National Post (National Edition)

Controvers­y stirs Green leadership race

MAY MEDDLING?

- JONATHAN BRADLEY

The race to find a new leader of the Green Party of Canada has become mired in controvers­y with one candidate banned for allegedly making “super racist comments” while another candidate accused of a “vile anti-Semitic smear” has been allowed to run.

Meanwhile, another candidate has withdrawn from the contest accusing former leader Elizabeth May of meddling in the race.

Nine people are running to replace May who stepped down in November after a decade as leader.

In a statement, the Green party announced that Dylan Perceval-Maxwell, an environmen­tal activist from Montreal, would no longer be a contestant for the leadership after making “inappropri­ate” comments.

During a televised debate organized by TVO he said the police should “give $20 to every person of colour they stop.”

Meryam Haddad, another Green party leadership candidate from Montreal, called the comment “super racist.” She said “as a person of colour, I find your comment very, very offensive.”

The Green party disqualifi­ed Perceval-Maxwell from running, saying in a statement, “The party’s Leadership Contest Authority (LCA) found that several recent statements by Mr. Perceval-Maxwell were inappropri­ate and were not aligned with the party’s core values, in particular respect for diversity.”

In an interview, Perceval-Maxwell said he regretted making the comments.

“I apologize for suggesting that reparation­s should be given directly to people of colour when they are stopped and I accept the consequenc­es of my mistakes,” he said. “There are many other ways to incentiviz­e the police to engage in less racial profiling. I understand why people found that part of my idea offensive.”

The incident comes after Dimitri Lascaris, a Green party leadership candidate from Montreal, was first rejected by the vetting committee on May 26. But the Green party said in a statement on June 2 that it had reversed its decision to exclude Lascaris from the leadership race.

Lascaris attracted controvers­y when he said in a tweet in 2018 that Liberal MPs Anthony Housefathe­r and Michael Levitt “are more devoted to apartheid Israel than to their own Prime Minister and their own colleagues in the Liberal caucus.” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in a tweet at the time that the comment was a “vile anti-Semitic smear.”

Lascaris, a lawyer, used to be the justice critic in the Green party’s shadow cabinet, but he was removed in 2016 for being critical of former Green Party of British Columbia leader Andrew Weaver.

In a statement, Lascaris said he was pleased to be in the Green party leadership race.

“I am honoured to be part of this leadership contest with such an accomplish­ed and talented group of candidates,” he said.

Judy N. Green, a Green party leadership candidate from Nova Scotia, was rejected by the vetting committee on June 2 for “accusation­s not accompanie­d by evidence.” The Green party said in a statement on June 10 that it had reinstated Green as a candidate.

Green said she was “legally forbidden from disclosing the details of the process or the specifics.”

Alex Tyrrell, a Green party leadership candidate from Montreal who has withdrawn from the leadership race, said there was meddling going on.

“Elizabeth May has transforme­d the Green Party of Canada into a top down organizati­on in which she controls and micromanag­es virtually all aspects of the federal organizati­on,” said Tyrrell. “For several years she has been speaking openly about what she calls succession planning and said back in 2016 that she would only step down from the leadership once she had found someone to take over.

“Now rather than stepping back she has remained in control of the party, got her husband and a slate of hand picked candidates elected to federal council in order to consolidat­e her power within the party.”

Online voting, available to eligible members, will be open from Sept. 26 to Oct. 3.

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