Times Colonist

Non-confidence vote on Green leader cancelled

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS

OTTAWA — The Green Party has confirmed that a planned nonconfide­nce vote against leader Annamie Paul is off the table for the time being, neutralizi­ng an imminent threat to her prospects ahead of a likely election this year.

In a short statement posted to the party website Monday, the Greens said no further nonconfide­nce motions against Paul will be proposed by the current federal council — the party’s main governing body — or prior to a party convention.

“This experience has been incredibly painful for me and for my family,” Paul said at a news conference Monday afternoon in Toronto Centre, the riding she hopes to win following two unsuccessf­ul attempts that have kept her out of the House of Commons.

“It is extremely hard to have your integrity questioned when you value it so much.”

Paul admitted that she had “thought of packing it in” amid what she dubbed a “one-sided campaign” waged against her leadership by party brass in recent months, but said she felt she owed it to the Greens who elected her last year to continue.

“Diversity in politics matters,” she said, repeating what she said she told her two children: “We are both literally and figurative­ly survivors.”

A party membership review, launched last week by Green interim executive director Dana Taylor, that would have suspended Paul’s membership, has also been shelved, Paul said.

The shift appears to keep her insulated from an immediate ouster until an expected federal election in the coming months, as the party council will turn over on Aug. 20, though a general meeting of members is scheduled for Aug. 21.

The move also helps cement the prospect that a Black Canadian will lead a mainstream party into a national campaign for the first time in the country’s history.

Backed by sign-toting supporters, Paul held the news conference at St. James Park in downtown Toronto, with St. Lawrence Hall in the background. The neoclassic­al building served as a venue for the North American abolitioni­st movement shortly after it opened in 1850.

Despite the retreat by party executives who have clashed openly with Paul, tensions remain as Greens struggle to pitch an agenda that has been overshadow­ed by months of internal strife.

“This is a wounded party,” said Daniel Béland, director of the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada.

An Angus Reid poll published Friday showed only three per cent of respondent­s intended to cast a ballot for the Greens.

The figure falls far short of the 6.55 per cent of the vote they garnered in the 2019 election, despite climate change and the environmen­t now tying for the most important issue in voters’ minds, according to the poll.

The party has been riven by infighting and factionali­sm for months as Paul, who was elected leader in October 2020, attempts to steer the Greens in a new direction.

Federal council members passed a motion in June demanding that Paul hold a press conference with Green MP Paul Manly and repudiate comments from Noah Zatzman, a top adviser to the leader.

Paul fired back against party executives on June 16, calling them out for “racist” and “sexist” accusation­s that were included in the written motion obtained by the Canadian Press.

On June 30, party president Liana Canton Cusmano told members at a virtual town hall that Paul has failed to live up to council’s ultimatum or to “meet her obligation­s as leader,” citing Green MP Jenica Atwin’s defection to the Liberals earlier in the month.

 ?? PATRICK DOYLE, THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? The Green Party says a planned non-confidence vote against leader Annamie Paul is off the table until at least the next general meeting of members.
PATRICK DOYLE, THE CANADIAN PRESS The Green Party says a planned non-confidence vote against leader Annamie Paul is off the table until at least the next general meeting of members.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada