Vancouver municipal election, 2011

Last updated
Vancouver municipal election, 2011
Flag of Vancouver (Canada).svg
  2008 November 19, 2011 (2011-11-19) 2014  

11 seats in Vancouver City Council
 First partySecond partyThird party
  Gregor Robertson Burrard.jpg Suzanne Anton (November 2010).jpg Adriane Carr of the Green Party.jpg
Leader Gregor Robertson Suzanne Anton Adriane Carr
(de facto)
Party Vision NPA Green
Leader sinceJune, 200820112011
Leader's seat Mayor Ran for Mayor (lost) Councillor
Last election8 seats, 54.39%1 seat, 39.26%0 seats, N/A
Seats won821
Seat change±0+1+1
Popular vote77,00558,152N/A
Percentage53.17%40.15%N/A
Swing-1.21%+0.89%N/A

 Fourth partyFifth party
  Ellen-woodsworth.jpg
Leader Ellen Woodsworth
(de facto)
Randy Helten
Party COPE NSV
Leader since20112007
Leader's seatRan for Councillor (lost)Ran for Mayor (lost)
Last election2 seats, N/AN/A
Seats won00
Seat change-2±0
Popular voteN/A4,077
PercentageN/A2.77%
SwingN/AN/A

Mayor before election

Gregor Robertson
Vision

Elected Mayor

Gregor Robertson
Vision

The City of Vancouver held a municipal election on November 19, 2011, along with other municipalities and regional districts in British Columbia. All local government elections were for a three-year period. The ballot elected one Mayor, 10 councillors, nine school board trustees and seven park board commissioners. A $180 million capital borrowing plan [1] was also put to a vote.

Vancouver City in British Columbia, Canada

Vancouver is a coastal seaport city in western Canada, located in the Lower Mainland region of British Columbia. As the most populous city in the province, the 2016 census recorded 631,486 people in the city, up from 603,502 in 2011. The Greater Vancouver area had a population of 2,463,431 in 2016, making it the third-largest metropolitan area in Canada. Vancouver has the highest population density in Canada with over 5,400 people per square kilometre, which makes it the fifth-most densely populated city with over 250,000 residents in North America behind New York City, Guadalajara, San Francisco, and Mexico City according to the 2011 census. Vancouver is one of the most ethnically and linguistically diverse cities in Canada according to that census; 52% of its residents have a first language other than English. Roughly 30% of the city's inhabitants are of Chinese heritage. Vancouver is classed as a Beta global city.

In many countries, a mayor is the highest-ranking official in a municipal government such as that of a city or a town.

Contents

Incumbent Mayor Gregor Robertson and the Vision Vancouver Party sought and won their second term in office following their victory in the 2008 election. All Vision Vancouver candidates won seats in their respective categories. [2]

Gregor Robertson (politician) Canadian politician

Gregor Angus Bethune Robertson is a Canadian entrepreneur and politician, who served as the 39th Mayor of Vancouver, British Columbia from 2008 to 2018. As mayor, Robertson oversaw the creation and implementation of the Greenest City 2020 Action Plan and spearheaded the creation of the city's first comprehensive Economic Action Strategy.

Vision Vancouver political party

Vision Vancouver is a social democratic and green liberal municipal political party in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Vision was formed in the months leading up to the 2005 municipal election.

Suzanne Anton lost her bid as mayor but the NPA team gained seats in council, Park Board and School Board. COPE was nearly wiped out this election, losing both seats in city council. Its only elected official was School Board trustee incumbent Allan Wong. [3] On December 8, 2013, Wong resigned from COPE and joined Vision as a sitting trustee.

Suzanne Anton Canadian politician

Suzanne Anton, is a Canadian politician and the former Minister of Justice and Attorney General of British Columbia. Elected to the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia in the 2013 provincial election, Anton represented the riding of Vancouver-Fraserview as a member of the British Columbia Liberal Party, following a career at the municipal level. She was appointed British Columbia's Attorney General and Minister of Justice on June 10, 2013. Prior to her political involvement, Anton was a lawyer and former prosecutor with the Criminal Justice Branch of British Columbia. She was defeated in the 2017 provincial election by George Chow.

Non-Partisan Association municipal political party in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada

The Non-Partisan Association (NPA) is a municipal political party in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. There are, and have also been in the past, Non-Partisan Association political parties in the nearby municipalities of Burnaby, Richmond and Surrey.

The Coalition of Progressive Electors (COPE) is a municipal political party in the Canadian city of Vancouver, British Columbia. It has traditionally been associated with tenants, environmentalists, and the labour movement. COPE is generally guided by social-democratic principles and has a long history of advocating for issues such as improving public transit and investing in affordable housing. It last held a majority government on City Council from 2002 to 2005. COPE describes itself as being committed to environmental sustainability and generally supports measures and legislation to reduce municipal greenhouse emissions and to enact other environmental reforms. COPE cites climate change as a threat to the planet and to future generations, and much of its platform is based upon opposition to development that could contribute to climate change or endanger the city from an environmental perspective.

The Green Party of Vancouver had its first elected city councillor with Adriane Carr, but lost its incumbent seat in the Park Board. [4] New party NSV did not win any seats in council. Leader Randy Helten placed a distant third in the mayoral race.

Green Party of Vancouver

The Green Party of Vancouver, founded in 1984, is a municipal political party in Vancouver. It is affiliated with both the provincial Green Party of British Columbia, and the national Green Party of Canada.

Adriane Carr Canadian politician

Adriane Carr is a Canadian academic, activist and politician with the Green Party in British Columbia and Canada. She is also a councillor on Vancouver City Council. She was a founding member and the Green Party of British Columbia's first spokesperson (leader) from 1983 to 1985. In 1993 the Party formally established the position of "Leader". In 2000, she became the party's leader again. In the 2005 provincial election, she received in excess of 25% of the vote in her home riding of Powell River-Sunshine Coast. She resigned her position in September 2006 when she was appointed by Federal Green Party Leader, Elizabeth May, to be one of her two Deputy Leaders of the Green Party of Canada. Earlier in 2006, Carr had co-chaired the successful campaign to get her political ally and long-time friend Elizabeth May elected as Leader. After two losses as a federal candidate in Vancouver Centre, Carr was elected to Vancouver City Council in November 2011. She was the sole candidate of the Green Party of Vancouver for one of 10 seats in the at large election held in November 2011 municipal election. This was her first electoral success in eight attempts, and she is the first person elected to a major Canadian City's Council under the Green Party banner. She continues to support the Green Party of British Columbia and the Green Party of Canada.

Neighbourhoods for a Sustainable Vancouver (NSV) is a centrist and green municipal political party in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It is consensus-based, is run by a steering committee, rather than having an individual as leader, and does not ascribe to an ideology.

Candidates and results

The nomination period officially opened on October 4, 2011 and closed on October 14, 2011. This was the second election where Vision Vancouver and the Coalition of Progressive Electors (COPE) signed an electoral agreement to support each other's candidates for election. [5] [6] (I) denotes incumbents.

The incumbent is the current holder of an office. This term is usually used in reference to elections, in which races can often be defined as being between an incumbent and non-incumbent(s). For example, in the Hungarian presidential election, 2017, János Áder was the incumbent, because he had been the president in the term before the term for which the election sought to determine the president. A race without an incumbent is referred to as an open seat.

Mayor

Poster from the 2011 Vancouver municipal elections Vancouver municipal elections 2011.JPG
Poster from the 2011 Vancouver municipal elections

Twelve candidates sought election to the position of mayor. Four were affiliated with a political party and eight were independents. Incumbent mayor Gregor Robertson of Vision Vancouver was re-elected.

Candidate NameParty affiliationVotes% of votesElected
(I) Gregor Robertson Vision Vancouver 77,00553.17%X
Suzanne Anton Non-Partisan Association 58,15240.15%
Randy Helten Neighbourhoods for a Sustainable Vancouver 4,0072.77%
Gerry McGuire Vancouver Citizen's Voice 1,1950.83%
Sam Pelletier Independent 4430.31%
Darrell Zimmerman Independent 4260.29%
Dubgee Independent 4190.29%
Robin Lawrance Independent 3530.24%
Victor B. Paquette Independent 3330.23%
Lloyd Alan Cooke Independent 3100.21%
Menard Caissy Independent 2880.20%
Gölök Zoltán Buday Independent 2680.19%

City Councillors

Ten councillors were elected out of 41 candidates. Of the candidates, 28 were affiliated with a political party, and 13 were independent. Seven incumbent councillors sought re-election: six from Vision Vancouver and one from COPE. Of those subsequently elected, Vision Vancouver held seven seats, the NPA two and the Green Party of Vancouver one.

Candidate NameParty AffiliationVotes% of VotesElected
(I) Raymond Louie Vision Vancouver 63,27343.69%X
(I) Kerry Jang Vision Vancouver 61,93142.76%X
(I) Heather Deal Vision Vancouver 61,36842.37%X
(I) Andrea Reimer Vision Vancouver 60,59341.84%X
(I) Tim Stevenson Vision Vancouver 56,63839.11%X
(I) Geoff Meggs Vision Vancouver 56,18438.79%X
Tony Tang Vision Vancouver 53,87337.20%X
Elizabeth Ball Non-Partisan Association 51,60735.63%X
George Affleck Non-Partisan Association 51,14535.32%X
Adriane Carr Green Party of Vancouver 48,64833.59%X
(I) Ellen Woodsworth Coalition of Progressive Electors 48,55733.53%
Bill Yuen Non-Partisan Association 48,40733.42%
Mike Klassen Non-Partisan Association 47,86833.05%
Ken Charko Non-Partisan Association 45,37331.33%
Bill McCreery Non-Partisan Association 45,11431.15%
Francis Wong Non-Partisan Association 44,70730.87%
Tim Louis Coalition of Progressive Electors 43,92630.33%
Sean Bickerton Non-Partisan Association 43,28929.89%
Joe Carangi Non-Partisan Association 41,46028.63%
RJ Aquino Coalition of Progressive Electors 39,05426.97%
Jason Lamarche Non-Partisan Association 37,28625.75%
Sandy Garossino Independent 20,86614.41%
Elizabeth Murphy Neighbourhoods for a Sustainable Vancouver 19,64413.56%
Nicole Benson Neighbourhoods for a Sustainable Vancouver 17,98312.42%
Terry Martin Neighbourhoods for a Sustainable Vancouver 13,0258.99%
Marie Kerchum Neighbourhoods for a Sustainable Vancouver 12,6148.71%
Chris Shaw De-Growth Vancouver 8,2195.68%
Ian Gregson De-Growth Vancouver 7,8725.44%
Amy Fox Independent 6,4994.49%
Kelly Alm Independent 5,5253.82%
Grant Fraser Independent 4,7583.29%
Chris Masson De-Growth Vancouver 4,6903.24%
Lauren R.I.C.H. Gill Independent 4,6823.23%
Michael Singh Dharni Independent 4,1672.88%
Marc Tan Nguyen Independent 4,1182.84%
Rick Orser Independent 3,9962.76%
Wendythirteen Independent 3,9262.71%
Bang Nguyen Independent 3,8262.64%
Cord (Ted) Copeland Independent 3,5872.48%
Aaaron R.I.C.H. Spires Independent 2,2001.52%
R H Maxwell N Bur Independent 1,9551.35%

Park Commissioners

Seven commissioners were elected out of 21 candidates. Of the candidates, 15 were affiliated with a political party, and six were independent. Four incumbent commissioners sought re-election: three from Vision Vancouver and one from the Green Party of Vancouver. Of the elected commissioners, Vision held five seats and the NPA two.

Candidate NameParty AffiliationVotes% of VotesElected
(I) Constance Barnes Vision Vancouver 63,95244.16%X
(I) Sarah Blyth Vision Vancouver 62,19842.95%X
(I) Aaron Jasper Vision Vancouver 58,34340.29%X
Niki Sharma Vision Vancouver 58,33040.28%X
Melissa De Genova Non-Partisan Association 56,50139.01%X
John Coupar Non-Partisan Association 50,37534.78%X
Trevor Loke Vision Vancouver 49,87834.44%X
Casey Crawford Non-Partisan Association 49,02033.85%
Gabby Kalaw Non-Partisan Association 48,60033.56%
Jason Upton Non-Partisan Association 46,26131.94%
Dave Pasin Non-Partisan Association 46,00531.77%
(I) Stuart Mackinnon Green Party of Vancouver 44,76130.91%
Brent Granby Coalition of Progressive Electors 42,76929.53%
Donalda Greenwell-Baker Coalition of Progressive Electors 39,03326.95%
Jamie Lee Hamilton Independent Democratic Electoral Alliance 19,49513.46%
Juliet Victoria Andalis Independent 12,6938.76%
Eleanor Hadley Independent 10,7549.37%
Andrew Murray Independent 9,8196.78%
Tammy Truong Independent 8,9176.16%
Peter Raymond Haskell Independent 5,5403.83%
Freyja Pri Toor Independent 5,0623.50%

School Trustees

Nine school trustees were elected out of 20 candidates. Of the candidates, 15 were affiliated with a political party, and five were independent. Seven incumbent trustees were seeking re-election: three from Vision Vancouver, three from COPE, and one from the NPA. Of the elected trustees, five were from Vision Vancouver, three from the NPA and one from COPE.

Candidate NameParty AffiliationVotes% of VotesElected
(I) Patti Bacchus Vision Vancouver 72,02549.73%X
(I) Mike Lombardi Vision Vancouver 65,41145.17%X
(I) Ken Clement Vision Vancouver 61,99442.81%X
Cherie Payne Vision Vancouver 61,87442.72%X
(I) Ken Denike Non-Partisan Association 59,31040.95%X
(I) Allan Wong Coalition of Progressive Electors 57,90239.98%X
Rob Wynen Vision Vancouver 56,76339.19%X
Sophia Woo Non-Partisan Association 55,89038.59%X
Fraser Ballantyne Non-Partisan Association 55,71338.47%X
Stacy Robertson Non-Partisan Association 54,27537.48%
Gwen Giesbrecht Coalition of Progressive Electors 52,47036.23%
(I) Jane Bouey Coalition of Progressive Electors 52,02635.92%
(I) Al Blakey Coalition of Progressive Electors 51,96335.88%
Sandy Sharma Non-Partisan Association 49,84334.42%
Louise Boutin Green Party of Vancouver 34,47723.81%
Lily Harvey Independent 20,31414.03%
Misha Lauenstein Independent 14,2979.87%
Robert Allan Stark Independent 13,3919.25%
Bang Nguyen Independent 12,9038.91%
Peter Raymond Haskell Independent 11,9158.23%

Capital Plan Questions

1. Are you in favour of Council having the authority, without further assent of the electors, to pass by-laws between January 1, 2012 and December 31, 2014 to borrow an aggregate $65,800,000 for the following purposes?

OptionVotesPercentage
Yes81,60563.39%
No47,12436.61%
Total Votes128,729100%

2. Are you in favour of Council having the authority, without further assent of the electors, to pass by-laws between January 1, 2012 and December 31, 2014 to borrow an aggregate $66,300,000 for the following purposes?

OptionVotesPercentage
Yes88,64068.85%
No40,09531.15%
Total Votes128,735100%

3. Are you in favour of Council having the authority, without further assent of the electors, to pass by-laws between January 1, 2012 and December 31, 2014 to borrow an aggregate $47,700,000 for the following purposes?

OptionVotesPercentage
Yes87,51568.23%
No40,74031.76%
Total Votes128,255100%

Voter and party statistics

Voter turnout

Of the 418,878 registered voters, there were 144,823 recorded ballots, marking the voter turnout at 34.57%. [7] This is an increase from the 30.79% turnout during the previous municipal election in 2008.

Elected percentage by party

Of the parties represented, only Vision Vancouver had its entire slate of candidates elected in all fields.

PartyMayorCouncillorsPark CommissionersSchool TrusteesTotal candidates
# Elected% Elected# Elected% Elected# Elected% Elected# Elected% Elected# Elected% Elected
Vision Vancouver 1/1100.0%7/7100.0%5/5100.0%5/5100.0%18/18100.0%
Green Party of Vancouver NILN/A1/1100.0%0/10.0%0/10.0%1/333.3%
Non-Partisan Association 0/10.0%2/1020.0%2/633.3%3/560.0%7/2231.8%
Coalition of Progressive Electors NILN/A0/30.0%0/20.0%1/425.0%1/911.1%
Neighbourhoods for a Sustainable Vancouver 0/10.0%0/40.0%NILN/ANILN/A0/50.0%
De-Growth Vancouver NILN/A0/30.0%NILN/ANILN/A0/30.0%
Vancouver Citizen's Voice 0/10.0%NILN/ANILN/ANILN/A0/10.0%
Independent Democratic Electoral Alliance NILN/ANILN/A0/10.0%NILN/A0/10.0%
Independent candidates 0/80.0%0/130.0%0/60.0%0/50.0%0/320.0%

Seat changes by party

PartyMayor & CouncillorsPark CommissionersSchool TrusteesTotal elected
20082011% Change% Seats20082011% Change% Seats20082011% Change% Seats20082011% Change% Seats
Vision Vancouver 88±0.00%72.73%45+25.00%71.43%45+25.00%55.56%1618+12.50%66.67%
Non-Partisan Association 12+100.00%18.18%12+100.00%28.57%23+50.00%33.33%47+75.00%25.93%
Green Party of Vancouver 01N/A9.09%10-100.00%0.00%00±0.00%0.00%11±0.00%3.70%
Coalition of Progressive Electors 20-100.00%0.00%10-100.00%0.00%31-66.67%11.11%61-83.33%3.70%

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References

  1. Capital Plan 2012-2014 at vancouver.ca
  2. Spencer, Kent; Olivier, Cassidy (November 20, 2011). "Robertson leads Vision sweep". The Province . Retrieved November 23, 2011.
  3. O'Connor, Naoibh (November 21, 2011). "COPE's last man standing speaks". Vancouver Courier . Retrieved November 23, 2011.
  4. Thomas, Sandra (November 19, 2011). "Adriane Carr makes Vancouver city council history". Vancouver Courier . Retrieved November 23, 2011.
  5. Howell, Mike (November 21, 2011). "COPE infighting follows Vancouver election disaster". Vancouver Courier . Retrieved November 23, 2011.
  6. Carrigg, David (November 20, 2011). "Veteran left-wing COPE squeezed out of picture". The Province . Retrieved November 23, 2011.
  7. Percent Voter Turnout Calculations for BC Municipalities CivicInfo BC. Retrieved 2011-11-20