National Post

May says Greens will run full slate of candidates for next election

- Catherine Lévesque

• Green Party of Canada co-leaders Elizabeth May and Jonathan Pedneault will be hitting the road in early 2024, with stops planned in all provinces and most territorie­s. And they have many challenges ahead of the next election, including presenting a full slate of candidates.

In 2021, former party leader Annamie Paul was still nearly 90 candidates short of a full slate and saw the party’s support collapse to 2.3 per cent of the vote — its lowest in 21 years.

Speaking to reporters on Thursday, May was adamant that her party would be running candidates in every single riding. “What happened in 2021 and not running a full slate is to me incomprehe­nsible and will not happen again. We will run a full slate,” she said.

May and Pedneault have been running the green ship in tandem for more than a year now, but the party fell a bit off the radar in 2023. Pedneault failed to win a seat in a Montreal byelection last June, and May suffered from a stroke which forced her to reduce her activities.

But both co-leaders have high hopes for the next election, with May predicting that the Green party will “surprise people in electing a lot more MPS than we’ve had in the past.”

May pointed to Aislinn Clancy’s “very decisive upset” for the Green Party of Ontario in the recent byelection in Kitchener Centre — a win she attributed to the work of Green MP Mike Morrice, who represents the federal riding of Kitchener Centre, and Ontario Green party leader Mike Schreiner.

Schreiner said after the win that the “Green wave is growing” across Ontario, and May agreed on Thursday that she is seeing a “shift” in the province.

May added that the Green movement needs to build on that momentum — and believes that there are more “winnable seats” in Atlantic Canada, British Columbia and the territorie­s. At the moment, there are 11 Green representa­tives at the federal and provincial levels in Canada.

“It’s about the lay of the land and the context in which we’re now operating,” said May. “The disillusio­nment factor with the Liberals is huge. The disillusio­nment factor with the NDP is huge.”

Poll analyst Philippe J. Fournier cast a shadow on May’s high hopes for many more Green seats in Canada, arguing that the available data simply do not tell that story right now.

“Either Ms. May has some numbers that have not been made public or that we’ve missed, or she is looking at the situation through rose-coloured glasses,” said Fournier, who founded the 338Canada project, a statistica­l model of electoral projection­s based on opinion polls.

At the federal level, the Greens are polling between four and six per cent, which he said was already the norm — excluding 2021 — and would elect between one and three MPS if an election was held today. The party currently has two MPS, May and Morrice.

Three provinces should be holding elections this coming year — British Columbia, Saskatchew­an and New Brunswick — but the numbers don’t show a sudden surge of support for the Greens.

Fournier said that the federal Greens remain a fairly marginal political force in Canada. For the party to make gains in places like Victoria or in southweste­rn Ontario, they would have to chip away at some of the NDP’S support in those areas, he said.

Already, the Greens are distancing themselves from the Liberals and the NDP and trying to present themselves as the only progressiv­e party on the federal scene.

“In terms of a progressiv­e party, is the field crowded? No, we stand here alone,” said May. “I don’t see anybody else. I really don’t see any other party that takes the climate crisis seriously and sees it as a genuine opportunit­y for greater equity and fairness across our society.”

Pedneault added that, in his opinion, the Liberals fooled Canadians with their progressiv­e ideas in the past but represent the “status quo alternativ­e.”

“And the NDP, sadly, has been incentiviz­ing that by supporting them with their confidence and supply agreement,” he said.

“There is another alternativ­e, and it’s called the Greens.”

IS THE FIELD CROWDED? NO, WE STAND HERE ALONE.

 ?? PATRICK DOYLE / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Green Party of Canada co-leader Elizabeth May says she believes the party will
“surprise people in electing a lot more MPS than we’ve had in the past.”
PATRICK DOYLE / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Green Party of Canada co-leader Elizabeth May says she believes the party will “surprise people in electing a lot more MPS than we’ve had in the past.”

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