29
Independent Tim Ly 349 0.20
Independent Sophia C. Kaiser 336 0.19
Independent Satwant K. Shottha 331 0.19
Independent Lawrence Massey 233 0.13
Independent Katy Le Rougetel 181 0.10
Independent Gölök Z. Buday 178 0.10
Independent Maynard Aubichon 139 0.08

References

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