Vancouver Sun

Vision seeking help from like-minded parties

- CHERYL CHAN chchan@postmedia.com twitter.com/cherylchan

Vision Vancouver, which has been hammered by a series of impending exits by a number of highprofil­e leaders, including Mayor Gregor Robertson, will be seeking to collaborat­e with other leftleanin­g progressiv­e parties going into the October election.

“This is a progressiv­e city,” Robertson told the more than 100 party faithful who packed a room at SFU Harbour Centre Monday for Vision’s annual general meeting.

“We want to see people who will walk the talk on the progressiv­e values. We’ve done that in three elections now in the civic level, so I fully expect we can figure out how to get along and elect fantastic new people to office this fall.”

Robertson said it is “critical” to do what it did in 2008 — when Vision swept into power and progressiv­e parties won about 85 per cent of the seats on council, the school board and park board — and work with parties including COPE, the Green party, OneCity, “anyone who wants to work with us.

“I don’t think the NPA wants to work with us,” he added jokingly.

The AGM comes on the same day Tim Stevenson, a longtime Vision Vancouver councillor, said he will not run in the fall election. Stevenson’s announceme­nt came less than a week after Robertson announced his own departure, what he described Monday as “the toughest decision I had to make in my life.”

Coun. Andrea Reimer has also said she will not run in the next election.

Vision also lost a seat vacated by Geoff Meggs after its candidate, Diego Cardona, finished fifth behind the NPA’s Hector Bremner.

Vision plans to launch its nomination process in mid-February and expects them to be completed by the end of June.

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