The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Hammarlund wins close race

Charlottet­own-Brighton only contested district; four other Green candidates acclaimed at party meeting

- BY STU NEATBY

The Green Party of P.E.I. has nominated five more candidates at a nomination meeting that saw a nail-bitingly close contest in the District of Charlotte town Brighton.

A total of 132 party members attended the nomination meeting in Charlottet­own. The candidates nominated to represent the party in the next provincial election included media analyst Josh Weale in Stratford-Keppoch, teacher Josh Underhay in Charlottet­own-Hillsborou­gh Park, incumbent MLA Hannah Bell in Charlottet­own-Belvedere, educator Karla Bernard in Charlottet­own-Victoria Park and architect Ole Hammarlund in Charlottet­own-Brighton.

Hammarlund was the only candidate who faced a contested nomination. He defeated naturopath and Root Cellar owner Kali Simmonds by four votes – 66 to 62. Party rules require that the winning candidate has a 50 per cent plus one margin, meaning

that a change in a single vote could have altered the outcome.

Green Party rules also allowed party members to cast a ballot for a “no candidate” option, as a means to allow members to express dissatisfa­ction with all candidates. In the case of the Charlottet­own-Brighton nomination, two votes were cast for “no candidate”.

The nomination comes at a time when public opinion polls have put the Green Party at a virtual dead heat with the Liberal and PC parties. Recent polls by MQO research and CRA showed the Green Party at 33 per cent of the popular vote, just shy of the Liberal Party and just ahead of the PCs.

Hammarlund, who has designed and renovated a number of landmark buildings on P.E.I., including the Atlantic Tech Centre and the Coles Building, said he decided to run for office in hopes of improving the environmen­t on P.E.I.

“For the last couple of years, I’ve been looking at my life’s work and where the world has gone,”

Hammarlund.

“This isn’t the place we want to leave for our children and grandchild­ren. I want to do something more. I realized that the hold-up, really, is in the politics. We need some politician­s that actually do the right thing.”

Other nominees spoke in similar terms about P.E.I.’s traditiona­lly two-party political culture. Weale said the notion of common purpose for Islanders was often lost in divisions between competing political parties, and rural-urban alienation.

“‘We’re all in the same boat’ is the mantra that I want to bring to politics with me, that I want to deliver on the doorsteps and in the debates that I attend,” Weale said.

“We’re miles from the idea of ‘we’re all in the same boat.’ In fact, the mantra in P.E.I. politics is something more akin to ‘your boat sucks and you’re all idiots’.”

Bell, the sole incumbent MLA nominated on Wednesday, spoke about the rapid growth the party has seen in recent months. She became the party’s second

elected MLA following a byelection in November of 2017.

“We’re doing this as a party that has very little history or roadmap. We have accelerate­d exponentia­lly into this space from a lone out-rider to a caucus,” Bell said.

The nomination meeting followed a process different from Liberal or PC party nomination­s. Green Party members living in other electoral ridings were permitted to cast ballots in nomination­s for candidates outside of their riding. However, the Charlottet­own-Victoria Park district, which had a functional electoral district associatio­n, required that votes cast for the nominee be solely from residents living in that district.

Wednesday night’s nomination­s put the total number of Green Party candidates at 12.

The party currently has the largest number of nominated candidates of all Island political parties.

 ??  ?? Candidates Ole Hammarlund and Kali Simmonds are shown at a nomination meeting in Charlottet­own on Wednesday. Hammarlund would win the nomination by a razor-thin margin, 66 votes to Simmonds’ 62.
Candidates Ole Hammarlund and Kali Simmonds are shown at a nomination meeting in Charlottet­own on Wednesday. Hammarlund would win the nomination by a razor-thin margin, 66 votes to Simmonds’ 62.

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