Times Colonist

Annamie Paul new leader of federal Greens

- — With a file from Carla Wilson, Times Colonist

Green Party of Canada members have chosen Toronto’s Annamie Paul as their new leader.

Paul won a bare majority of votes in the eighth round, defeating Dimitri Lascaris.

Paul, who is Black and Jewish, took the microphone in an Ottawa art gallery after her win was announced and declared herself the descendant of slaves and an ally of those, such as Indigenous people, who are fighting for justice.

She stands on the shoulders of female leaders like the NDP’s Audrey McLaughlin and the Conservati­ves’ Kim Campbell, and Black female leaders like the Liberals’ Jean Augustine, she said.

“Tonight, we have to recognize that this is an historic moment,” Paul said.

“We as Greens, once again, are leading the way. We have done something that has never been done before in Canadian politics, and I congratula­te us.”

Paul is a non-practising lawyer who has spent much of her career in internatio­nal institutio­ns, including at the Internatio­nal Criminal Court and in Canada’s mission to the European Union.

She said she’s driven in politics partly by her father’s death of an avoidable infection in May, especially as we face a crisis in the Earth’s climate and a planet ravaged by COVID-19.

“We must constantly ask ourselves, what is a life worth?” she said.

We’re seeing the price of recklessne­ss in floods, wild fires, and the boom-and-bust cycles in resource-extraction industries, she said, and current politician­s don’t know what to do.

“They are intellectu­ally exhausted and they are out of ideas,” she said.

The moment calls for boldness and audacity, she said.

“We have a good-news story,” she said. “This is the chance of a lifetime for us to move toward a more just, a more resilient society.”

Nearly 35,000 people were eligible to vote, almost 10 times the turnout in the last leadership election in 2006, and nearly 24,000 ballots were cast, according to the party.

The Greens used a rankedball­ot voting system, which quickly redistribu­ted members’ second-choice votes if their first-choice candidate came last and was cut.

Paul took 12,090 votes on the last ballot, just more than the 11,939 needed to win. Paul led on the first few ballots, slipped behind Lascaris for two, and then regained a lead she never gave up on the sixth.

Yellowknif­e doctor Courtney Howard came a distant third and former Ontario cabinet minister Glen Murray finished fourth.

Victoria’s David Merner, a retired government lawyer, was fifth. Merner said Paul is going to be a “fantastic leader.”

Paul is “very much at the heart of mainstream Green policy agenda,” he said, adding: “Overall, I think this represents continuity for the Green Party.”

The race suffered several hiccups, including the disqualifi­cation of one candidate, the disqualifi­cation and then reinstatem­ent of a second, and a bookkeepin­g error that the party says kept thousands of dollars in donations out of Murray’s coffers.

Paul succeeds Elizabeth May, who stepped down last fall after leading the party for 13 years.

May’s electoral success has masked divisions in the party, whose members’ environmen­talism ranges from business

minded support for market mechanisms to cut pollution to ecosociali­sm that rejects capitalism as inherently destructiv­e to the environmen­t.

May will remain a force in the party, as she is still one of its three MPs and as of now, intends to remain as parliament­ary leader in the House of Commons. The losing candidates for the federal leadership have all expressed interest in seeking House of Commons seats all the same.

Paul is the first to do that, after being acclaimed the Green candidate for the Toronto Centre byelection being held Oct. 26.

 ?? ADRIAN WYLD, CP ?? New Green Party Leader Annamie Paul celebrates after speaking at the leadership announceme­nt in Ottawa on Saturday.
ADRIAN WYLD, CP New Green Party Leader Annamie Paul celebrates after speaking at the leadership announceme­nt in Ottawa on Saturday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada