This is a list of nominated candidates for the Green Party of Canada in the 40th Canadian federal election.[1] Candidates ran in all but five ridings: Humber—St. Barbe—Baie Verte (NL), Cumberland—Colchester—Musquodoboit Valley (NS), Jonquière—Alma (QC), Saint-Laurent—Cartierville (QC), Sherbrooke (QC).
David Aylward [1]
Robert O'Connor [2]
No candidate.
Nyssa McLeod [3]
Kaitlin Wainwright [4]
Howard Story [5]
Ted Warren [6]
Emma Daughton [7]
Laura Bisaillon [8]
Rebecca Ridlington [9]
Peter Bevan-Baker [10]
Dwayne MacEachern [11]
The Green Party of Canada and its Electoral District Association in Cumberland—Colchester—Musquodoboit Valley has decided not to run a candidate opposite incumbent Bill Casey. [13]
Paul Shreenan [14]
Darryl Whetter [15]
Michael Munday [16]
Brendan MacNeill [17]
Noreen Hartlen [18]
Michael Oddy [19]
Collin Harker [20]
Ronald Mills [21]
Michelle Aubin [22]
Michael Milligan [23]
Mary Lou Babineau [24]
Erik Millett [25]
André Arpin [26]
Todd Smith [27]
Alison Ménard [28]
Robert Boucher [29]
Michael Richardson [30]
Mark Glass [31]
Patrick Rancourt [32]
Bruno Côté [33]
Lynette Tremblay [34]
Tristan Desjardins Drouin [35]
Pierre Audette [36]
Rebecca Laplante was eighteen years old at the time of the election and was a science student at François-Xavier-Garneau College in Quebec City.[2] She indicated that her political interests involved agriculture, recycling, and river/riverbank preservation.[3] She received 1,334 votes (2.72%), finishing fifth against Bloc Québécois incumbent Louis Plamondon.
Nicolas Rochette [37]
David Smith [38]
Luc Côté [39]
Denis Lefebvre [40]
François Boucher [41]
Pierre Brassard was born in Montreal and has a diploma in financial administration from the Université du Québec à Montréal.[4] He worked for Hydro Quebec from 1960 to 1996.[5] Brassard moved to Bromont in Quebec's Eastern Townships in 1994, and in 2000 he was elected to the Bromont City Council in a by-election.[6] He served for two years before being defeated in 2002.[7] He attempted to return to council in 2005 and 2009, without success.[8] The 2008 campaign was Brassard's first bid for the Canadian House of Commons.
Election | Division | Party | Votes | % | Place | Winner |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2000 Bromont by-election | Councillor, ward Two | n/a | elected | 1/? | himself | |
2002 Bromont municipal | Councillor, Ward Two | n/a | 205 | 37.68 | 2/2 | Patrick Charbonneau |
2005 Bromont municipal | Councillor, Ward Four | n/a | 210 | 33.07 | 2/2 | Paul Rolland |
2008 federal | Brome—Missisquoi | Green | 1,784 | 3.58 | 5/6 | Christian Ouellet, Bloc Québécois |
2009 Bromont municipal | Councillor, Ward Four | n/a | 64 | 9.55 | 4/4 | Marie-Ève Lagacé |
Sonia Ziadé [42]
Olivier Adam [43]
François Bédard [44]
Brian Sarwer-Foner [45]
Jean-François Veilleux [46]
Gary Caldwell [47]
Réginald Gagnon [48]
Julien Leblanc [49]
David Inglis [50]
Louis Drainville [51]
Philippe Larochelle [52]
Gaetan Bérard [53]
Frédéric Pouyot [54]
Véronik Sansoucy [55]
Annie Durette [56]
No candidate
Domita Cundari [57]
Peter Graham [58]
Kristina Vitelli [59]
Jacques Rigal [60]
Dylan Percival-Maxwell [61]
Eric Madelein [62]
Brent Neil [63]
Lynne Champoux-Williams [64]
Danielle Moreau [65]
Shirley Picknell [66]
Michèle Fontaine [67]
Jean Cloutier [68]
Jacques Gélineau [69]
Lise Bissonnette [70]
Jean Guernon [71]
Michel Paulette [72]
Claude Gaumond [73]
Jacques Legros [74]
Tyrell Alexander [75]
Jessica Gal [76]
François Pilon was born on April 14, 1956 in Montreal. He is a businessperson who has sought election for the Green Party in three federal elections.[9] In 1999, the Montreal Gazette wrote a profile piece on his business as a clothesline installer.[10] In the 2008 federal election, he appeared on the ballot as "F. Monsieur Corde à Linge Pilon" (which translates as "F. Mr. Clothesline Pilon").[11]
Pilon is again running as the Green Party candidate for Outremont in the 2011 federal election.[12] He is not to be confused with another François Pilon who has run for the New Democratic Party in Montreal.
Election | Division | Party | Votes | % | Place | Winner |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2006 federal | Outremont | Green | 1,957 | 4.82 | 5/11 | Jean Lapierre, Liberal |
Canadian federal by-election, 17 September 2007 | Outremont | Green | 529 | 2.21 | 5/12 | Thomas Mulcair, New Democratic Party |
2008 federal | Outremont | Green | 1,566 | 4.31 | 5/5 | Thomas Mulcair, New Democratic Party |
Ingrid Hein [77]
Ryan Young [78]
André Sylvestre [79]
Nathan Weatherdon [80]
Yonnel Bonaventure [81]
Paul Fournier [82]
François Fillon [83]
James Morisson [84]
Marie Martine Bédard [85]
Rene Piche [86]
Jocelyn Tremblay [87]
Vincent Larochelle [88]
Simon Bernier [89]
Jacques Tétreault [90]
Pierre Tremblay [91]
Diane Joubert [92]
No candidate due to deal between Elizabeth May and Liberal Party leader Stéphane Dion not to run candidates in each other's ridings.
Frank Monteleone [93]
Martial Toupin [94]
Michel M. Champagne is a veteran member of Canada's environmental movement.[13] Once a real estate agent, he moved to Bromont in 1976 and became an organic farmer.[14] He studied theology, biodynamics and commerce at the University of Montreal and has been a member of the Granby Chamber of Commerce.[15]
Champagne ran for the Canadian House of Commons as a Natural Law candidate in a 1995 by-election. He later joined the Green Party and has stood as a party candidate in two elections. He spoke against government subsidies for automobile manufacturers and chemical companies during the 2006 campaign, instead encouraging subsidies to gas-electric hybrid carmakers and small organic producers.[16]
He has also sought election at the municipal level.
Election | Division | Party | Votes | % | Place | Winner |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
federal by-election, 13 February 1995 | Brome—Missisquoi | Natural Law | 77 | 0.21 | 9/10 | Denis Paradis, Liberal |
2006 federal | Brome—Missisquoi | Green | 1,721 | 3.55 | 6/6 | Christian Ouellet, Bloc Québécois |
2008 federal | Shefford | Green | 1,848 | 3.66 | 5/5 | Robert Vincent, Bloc Québécois |
2009 Bromont municipal | Council, Ward Six | n/a | 57 | 13.38 | 3/3 | Anie Perrault |
No candidate.
Martin Drapeau [95]
Ariane Blais [96]
Jean-Yves Massenet [97]
Annie Morel [98]
Claude William Genest [99]
Mikhel Harilaid [100]
Lorraine Rekmans [101]
Peter Ormond [102]
Erich Jacoby-Hawkins [103] [104]
Zoran Markovski [105]
Mark Pajot [106]
Dave Finlay has an Honours Bachelor of Arts degree in International Relations, and a teacher's certificate. He has taught overseas, and was a high school social science teacher in Brampton at the time of the election. He has helped organize several local environmental initiatives.[17] Finlay listed Terry Fox, David Suzuki and Tommy Douglas as his political heroes.[18] He received 3,516 votes (7.77%), finishing fourth against Liberal incumbent Ruby Dhalla.
Raised in Moncton, New Brunswick, Patti Chmelyk has lived/worked in Ontario, Alberta, British Columbia, and the Yukon. She was an executive committee member for People Against Radioactive Contamination, which stopped a proposed incinerator in Brampton, Ontario.
Nora Fueten [107]
Dick Hibma [108]
Marnie Mellish [109]
Scott Cosman [110]
Jake Cole [111]
Alina Abbott [112]
Wayne Scott [113]
Wayne Clements [114]
Georgina Wilcock [115]
Ard Van Leeuwen [116]
Stephen Leahy [117]
Andrew James [118]
Noel Burgon [119]
Richard Bachynsky [120]
Richard Bachynsky is an environmentalist, writer, and consultant. Richard has been active in environmental interests since the mid 1980s, when he began to travel as a consultant. He was to see the complete disregard for environmental issues evident in both developing countries and North America.
Richard was born and raised in the Windsor area, and has seen the rapid decline of the region in terms of jobs, environmental issues, and health related issues. With the failure of recent members of Parliament to attract new industry, improve the environment, or create better infrastructure, members of the community are motivated for change.
A region rich in agriculture, industry, and resources, it is inconceivable – but true – that the region has one of Canada’s highest unemployment rates. The residents of the region are being shortchanged, and need better federal support for job creation, tourism promotion, small business assistance, health care, and seniors.
Active in finance, Richard has worked towards establishing new green industries including tire and industrial waste rubber recycling, biodiesel fuel plants, and alternative energy development worldwide. He also has extensive experience in real estate management and financing, and has served as a consultant for numerous firms completing projects both in Canada, and internationally. He currently holds of the position of Vice President International Sales and Finance for GreenShift Corporation, NY, NY USA, is Head of Export Finance Department, Roberts &Schaefer Engineering and Construction, USA., Finance Dir for Alternativa Corporation, Ukraine and is a Broker for Argentum Mortgages Toronto, and a consultant for Bachynsky Group, Bachynsky Realty Inc., and Bachynsky Mortgage Corporation, Windsor.
Richard holds an MBA and is certified as a mortgage broker in Ontario. He is a member of the Board of the Amherstburg Chamber of Commerce. Previously, he was a member of parent and teacher association of F.J. Brennan High School in Windsor, and of the OMBA. In addition, he was active as a coach for minor hockey for the Windsor Minor Hockey Association, Riverside Hockey Association, and the Patterson Chiefs Hockey Program. Richard is the parent of 3 teenagers Erik, Laura, and Daniel.
Richard Bachynsky was the candidate for the Green Party of Canada for the Federal election of 2008.
Richard Bachynsky is currently the nominated candidate for the Green Party of Canada for the riding of Windsor-Tecumseh.
Marion Schaffer [121]
David Corail [122]
Nigel Barriffe [123]
Sylvie Lemieux [124]
Mike Nagy [125]
Stephana Johnston [126]
Michael Bell owns a publishing company, and has published The Wire and The Green Zine. He is also a singer-songwriter and has worked with the Peterborough Food Bank, Peterborough Flood Relief, World Vision, the United Way and Amnesty International.[19] He has spent the majority of his life in Peterborough, although he says he became involved with the environmental movement while living in Australia between 2006 and 2008.[20] He initially sought the Green Party nomination for Peterborough in the buildup to the 2008 election, but either withdrew from the contest or was defeated by rival candidate Emily Berrigan.[21] Running in Haliburton—Kawartha Lakes—Brock, he limited his election expenses to only two dollars in 2008. He received 4,505 votes (8.29%), finishing fourth against Conservative incumbent Barry Devolin.
Amy Collard [127]
John Livingstone [128]
Dave Hart Dyke [129]
Stephen Brotherston [130]
Glen Smith [131]
Jo Jo Holiday [132]
Eric Walton [133]
John Bithell [134]
Jamie Kropf [135]
Cathy MacLellan [136]
Jim Johnston [137]
Chris Walker [138]
Jeanie Warnock [139]
Daniel O'Neail [140]
Mary Ann Hodge [141]
Monica Jarabek [142]
Leonard Aitken [143]
Grace Yogaretnam [144]
Jaymini Bhikha [145]
Richard Pietro [146]
Richard Laushway [147]
Otto Casanova [148]
Lori Gadzala [149]
Glenn Hubbers [150]
Shawn Willick [151]
Sid Frere [152]
Frederick Twilley [153]
Craig Bridges [154]
Ralph Torrie [155]
Richard Taylor [156]
Blake Poland [157]
Pat Gostlin was a retired teacher. She was killed in a car accident involving a suspected drunk driver on October 26, 2008, less than two weeks following the election.[22][23]
Jen Hunter [158]
Hunter has been an executive member of Equal Voice National Capital Chapter, has led an annual international Team Learning Adventure, was co-leader of a women's leadership event in Toronto, and was the first international board member for the Appalachian Trail Conservancy. She is also the founder of the Learning Catalyst. Hunter attended Queen's University, where she received her honours degree in political studies.[24] Hunter chose to run for office in order to increase the number of women running. She believes in giving more federal money to cities, and in income splitting.[25]
Paul Maillet [159]
Qais Ghanem [160]
Akbar Manoussi [161]
Frances Coates [162]
Cathy Mott [163]
Robert L. Rishchynski [164]
Glen Hodgson was raised in Orillia. He has a Bachelor's degree in English and Environmental Studies from Trent University and a Bachelor of Education degree from Queen's University.[26] A high school teacher by profession, he is also a newspaper columnist and has served on the West Parry Sound District Museum and the Georgian Bay Biosphere Reserve.[27]
Hodgson joined the Green Party while attending Trent in the early 1990s and has run for the party in four federal elections and one provincial election.[28] He has been nominated as the party's candidate for Parry Sound—Muskoka in the 2011 federal election. He briefly joined the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada in 1998 to support David Orchard's leadership bid.[29]
He criticized the heightened security at the 2010 G8 summit in Huntsville and the 2010 G20 summit in Toronto, and said that he would protest peacefully at the "People First! We Deserve Better" rally.[30]
Election | Division | Party | Votes | % | Place | Winner |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1997 federal | Parry Sound—Muskoka | Green | 513 | 1.20 | 5/7 | Andy Mitchell, Liberal |
2003 provincial | Parry Sound—Muskoka | Green | 2,277 | 5.88 | 4/5 | Norm Miller, Progressive Conservative |
2004 federal | Parry Sound—Muskoka | Green | 3,524 | 8.02 | 4/4 | Andy Mitchell, Liberal |
2006 federal | Parry Sound—Muskoka | Green | 3,701 | 8.02 | 4/4 | Tony Clement, Conservative |
2008 federal | Parry Sound—Muskoka | Green | 5,119 | 11.77 | 4/5 | Tony Clement, Conservative |
John Cowling [165]
Emily Berrigan was twenty-one years old at the time of the election. She became active with the Green Party while attending high school in Port Hope, Ontario, and later worked for eight months at party headquarters in Ottawa.[31] During the election, she noted that she was from a working class background.[32] She received 4,029 votes (6.91%), finishing fourth against Conservative incumbent Dean Del Mastro. She later moved to Toronto and became project manager for a non-governmental organization.[33]
Berrigan was one of several people arrested on June 26, 2010, at the G20 Toronto protests. After taking part in non-violent protests, and wandering the streets in observation, she and a group of friends returned to Queen's Park in the evening for their bicycles. She was arrested while standing in the designated protest zone and taken to a detention centre, where she was kept in a small cage that was exposed to pepper spray and not given food or water for eight hours. She was released the next day, after being charged with obstruction and unlawful demonstration. Berrigan has described her arrest as "completely unacceptable" and the arrest conditions as "inhumane."[34]
Jason Becevello [166]
Alan Coxwell [167]
Ben Hoffman [168]
Dylan Marando [169]
Justin Erdman [171]
Alan McKeown [172]
Luke Macmichael [173]
Adrian Molder [174]
Ella Ng [175]
Alonzo Bartley [176]
Attila Nagy [177]
Stefan Dixon [178]
Peter Ellis [179]
Valerie Powell [180]
David Rawnsley [181]
Gordon Harris has been a sales and marketing manager and a publisher. He moved to Sudbury in 2002 and became president of the Sudbury Arts Council in 2007.[35] Before joining the Green Party, he worked on election campaigns for the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario and the Liberal Party of Canada.[36] He aligned with the Greens in the 2003 provincial election,[37] and has served on the party's provincial executive.[38] In the 2008 election, Harris said that he was not aligned with either a right-wing or left-wing ideology.[39] He received 3,330 votes (7.75%), finishing fourth against New Democratic Party candidate Glenn Thibeault. He planned to seek the party's nomination again for the 2011 federal election, but later withdrew.[40]
Norbert Koehl [182]
Russ Aegard [183]
Brendan Hughes [184]
Larry Verner [185]
Ellen Michelson [186]
Sharon Howarth [187]
Stephen LaFrenie [188]
Adrian Visentin [189]
Jennifer Mooradian [190]
Brent Bouteiller [191]
Doug Anderson [192]
Lou Carcasole [193]
Kyle Prestanski [194]
John Esposito [195]
Rosemary Frei [196]
John Dewar [197]
Andre Papadimitriou [198]
Nick Capra [199]
Dave Barnes [200]
Brian Timlick [201]
Saara Harvie [202]
Kate Storey [203]
Christopher Hrynkow (born on April 17, 1977 in Dorval, Quebec)[41] is a university instructor and a PhD student in the Peace and Conflict Studies program at the University of Manitoba. A late 2005 article in the Winnipeg Free Press indicates that he was one of the first students to join this, and that he intended to focus his studies on Northern Ireland.[42] He received 1,839 votes (5.86%) in 2008, finishing fourth against New Democratic Party candidate Jim Maloway. Hrynkow is the author of an essay entitled "Autonomy Reconsidered: Creation, God and Relationships", published in the Summer 2009 edition of the Canadian Journal of Orthodox Christianity.[43] He has also written on organic foods in Manitoba.[44]
Kevan Bowkett [204]
Charlie Howatt [205]
Janine Gibson [206]
Marc Payette [207]
Glenda Whiteman [208]
Jessie Klassen [209]
Catherine Johannson [210]
David Cosby [211]
Vere Scott [212]
Norbert Kratchmer [213]
Imre Pallagi [214]
Bill Clary [215]
George Morin [216]
Larissa Shasko [217]
Amanda Smytaniuk [218]
Nicolas Stulberg [219]
Greg Chatterson [220]
Jean-Pierre Ducasse [221]
Amber Jones [222]
Tobi-Dawne Smith [223]
Bob Deptuck [224]
George Wooldridge [225]
Jen Antony [226]
Natalie Odd [227]
Eric Donovan [228]
Nathan Coates [229]
Abeed Monty Ahmad [230]
Tony Hajj [231]
Margaret Chandler [232]
Kelly Christie [233]
Randy Weeks [234]
Kaity Kettenbach [235]
Trey Capnerhurst [237]
Valerie Kennedy [238]
David Allan Hrushka [239]
Peter Johnston [240]
Nina Erfani [241]
Wendy Walker [242]
Jane Thrall [243]
Dylan Richards [244]
Amanda Swagar [245]
Jared McCollum [246]
Kevin Dodd [247]
Jennifer Villebrun [248]
Evan Bedford [249]
Will Munsey [250]
Aden Murphy [251]
Les Parsons [252]
Lisa Fox [253]
Monika Schaefer [254]
Karen Durant [255]
Andy Morel [256]
Doug Perry [257]
Carrie-Ann McLaren [258]
Amber van Drielen [259]
Barbara LeBeau [260]
Matt Laine [261]
Brian Gordon [262]
Brian Newbold [263]
Donovan Cavers [264]
Angela Reid [265]
Ralph Moore [266]
Patrick Meyer [267]
John Fryer [268]
Christina Knighton [269]
Liz Walker [270]
Marshall Smith [271]
Jim Stephenson [272]
Dan Bouchard [273]
Huguette Allen [274]
Mike Gildersleeve [275]
Rod Brindamour [276]
Hilary Crowley [277]
Michael Wolfe [278]
Andrew Lewis [279]
Hondo Arendt [280]
David Blair [281]
Dan Kashamanga [282]
Mike Carr [284]
Philip Stone [285]
Doug Warkentin [286]
Daniel Grice [287]
Csaba Gulyas [288]
Adam Saab [289]
John Streicker
Sam Gamble [291]
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