Green Party candidates, 2007 Ontario provincial election
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The Green Party of Ontario is a minor political party in Ontario, Canada running in the 2007 Ontario provincial election. The party received 2.8% of the popular vote in the 2003 election, and has yet to win a seat in the Legislature.
The party ran a full slate of 107 candidates, none of whom won.
[edit] Candidates
[edit] Cecile Willert (Ajax-Pickering)
Willert is an engineer, holding a Bachelor of Applied Science from the University of Toronto, and community volunteer and business leader. Her campaign is based on the sustainable development and improving quality of life and health through better transportation, education, health care, reducing poverty, sound fiscal management, and protection from toxic chemicals and hazards in our everyday lives.
[edit] Ted Shelegy (Brant)
Ted is an organic farmer, retired teacher, and three time former Burford township councillor who worked with the Liberals on election campaigns for years, until disenchantment with their handling in government of the environment and agriculture caused him to become a Green.[1]
Born in 1941,Ted was raised on a small dairy farm near Scotland, Ontario. He graduated from the Ontario College of Agriculture (BSA) and later the University of Guelph (MSc). Before his recent retirement, the father of three taught Science, Biology, Physics, and Agriculture at Pauline Johnson Collegiate, Simcoe Composite School, and Waterford District High School. While teaching, Ted still found time to farm, growing organic crops the last 14 years.[2]
Ted is former Director of the Brant County Federation of Agriculture, the Society for Biodynamic Farming and Gardening in Ontario, and OntarBio Organic Farmers Cooperative (now Organic Meadow Cooperative) in Guelph. He serves as Director of the Norfolk Local of the National Farmers Union (Canada), as Chair of the Organic Grain Pool of Organic Meadow Cooperative, and also serves as a Facilitator for Ecological Farmers Association of Ontario, teaching other farmers about the transition to organic. [3]
Other than his involvement in agriculture, Ted served for three terms as a Burford Township Councillor and chaired the Rural Community Development Project. He volunteers as a weather observer for Environment Canada's Meteorological Service and is also active in Sustainable Brant, the Knights of Columbus, the Optimist Club, and formerly the Brantford Flying Club.
[edit] Shane Jolley (Bruce-Grey-Owen Sound)
[edit] Colin Carmichael (Cambridge)
Carmichael is a web strategist and ordained Elder with the Presbyterian Church of Canada, and holds a BA in political science from Wilfrid Laurier University. He bases his campaign around an improved quality of life for his riding and support of a mixed-member proportional system of representation.
[edit] John Ogilvie (Carleton—Mississippi Mills)
John Ogilvie is an electrical engineer and a serial software entrepreneur[4] who created several companies using venture capital including Killdara Corporation and Hyla Corporation. He presently runs the Bifrost Group, a technology firm with customers in Canada and Asia.[5]
[edit] Trifon Haitas (Don Valley East)
Haitas is a communications business owner and honorary member of the National Ethnic Press & Media Council of Canada. He bases his platform around the environment, as well as improved conditions for senior citizens, youth, and labour relations.
[edit] Jeanie Warnock (Leeds-Grenville)
Jeanie Warnock holds a PhD. in English literature and teaches at the University of Ottawa, as well as working as an editor for Doris Lessing Studies. Warnock has been a volunteer at the Ottawa Humane Society educational program and with Big Brothers and Sisters and has volunteered on a summer program teaching English to recent immigrants. She has lived in Stormont-Dundas-South Glengarry, the riding adjoining Leeds-Grenville for the last twenty years, and became the Eastern region co-representative for the GPO last year.
Jeanie Warnock was one of the 18 candidates who managed to place ahead of another major party candidate in her riding of Leeds-Grenville.
[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. He is a receipient of the Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee Medal. 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. On the Ontario Election of 2007, Paul received 3,888 votes, equivalent to 10.6% of the popular vote. The winner of that election was Amrit Mangat from the Ontario Liberal Party.
[edit] David Johnston (Mississauga South)
A literary Agent and documentary filmmaker, Johnston is a native of Port Credit, where he still lives. Johnston studied Literary Studies and Modern Languages at University of Western Ontario and The University of Toronto, and was a producer resident at the Canadian Film Centre. Johnston got 3,627 votes and 8.8% total, by far the best result for the Green Party in the history of the riding.
[edit] Melanie Mullen (Niagara Falls)
Mullen is a with a degree in environmental engineering and recipient of the Canadian Engineering Memorial Foundation Award. She has founded a radio show as a fourm for environmental issues, and was an executive member of Engineers Without Borders for four years. Mullen has previously worked with bio-diversity groups, helping to protect old growth forests in the Niagara Region.
[edit] Greg Laxton (Ottawa Centre)
Laxton has a Bachelor of Arts degree in International Studies and History from Trent University, and a Masters degree in Political Science at York University. Laxton previous ran for the Greens in 2003 in Trinity-Spadina, getting 2,362 votes in 2003 (5.82%). He served as the GPO's fundraising chair from 2000 to 2003 In 2007, he won 6,456 votes (12.3%), the best result for the Greens ever in percentage terms, and placing among the top three Green vote-getters in the province. He ran for the post of GPO President, but was unsuccessful.
[edit] Leonard Poole (Ottawa-Vanier)
Leonard Poole, born in Toronto, 1951, graduated from Queens’ University at Kingston with a degree in Geography and Psychology. He worked in the transportation industry for almost thirty years, the last twenty for United Parcel Service. He has been active with the Overbrook-Forbes Community Resource Centr.[6]
[edit] Elaine Kennedy (Stormont—Dundas—South Glengarry)
Kennedy is an environmentalist and chair of the Cornwall & District Environment Committee. Prior to these positions, she was a high school teacher. Kennedy has been involved in environmental campaigns since the 1970s, working with recycling and environmental advocacy groups, and has previously worked with Fair Vote Canada and been a recipient of the Queen Elizabeth II Golden Jubilee Medal.
[edit] References
- ^ Ex-Liberal running for Green Party in provincial election, Brantford Expositor, 14 August 2007
- ^ Guelph 2002 Organic Conference - Organic Agriculture & the Farm Economy
- ^ Ted Shelegy - Green Party of Ontario
- ^ He says, he says Pure-play vs. in-house R&D. Ottawa Business Journal (2007-09-26). Retrieved on 2007-09-27.
- ^ Ogilvie hopes to engineer a Green party win in local riding. Kanata Kourier Standard.
- ^ Leonard Poole for Ottawa-Vanier