Green Party of Vancouver | |
---|---|
Leader | Adriane Carr (de facto) |
Chairperson | Priyan Samarakoone |
Founded | 1984 [1] |
Ideology | Green politics |
National affiliation | Green Party of Canada |
Colours | Green |
City council | 2 / 11 |
Park board | 1 / 7 |
School board | 2 / 9 |
Website | |
www | |
The Green Party of Vancouver, founded in 1984, [1] is a municipal political party in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It is affiliated with both the provincial Green Party of British Columbia and the federal Green Party of Canada.
Roslyn Cassells was the first elected Green in Canada and was elected to the Vancouver Park Board in the 1999 Vancouver municipal election. In 2002, Andrea Reimer was elected to the Vancouver School Board as a trustee, and in 2008 Stuart Mackinnon was elected a park board commissioner.
The party nominated Green Party of Canada deputy leader Adriane Carr as their sole nominee for Vancouver City Council during the 2011 Vancouver municipal election. [2] Carr subsequently won the seat. [3] [4] Carr retained her council seat during the 2014 Vancouver municipal election, winning with the highest number of votes of any council candidate. [5] School board candidate Janet Fraser and park board candidates Michael Wiebe and Stuart Mackinnon were also elected.
The Green Party of Vancouver further increased its seat count following the 2017 Vancouver municipal by-election, where all three of the party's school board candidates were elected. The party elected nine candidates in the 2018 Vancouver municipal election. In the 2022 Vancouver municipal election, the party fielded 10 candidates: five for city council, two for park board, and three for school board. Five candidates were elected.
Roslyn Cassels was the first elected Green in Canada and was elected to the Vancouver Park Board in the 1999 Vancouver municipal election. In 2002, Andrea Reimer was elected to the Vancouver School Board as a trustee, and in 2008 Stuart Mackinnon was elected as a park board commissioner. [6] Adriane Carr was elected in 2011 as the first Green city councillor. [3]
The Green Party of Vancouver nominated seven candidates for the 2014 Vancouver municipal election, held on 15 November 2014. Adriane Carr received the most votes of any council candidate. [7]
School board candidate Janet Fraser and park board candidates Michael Wiebe and Stuart Mackinnon were also elected.
The 2017 Vancouver municipal by-election was called to replace a single vacant council seat, due to Geoff Meggs' departure to take on the role of premier John Horgan's chief of staff. The by-election was also meant to elect a new board of school trustees, who had been dismissed by provincial education minister Mike Bernier after failing to pass a balanced budget and allegations of workplace harassment arose.
The Green Party of Vancouver ran Pete Fry for council and Janet Fraser, Estrellita Gonzalez and Judy Zaichkowsky for school board. All three school trustee candidates were elected, finishing in the top three spots. [8] Non-Partisan Association candidate Hector Bremner was elected to council, and Fry finished a close third behind anti-poverty activist Jean Swanson.
The Green Party of Vancouver nominated 11 candidates to run in the 2018 Vancouver municipal election on 28 June 2018. [9] School board candidate Nicholas Chernen resigned on 9 July 2018 after it was discovered that he had failed to disclose his involvement in a pending lawsuit to the party, [10] resulting in the party running four council candidates, three school board candidates, and three park board candidates. Prior to the election, both the Vancouver School Board and Park Board were chaired by Green Party incumbents. [9]
The Green Party elected nine candidates in the municipal election. Carr, Fry and Wiebe were elected to city council and all the party's school and parks board candidates were elected. [11]
Green councillors Carr and Fry were re-elected at the 2022 election, while Wiebe was not. Tom Digby was the only Green, and only non-ABC Vancouver, commissioner elected to the park board, while Green school board incumbents Janet Fraser and Lois-Chan Pedley were re-elected.
Election | Candidate | Votes | % | Position | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1996 | Paul Watson | 3,117 | 3.20 | 4th | Not elected |
Election | Leader [lower-alpha 1] | Seats | +/– | Votes | % | Change (pp) | Position |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1996 | Fred Bass | 0 / 11 | 28,339 | 3.39 | No seats | ||
1999 | Ann Livingston | 0 / 11 | 77,206 | 9.68 | 6.29 | No seats | |
2002 | Connie Fogal | 0 / 11 | 74,414 | 6.50 | 3.18 | No seats | |
2005 | Ann Livingston | 0 / 11 | 27,168 | 2.51 | 3.99 | No seats | |
2008 | – | 0 / 11 | – | – | – | No seats | |
2011 | Adriane Carr | 1 / 11 | 1 | 48,648 | 4.03 | 1.52 | Crossbench |
2014 | Adriane Carr | 1 / 11 | 168,163 | 11.58 | 7.55 | Crossbench | |
2017 [lower-alpha 2] | Pete Fry | 1 / 11 | 9,759 | 20.31 | 8.73 | ||
2018 | Adriane Carr | 3 / 11 | 2 | 218,025 | 15.61 | 4.70 | Crossbench |
2022 | Adriane Carr | 2 / 11 | 2 | 151,141 | 11.23 | 4.38 | Opposition |
Election | Seats | +/– | Position |
---|---|---|---|
1996 | No data | ||
1999 | 1 / 7 | – | Opposition |
2002 | 0 / 7 | 1 | No seats |
2005 | 0 / 7 | No seats | |
2008 | 1 / 7 | 1 | Crossbench |
2011 | 0 / 7 | 1 | No seats |
2014 | 2 / 7 | 2 | Opposition |
2018 | 3 / 7 | 1 | Minority |
2022 | 1 / 7 | 1 | Crossbench |
Majority bloc [lower-alpha 1] |
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