Green Party candidates, 2004 Canadian federal election

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The Green Party of Canada ran a full slate of 308 candidates in the 2004 federal election. Some of these candidates have separate biography pages; relevant information about other candidates may be found here.

The candidates are listed by province and riding name.

Contents

[edit] Alberta

[edit] George Read (Calgary Southeast)

Current leader of the Green Party of Alberta.

[edit] Darcy Kraus (Calgary Southwest)

Kraus was born in Calgary, and holds a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science from the University of Calgary. He was thirty at the time of the election, and was the Green Party's election campaign organizer for Alberta (Calgary Herald, 8 April 2004). He worked in sales in private life, and was a radio programmer at CJSW 90.9 FM in Calgary (Calgary Herald, 27 June 2004 + [1]

Kraus is a longtime personal friend of Alberta Greens leader George Read (Edmonton Journal, 31 October 2004), and himself ran for the Alberta Greens in the 2001 provincial election.

Electoral record
Election Division Party Votes % Place Winner
2001 provincial Calgary North Hill Green 404 4/4 Richard Magnus, Progressive Conservative
2004 federal Calgary Southwest Green 3,210 6.22 3/6 Stephen Harper, Conservative

[edit] Manitoba

[edit] David Kattenburg (Brandon—Souris)

Kattenburg is a radio documentary producer and science educator in Manitoba, Canada.

He received a Bachelor of Science degree from McMaster University in 1975, and was awarded a Ph.D. in Medical Sciences in 1981. He subsequently worked as a journalist, instructor and environmental activist. Now residing in Brandon, Kattenburg is the owner and operator of Earth Chronicle Productions, which has created documentaries on issues relating to development and the environment. His series include The Earth Chronicles, More Than Just A Dozen, Children of the Earth, Partners in Action and ClimateWatch.

He received 1264 votes in 2004, or about 3.5% of the total cast.

[edit] Andrew Basham (Charleswood—St. James)

Basham received 880 votes (2.09%), finishing in fourth place against Conservative candidate Steven Fletcher.

[edit] C. David Nickarz (Churchill)

Nickarz is a carpenter and environmental activist. He first became involved with the environmental movement in 1991, while attending the University of Manitoba. The following year, he unsuccessfully sought to prevent the capture of four beluga whales in Churchill, Manitoba for sale to foreign zoos and circuses. Two of the whales later died in captivity, and the Canadian government passed a law banning future exports. No belugas have been captured in Churchill since 1992, due in part to the efforts of Nickarz and other protesters. Nickarz has also been active with the anti-whaling group Sea Shepherd Conservation Society, and has traveled to Antarctica, the Faroe Islands, the Galapagos Islands, Cape Flattery and the Gulf of St. Lawrence with the organization.[1][2][3] He has emphasized that while he opposes commercial whaling, he is not against traditional whale-hunting among aboriginal societies.[4]

He was arrested in 1993 for taking part in an anti-logging protest at Clayoquot Sound, British Columbia, and fined $1500. The fee was paid by the Green Party of Canada.[5] A newspaper report of the arrest lists him as twenty-one years old.[6]

Shortly after the 2004 election, Nickarz organized a protest against the spraying of malathion in Winnipeg. City authorities argued that the spraying would reduce the city's mosquito population, although Nickarz and others believed it was ineffective and dangerous.[7] David's father Jim Nickarz was arrested for protesting against malathion spraying the following year, and vowed to go on a hunger strike during his time in jail. The younger Nickarz was quoted as saying, "My father's of sound mind... he's very determined to see [the protest] through".[8] In 2006, Nickarz joined with veteran Winnipeg activist Nick Ternette and others to form the Cancer Brigade, a group that argues malathion weakens the body's immune system and its ability to fight cancer.[9]

He has campaigned for the federal and provincial Green Parties on three occasions.

Electoral record
Election Division Party Votes % Place Winner
1999 provincial Concordia Green 87 4/4 Gary Doer, New Democratic Party
2000 federal Winnipeg—Transcona Green 229 0.70 5/8 Bill Blaikie, New Democratic Party
2004 federal Churchill Green 612 3.09 4/4 Bev Desjarlais, New Democratic Party

[edit] Lindy Clubb (Dauphin—Swan River)

Lindy Clubb is a longtime resident of Winnipeg, and also owns a summer home in the Riding Mountain Escarpment. She is a freelance writer, researcher and editor, and has extensive experience in environmental advocacy in the region. She is the coordinator of the Mixedwood Forest Society, and is active in the 'nternational Erosion Control Association and Wolfe Creek Conservation. Clubb has also been involved in various activities with Manitoba's traditional Ojibway community. She is a supporter of family farms (as opposed to corporate farms), and is also a supporter of gun control.

The 2004 election was Clubb's first venture into electoral politics. She received 673 votes, about 2 % of the total cast.

[edit] Elijah Gair (Elmwood—Transcona)

Gair was a security official during the election.[10] His campaign centred on the need to find alternative energy sources, to replace forestry products and petroleum. According to his campaign literature, he supports a social model based on community and family instead of competition. He received 719 votes (2.46%), finishing fourth against New Democratic Party incumbent Bill Blaikie.

Gair was scheduled to be the Green Party's candidate for Winnipeg South in the 2006 federal election, but did not actually appear on the ballot.[11]

[edit] Jacob Giesbrecht (Kildonan—St. Paul)

Giesbrecht is a lawyer and activist in Manitoba, Canada. Raised in rural Manitoba, Giesbrecht moved to Winnipeg in 1986 and has resided there since that time. He is a lawyer with the firm of Inkster Christie Hughes, specializing in estate, unemployment and labour law. Giesbrecht has also been involved in volunteer organizations, including a number of anti-poverty groups in Winnipeg's downtown core.

He received 756 votes, or about 2% of the total votes in the riding.

[edit] Marc Payette (Portage—Lisgar)

Payette received 856 votes (2.46%), finishing fifth against Brian Pallister of the Conservative Party of Canada. See his entry here for more information.

[edit] Daniel Backé (St. Boniface)

Backé is a young politician with a history of social activism in Winnipeg. At age seven, he was involved in a program to assist juvenile delinquents with reading and writing skills (Ottawa Citizen, 12 January 1989).

At the time of the election, Backé was working towards the completion of his Bachelor of Arts degree at the University of Winnipeg, where he majored in Political Science and Theatre.

The 2004 election was Backé's first as a candidate. He claimed that his priorities were Senate reform and the creation of federal subsidy for ecologically-sound methods of transportation.[2] He received 925 votes (2.40%), finishing fourth against Liberal incumbent Raymond Simard.

[edit] Alon Weinberg (Winnipeg North)

Weinberg is a young politician and activist. He was born in the West Kildonan section of Winnipeg, where his grandparents founded Miracle Bakery, a longtime north end institution. He has described himself as an environmental educator, and has taught fifth and sixth grade students about natural cycles. Weinberg is supporter of organic farming, and has an interest in holistic medicine. He protested against the use of malathion against insects after two dead crows were allegedly found to have West Nile disease, and the provincial government suspended buffer zones by declaring a health emergency.(National Post, 22 July 2002)

Weinberg has a Bachelor of Arts degree in Philosophy from the University of Winnipeg. He has been a member of a Winnipeg organization called Jews for a Just Peace, which supports Palestinian self-determination and a two-state solution to end the Israeli-Palestinian conflict. He took part in a protest against former Israeli Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu's appearance in the city in 2002, arguing that Netanyahu "believes that more violence is a way to security".[3]

As of 2006, Weinberg is studying Native Studies at the University of Manitoba. He remains interested in the Israeli-Palestinian dispute, and has called for "justice and peace and mutual recognition" between Israelis and Palestinains based on human rights.[4]

He believes that ecoliteracy is key to transitioning from inefficient and unsustainable growth economics to localized and diversified smaller-scale economies. He has also identified biomimcry. a principle of design that replicates nature's cycles, as a powerful tool for humanity.

Electoral record
Election Division Party Votes % Place Winner
2003 provincial St. Johns Green 221 3.79 4/5 Gord Mackintosh, New Democratic Party
2004 federal Winnipeg North Green 531 2.04 4/6 Judy Wasylycia-Leis, New Democratic Party

[edit] External sources

[edit] Ron Cameron (Winnipeg South)

Cameron was raised in Yorkton and Regina, in Saskatchewan. He trained as a policeman, and was in charge of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Forensic Laboratory in Winnipeg from 1983 to 1989. He moved to Vancouver after his retirement, but returned to Winnipeg in 1999. At the time of the 2004 election, he coached swimming and was a member of the Lifesaving Society.[5]

Cameron's campaign focused on environmental issues, free education and a self-reliant economy. He received 1003 votes (2.67%), finishing fourth against Liberal cabinet minister Reg Alcock.

Cameron served as president of the Green Party of Manitoba in 2005, and appealed for Markus Buchart to remain as party leader after a period of division in the party.[6] He resigned his position in support of Buchart in March 2005 (Winnipeg Free Press, 14 March 2005).

He has been nominated to run for the Green Party in Winnipeg South in the 39th Canadian federal election.[7]

[edit] Newfoundland and Labrador

[edit] Justin Dollimont (Random—Burin—St. George's)

Has a Bachelor of Science degree in Environmental Science from Acadia University in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and an Advanced Diploma in Marine Geomatics from the Centre of Geographic Sciences in Lawrencetown, Nova Scotia. Spent two months in Costa Rica in 2000, preserving a watershed of rivers under the sponsorship of Canada World Youth and the Conservation Corps of Newfoundland and Labrador. Has worked with an Environmental Consulting Firm at Mount Pearl, Newfoundland and Labrador. Has also done environmental surveys in the Gulf of Mexico. Supports the legalization of marijuana. Was twenty-six years old at the time of the election. Received 474 votes, finishing fourth. The winning candidate was Bill Matthews of the Liberal Party of Canada.

[edit] Nova Scotia

[edit] Chris Milburn (Sydney—Victoria)

Milburn received 855 votes, finishing fifth against Liberal incumbent Mark Eyking.

[edit] Michael G. Oddy (Halifax)

Oddy came in fourth, with 2081 votes, to Alexa McDonough of the New Democratic Party.

Oddy had previously run in the same riding in the Canadian federal election, 2000 where he came sixth, with 587 votes.

[edit] Ontario

[edit] Nick Hudson (Brampton—Springdale)

Hudson has a certificate in Broadcast Sales and Marketing from Humber College. He worked as a materials supervisor in Woodbridge at the time of the election,[8] and was studying part-time for a Bachelor of Arts degree in Administrative Studies from York University.[9] He received 1,927 votes (4.74%), finishing fourth against Liberal candidate Ruby Dhalla.

[edit] Sanjeev Goel (Brampton West)

Born in Montreal, and graduated from the University of Toronto's medical school in 1995. Medical doctor and family physician, practicing at in Brampton at "A Healing Place", a three-story Victorian house that he manages with his wife. Practices Chelation Therapy. Has an interest in meditation and nutritional supplements. A member of a non-violent social action group called TruthForce, and co-manages the site www.truthforce.ca. Has cited the Mahatma Gandhi as a personal inspiration. Opposed the 2003 invasion of Iraq, and joined the Green Party as a result of this controversy. Also opposes "public-private partnerships" in health care. Focused on electoral reform and environment issues. Received 1,603 votes, finishing fourth in a field of five candidates. The winner was Colleen Beaumier of the Liberal Party of Canada.

Previous candidacies:

[edit] Stuart Langstaff (Carleton—Lanark)

Langstaff holds a Bachelor's Degree in Engineering Physics and has seventeen years experience high tech sector, where he has specialized in electronic and optical hardware design. At the time of the 2004 election, he was planning to enter a Bachelor of Education program at the University of Ottawa to teach high school science and mathematids. Langstaff owns an organic farm in Pakenham, and has served on the Environmental Advisory and Plasma Arc Committees of Mississippi Mills. He campaigned for the Pakenham seat on the Mississippi Mills council in 2003, and lost by 57 votes.[10] He was 42 years old in 2004.[11]

Langstaff is a frequent candidate for the Green Party, having campaigned under its banner in 1997, 2000 and 2004. He was also a candidate of the Green Party of Ontario in 1999. He has rejected the view that the Green Party is left-wing, and has argued that it does not fit into the traditional "left-right" spectrum (Ottawa Citizen, 30 April 2004).

Electoral record
Election Division Party Votes % Place Winner
1997 federal Ottawa West—Nepean Green 416 5/8 Marlene Catterall, Liberal
1999 provincial Lanark—Carleton Green 681 5/6 Norman Sterling, Progressive Conservative
2000 federal Lanark—Carleton Green 871 1.37 5/8 Scott Reid, Canadian Alliance
2004 federal Carleton—Lanark Green 3,665 4/4 Gordon O'Connor, Conservative

[edit] Mark O'Brien (Davenport)

Teaches English as a Second Language at York University in Toronto, and has worked extensively with Toronto's Latin American population. Has a degree in Linguistics, and also works professionally as a folk musician in the Andean tradition. Received 1,384 votes, finishing fourth. The winning candidate was Mario Silva of the Liberal Party of Canada.

Previous candidacies:

[edit] Mir Kamal (Etobicoke North)

Born in Hyderabad, India. A legal and immigration consultant in Toronto. Has worked outside of Canada as a lawyer and lecturer. Received 605 votes, finishing fifth in a field of seven candidates. The winner was Roy Cullen of the Liberal Party of Canada.

Previous candidacies:

[edit] Tim Holland (Haliburton—Kawartha Lakes—Brock)

Born 1974 in Guelph, Ontario. Has a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science from Trent University, and has been involved in OPIRG's Fair Trade campaigns. A former amateur boxer, Holland also performs as a festival entertainer under the name "Tim the Juggling Fool". Is on the left wing of the Green Party, and supports same-sex marriage. Finished fourth with 2,637 votes, just under 5% of the total cast in his riding. The winning candidate was Barry Devolin of the Conservative Party of Canada.

Previous candidacies:

[edit] Jo Pavlov (Hamilton Mountain)

Pavlov is a computer technician, and worked for the Hamilton-Wentworth District School Board at the time of the election. She was 32 years old in 2004. While a high school student, she had a co-op placement in Sheila Copps's constituency office.

Pavlov is an advocate for A Better Way To Live and is a member of the childfree movement, which argues that people without children are more likely to pursue environmentally-friendly lifestyles.[12] She received 1,378 votes, finishing fourth in a field of five candidates. The winner was Beth Phinney of the Liberal Party of Canada.

Pavlov made the following comment in the 2003 Ontario election: "Forget what you think you know about the Green Party. This isn’t a party of Birkenstock-wearing tree-huggers — those old stereotypes are a thing of the past."[13]

Previous candidacies:

[edit] Anne Marie Pavlov (Hamilton West)

Pavlov is a bank portfolio administrator in Hamilton, and is also a singer and guitarist. During the mid-1990s, she wrote about the difficulties that women sometimes have in being taken seriously as musicians (Hamilton Spectator, 10 April 1995). She was active in protests against the Red Hill Expressway, a project which many environmentalists in Hamilton regard as ecologically unsound (Spectator, 21 June 2004).

Pavlov's sister, Jo Pavlov, has also campaigned for the Green Party (Spectator, 29 June 2004).

She received 1,422 votes (3.21%), finishing fourth against New Democrat David Christopherson.

[edit] Janina Fisher Balfour (Kingston and the Islands)

Balfour was born in Toronto and raised in Jamaica. She moved to Washington, D.C. at age twenty-four after being recruited by the World Bank, and later studied Science and Anthropology at McGill University in Montreal. Since the 1980s, she has been a self-employed "success coach, international speaker and workshop facilitator".

She moved to Kingston, Ontario in 1999, and was 48 years old at the time of the 2004 election (Kingston Whig-Standard, 26 June 2004). Balfour was chosen as the GPC nominee over Queen's University professor George Clark,[14] and finished fourth against Liberal incumbent Peter Milliken with 3,339 votes (6.13%), one of the strongest showings for the Green Party in Ontario.

[edit] Pauline Richards (Kitchener—Waterloo)

Was 52 years old at the time of the election. A resident of Waterloo for 24 years prior to the election. Manages a small manufacturing plant, and leads a tri-city peer counselling network. Teaches peer counselling to adults. A founding member of the Seven Generations Network, and a member of the Laurel Creek Citizens' Committee. Manages the books for Kitchener-Waterloo Fair Trade Coffee. Sings with the Raging Grannies. Received 3,277 votes, finishing fourth in a field of six candidates. The winner was Andrew Telegdi of the Liberal Party of Canada.

Previous candidacies:

[edit] John Baranyi (Lanark—Frontenac—Lennox and Addington)

Baranyi was born in 1961 in Elliot Lake, Ontario. He enrolled at McMaster University in 1980 as an engineer, and left the following year to join the Canada World Youth Exchange Program. He lived in a small village in northern Sumatra, Indonesia for a year, where he was troubled by the local practices of Shell Oil and the effects of industrial capitalism on traditional communities. He later joined the non-government organization Plenty Canada, promoting soy production and nutritional projects in the Caribbean. More recently, Baranyi has worked as a tree planter and carpenter, and designs environmentally-friendly houses. With his wife, owns the vegetarian food company Pulse Foods.[15] He was 42 years old in 2004 (Ottawa Citizen, 2 June 2004).

Baranyi campaigned for the House of Commons as an independent candidate in the 2000 election, and ran for the Green Party of Ontario in 2003. In the latter campaign, he opposed a proposed Ottawa River boat bypass around Chats Dam (Ottawa Citizen, 12 September 2003). He received 2,736 votes (4.84%) in 2004, finishing fourth against Conservative candidate Scott Reid.

Previous candidacies:

[edit] Bronagh Joyce Morgan (London North Centre)

Born in Niagara Falls, Ontario. Has academic degrees from Trent University and Queen's University. Operates a legal research company. Also has several certifications from sports/fitness groups around the country, and is a personal trainer at Goodlife Fitness. A folk musician, and has exhibited artworks at the London Fringe Festival. Supports same-sex marriage. Received 2,376 votes, finishing fourth in a field of six candidates. The winner was Joe Fontana of the Liberal Party of Canada.

Previous candidacies:

[edit] Paul Simas (Mississauga—Brampton South)

Born in Brazil, and moved to Canada in 1989 as a teenager. Was a naval reservist in the 1990s, and is now a Naval Officer involved in the Canadian Forces Cadet Movement. A founding member of Brasilnet, supporting Brazilian professionals and promoting diversity within Canada. Works as an In-Charge Flight Attendant (Purser), and was a prominent member of the Canadian Airlines Employees Charitable Foundation. Also a computer animated drafting technologist, and the operations coordinator of the Green Party of Ontario. His father, Paulo Simas, is also a member of the GPO executive. Was working toward a Bachelor of Arts degree in Anthropology at the time of the election. Has formally presented green policies initiatives to Mississauga mayor Hazel McCallion. Has criticized former leader Joan Russow for leaving the Green Party in favour of the NDP.[16] Received 1,525 votes, finishing fourth in a field of five candidates. The winner was Navdeep Bains of the Liberal Party of Canada.

Previous candidacies:

[edit] Chris Paul Walker (Nepean—Carleton)

Walker was born in Oakville, Ontario. He moved to Kingston for service in the naval reserve, and graduated from Queen's University in 1985 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology. Walker worked for a development company in Toronto for four years, and returned to Kingston in 1993 to work as a home renovator and renewable energy consultant (Kingston Whig-Standard, 10 May 1997). He was 42 years old in 2004.[17]

Walker is a frequent candidate for the GPC and the provincial Green Party of Ontario. He ran an entirely solo campaign in the 1997 federal election, working without a riding association or election scrutineers. After the election, he helped to build a Green Party association in Kingston (KWS, 3 June 1997).

He is not a candidate in the 2006 election.

Electoral record
Election Division Party Votes % Place Winner
1997 federal Kingston and the Islands Green 902 1.74 5/6 Peter Milliken, Liberal
1999 provincial Kingston and the Islands Green 1,174 4/6 John Gerretsen, Liberal
2000 federal Hastings—Frontenac—Lennox and Addington Green 516 5/8 Larry McCormick, Liberal
2003 provincial Renfrew—Nipissing—Pembroke Green 671 4/4 John Yakabuski, Progressive Conservative
2004 federal Nepean—Carleton Green 2,886 4/5 Pierre Poilievre, Conservative

[edit] Tom Ferguson (Niagara West—Glanbrook)

Born in the Niagara region. Was educated at Brock University, the University of Guelph and York University. Has a Master of Arts degree in Political Science. 53 years old at the time of the election. Owner of Niagara Custom Homes. A member of the Town of Lincoln's Municipal Heritage Committee. Was a Progressive Conservative in the 1970s, and became a founding member of the Green Party in 1983. Was a policy advisor to the Green Party of Ontario in the late 1980s. Received 1,761 votes, finishing fourth in a field of six candidates. The winner was Dean Allison of the Conservative Party of Canada.

Previous candidacies:

[edit] David Chernushenko (Ottawa Centre)

Chernushenko received an endorsement from the Ottawa Citizen, and won 4,730 votes for a strong fourth-place finish. The winning candidate was Ed Broadbent of the New Democratic Party.

Chernushenko later became deputy leader of the GPC. See his biography page for more details.

[edit] Raphael Thierrin (Ottawa—Vanier)

Thierrin has two Master's Degrees: one in Environmental Science from the University of Calgary, the other in Library and Information Science from the University of Western Ontario. He has worked as Records Manager for the Alberta Ministry of the Environment. During the 1990s, he worked as a sustainable agriculture consultant. Thierrin has also worked with Canadian Organic Growers, and has been associated with franco-Albertan organizations. Thierrin has published articles on numerous subjects. In 2001, he was arrested and detained for taking part in that year's FTAA protests.

He received 3,628 votes (6.9%) for a fourth-place finish. The winner was Mauril Belanger of the Liberal Party of Canada.

On May 11, 2005, he received the Green Party nomination for Ottawa—Vanier for the next federal election.

Previous candidacies:

[edit] Neil Adair (Ottawa West—Nepean)

Adair received 2,748 votes (4.79%), finishing fourth against Liberal Marlene Catterall. See his entry here for more information.

[edit] Tom Lawson (Prince Edward—Hastings)

Has a Bachelor of Arts degree in History from the University of Toronto, and a Master of Arts degree in English from Cambridge University in England. Taught at Trinity College School from 1955 to 1988, and was head of the English Department for fifteen years. Now leads an annual twelve-week course for families coping with mental illness. In 1995, led his local community to reject a government proposal which would have brought radioactive and toxic waste into the region. Received 2,130 votes, finishing fourth. The winning candidate was Daryl Kramp of the Conservative Party of Canada.

Previous candidacies:

[edit] Kathryn Holloway (Scarborough-Rouge River)

[edit] Peter Van Dalen (Scarborough Southwest)

Van Dalen was 36 years of age at the time of the election, and had been running a concierge service in Toronto for five years. He joined the Green Party in 2001, having previously been a member of the Progressive Conservative Party in St. Paul's. He has promoted solar and wind energy.[18]

He received 1,520 votes (4.00%) in the 2004 election, finishing fourth against Liberal incumbent Tom Wappel. He has been nominated again as the Green Party candidate for Scarborough Southwest in the 39th Canadian federal election.

[edit] Jim Fannon (St. Catharines)

Fannon received 1,927 votes (3.66%), finishing fourth against Liberal incumbent Walt Lastewka.

[edit] Mark Viitala (Trinity—Spadina)

Works at Rogers Media, and is also a longtime volunteer in community radio. Uses the stage name "DJ Skip". Formerly on the management board of CKLU-FM in Greater Sudbury, and helped the station get its FM licence. Hosts a ska music program, and was the executive producer of Skanadian Club Volume 4. Former manager of The Smokers, and produced Package Deal, their first album. Raised in Northern Ontario. Vegetarian. Chair of the Greater Toronto Area group of the Sierra Club of Canada. Was the GPC administration chair and Green Party of Ontario office manager from 1998 to 2000, and the GPO Secretary in 2002-03. Since 2003, he has represented Ontario on the GPC federal council. Party advocate for issues of citizenship and culture. Supports the legalization of marijuana. Apparently intended to run for the GPC in Don Valley East in the 2000 federal election, but did not appear on the ballot. Received 2,259 votes in 2004, finishing fourth in a field of eight candidates.

Previous candidacies:

[edit] Brent Bouteiller (Wellington—Halton Hills)

Bouteiller received 2,725 votes (5.43%), finishing fourth against Conservative candidate Michael Chong.

[edit] Michael MacDonald (Whitby—Oshawa)

MacDonald was 28 years old at the time of the election, and was a customer service professional.[19] He had previously campaigned for the Green Party of Ontario in the 2003 provincial election, and finished fourth against Progressive Conservative Jim Flaherty with 1,375 votes.

He received 2,759 votes (4.85%) in the 2004 election, finishing fourth against Liberal incumbent Judi Longfield.

[edit] Rob Spring (Windsor West)

Spring was born in 1964 in Shelburne, Nova Scotia. He moved to Windsor in his youth, graduated from Essex District High School in 1982, and entered the workforce after his graduation.[20] He served two years with the 21st Windsor Service Battalion as a reservist vehicle technician.[21] Spring is an auto worker, and a veteran environmental activist in Windsor. He has served on the city's Environmental Advisory Committee, has been a member of the Citizens Environmental Alliance since 1985 (Windsor Star, 25 September 1998), and chaired the Canadian Auto Workers Local 444 environmental committee (Windsor Star, 22 October 1999). In 1998, he was part of a successful protest against the construction of a rock-crushing facility near a residential area (Windsor Star, 20 October 1998). He was also a member of Friends of Marshfield Woods in 2000, and unsuccessfully tried to prevent a logging operation in the area (Windsor Star, 17 January 2000).

Spring joined the Green Party in 2000, and worked as campaign manager for Green Party candidates Chris Holt and Cary M. Lucier in the 2003 provincial election (Windsor Star, 15 September 2003). He received 1,545 votes (3.50%) in the 2004 election, finishing fourth against New Democratic Party candidate Brian Masse.

[edit] Saskatchewan

[edit] David Greenfield (Saskatoon—Wanuskewin)

Greenfield (born 1967) is a veteran environmental activist, property manager, poet, singer and frequent candidate for public office (Saskatoon-Wanuskewin, 25 November 2000). He is an opponent of genetically-modified foods, has participated in anti-nuclear protests in Saskatchewan, and helped establish a LETS bartering system. Greenfield has also participated in marches against the Free Trade Area of the Americas and the Group of Eight.[22] He was thirty-two years old at the time of his first campaign, in 1999 (Saskatoon Star-Phoenix, 19 October 1999).

He has campaigned for both the Green Party of Canada and the Saskatchewan New Green Alliance. He was elected as Saskatchewan's representative to the Green Party executive in 2004.[23]

Electoral record
Election Division Party Votes % Place Winner
1999 provincial Saskatoon Meewasin NGA 294 4/4 Carolyn Jones, New Democratic Party
federal by-election, 15 November 1999 Saskatoon—Rosetown—Biggar Green 175 5/6 Dennis Gruending, New Democratic Party
2000 federal Saskatoon—Wanuskewin Green 402 1.21 5/5 Maurice Vellacott, Canadian Alliance
8 November 2001, provincial by-election Saskatoon Idylwyld NGA 68 4/5 David Forbes, New Democratic Party
2003 provincial Saskatoon Meewasin NGA 77 4/4 Frank Quennell, New Democratic Party
2004 federal Saskatoon—Wanuskewin Green 960 2.96 4/4 Maurice Vellacott, Conservative

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Eric Bockstael, "A former U of M student takes on poachers", The Manitoban, 30 October 2002, accessed 7 March 2007.
  2. ^ Dave Nickarz: Candidate Profile, Globe and Mail, accessed 7 March 2007.
  3. ^ Kevin Rollason, "Winnipeg man spends holiday saving whales", Winnipeg Free Press, 27 December 2006, B6.
  4. ^ Peggy Anderson, "Sea Shepherd: Idealists donating time to save the whales", Associated Press Newswires, 11 October 1998, 14:47.
  5. ^ Riding Profile: Churchill, Election 2004, Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, accessed 7 March 2007.
  6. ^ Randy Turner, "Eco-protesters live simply in Clayoquot peace camp", Winnipeg Free Press, 26 September 1993.
  7. ^ Jason Bell, "City relents after demonstrators form human chain, block trucks", Winnipeg Free Press, 18 July 2004, A1.
  8. ^ Mike McIntyre, "Courthouse stunt results in incarceration for protester", Winnipeg Free Press, 28 July 2005, B3.
  9. ^ Bruce Owen, "Cancer survivors target city fogging", Winnipeg Free Press, 11 July 2006, B3.
  10. ^ History of Federal Ridings since 1867: Elmwood—Transcona, 2004, Parliament of Canada, accessed 2 March 2007.
  11. ^ Martin Cash, "First-time flush, Green will run in all 14 ridings", Winnipeg Free Press, 5 December 2005, A8.