National Post

Green convention a go even if election called

- Christophe­r reynolds

OTTAWA • Green Leader Annamie Paul says party brass still plan to hold a national convention next month even if a federal election campaign is in full swing, as the list of items distractin­g attention from an impending fight at the polls mounts.

“Our federal council decided to hold the AGM on Aug. 21, and that’s going ahead,” Paul said Tuesday. “Preparatio­ns are underway.”

The choice by the federal council — the party’s 13-member governing body — comes after its five-person executive council enacted on July 16 a “state of electoral urgency,” according to two senior party sources who were not authorized to speak publicly on the matter.

The move speeds up the nomination process for candidates in anticipati­on of a likely election. It follows a similar declaratio­n by the Liberals last month and marks the latest sign that parties are gearing up for a battle at the ballot box.

National convention­s, which focus on policy positions and executive elections, will suck up time and resources as Paul tries to ramp up volunteer recruitmen­t, fundraisin­g and election readiness.

Paul said she hopes the governing Liberals will avoid triggering an election since other priorities demand immediate attention, including the climate and opioid crises.

“There are just a lot of things that suggest we need to get back to Parliament, and September should be the return from the summer recess and not a summer election,” Paul said.

The party has been mired in internal strife for the past few months as a handful of federal councillor­s seeks to oust Paul ahead of an expected writ drop in the coming weeks.

Some of them launched a legal proceeding against her on behalf of the party last week in the latest manoeuvre to depose the top Green.

However, party president Liana Canton Cusmano on Thursday sent an email to party members obtained by The Canadian Press that said it was Paul who set off the legal wrangling. She did this, the president said, by launching an arbitratio­n process that shut down a planned non-confidence vote against her by the federal council and halted a process to suspend her membership.

Paul has characteri­zed the fusillade as a “one-sided attack” by a coterie of outgoing officials.

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