Elizabeth May readies Green leadership bid, asked MP Mike Morrice to consider running: Sources

spaminator

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Elizabeth May readies Green leadership bid, asked MP Mike Morrice to consider running: Sources
Author of the article:Canadian Press
Canadian Press
Marie Woolf
Publishing date:Jul 29, 2022 • 11 hours ago • 3 minute read • Join the conversation

OTTAWA — Elizabeth May, who is preparing a bid for the leadership of the Green Party, first asked the only other Green MP if he would consider taking the helm before she decided to apply for her old job.


Three sources within the party confirmed May has been working to collect the 100 signatures needed to enter the contest, but said she first asked Ontario Green MP Mike Morrice whether he would be prepared to throw his hat into the ring to replace interim leader Amita Kuttner.

The sources, who spoke to The Canadian Press on the condition they not be named because they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly, said May has shared that she believes the Green party would benefit from having a leader with a seat in the House of Commons.

May, who was Green party leader from 2006 until after the 2019 federal election, has not yet responded to requests for comment about whether she wants to take on the role again.

The sources said May has also told fellow Greens that she would run for the job she gave up nearly three years ago if she could share the role with a co-leader, who could manage much of the day-to-day administration.


She was first elected to represent the B.C. riding of Saanich—Gulf Islands in 2011, after an unsuccessful attempt to defeat a Conservative cabinet minister in Nova Scotia in 2008.

While leader, May raised the party’s profile and the Greens managed to elect three MPs in the 2019 election — still far away from the dozen needed to reach official party status.

She stepped down as party leader in 2019 and the Greens then went through a tumultuous period under her successor, Annamie Paul, who resigned shortly after the 2021 election.

At the time, she described leading the Greens as the worst period in her life.

Vancouver-based astrophysicist Kuttner took over as interim Green leader on a mission to reunite the party and “heal” internal wounds after months of strife.


Morrice, who was elected to represent the riding of Kitchener Centre last year, confirmed people in the party had asked him to run.

He said he wants to focus on his constituency but did not rule out a future bid.

“I have really appreciated every message of encouragement from people in my community and across the country asking for me to consider running for the leadership of the Green Party,” he said Friday.

“For now, I’m keen to stay focused on the work my neighbours elected me to do and to continue making progress on their priorities.”

The contest rules say potential candidates must submit their applications, including 100 signed nomination forms from Green Party members, by next Friday.

They must get signatures from at least 20 party members who are under the age of 30, and from at least 20 members who live in a different region from their own.

The party will publish a list of approved candidates Aug. 31.

The winner will be announced Nov. 19.

The leader’s job ad states the successful candidate must follow “principles of servant leadership” and will “inspire, motivate and mobilize the Green movement and help it grow, influencing public opinion and decision-making in the Parliament of Canada.”

When the Green Party announced the leadership race rules, it said choosing a new leader “is an exciting opportunity for renewal and this contest will showcase and highlight some of our best party members.”
 
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Ron in Regina

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Green Party leadership hopeful Najib Jutt says he's refusing to take a French language test required by the party — which has rejected his application as a result.

Jutt, who worked on former leader Annamie Paul's election campaign, posted a statement on his website saying he will "not be participating in any language testing by a party that professes to stand for the principles of respect for diversity and social justice." He said he plans to appeal the party's rejection of his candidacy.

In the post, he calls the language requirement "the most egregious rule of the contest" and "an artificial barrier created to, unintentionally or not, move the goalposts for many equity-deserving leadership hopefuls."

"No former leader or interim leader of the Green Party of Canada has been required to take such a test," he wrote.

"The requirement to be proficient in both official languages is not a constitutional or legislative requirement for a party leader or prime minister. It isn't even a convention."

Prime ministers have been able to communicate in both of Canada's two official languages since the current officeholder's father, Poppa Pierre Elliott Trudeau, was elected in 1968.

While Jutt said he is fluent in other languages and is not opposed to learning French on the job, he doesn't think it should be a requirement for federal party leadership. He said making it a requirement amounts to a barrier for people of colour who don't speak both of Canada's official languages.

"It seems to contravene the party's own work toward justice, equity, diversity, and inclusion," Jutt said. "This arbitrary rule constitutes the very opposite of inclusion."

The Greens released the contest details and began accepting leadership candidates on Tuesday. With a strict bilingual requirement, a low-entry fee and a short contest period: people within the Canadian Green movement say the rules may not set the party up for success after a tumultuous year.

"It seems that we are putting rules in place that our most successful leader, Elizabeth May, could not achieve if she became leader," said Naomi Hunter, the provincial leader of the Saskatchewan Greens.

The main obstacle for Hunter is the race's language requirements. Applicants must demonstrate proficiency in English and French at an advanced level or what's known as a B2 level according to the European Common Framework of Reference for Languages. Indigenous applicants are exempted from this requirement because equality, etc…

Hunter said she believes the national leader should be proficient in both official languages, but it shouldn't be a barrier to entry into the job. Applicants should be able to learn on the job.

"That rules out most of Western Canada that already feels very marginalized politically," Hunter said.

Other leadership hopefuls, like Najib Jutt, said the strict language requirements would eliminate many BIPOC (Black, Indigenous and persons of colour), like him, who may not have grown up speaking French or English but speaking another mother tongue.

"I'm also concerned about other people who would have a similar barrier, such as me," said Jutt, who also worked on Paul's election bid. "I'm an immigrant to this country. I speak two other languages."

The leader of the Green Party of Quebec, Alex Tyrrell, who is fully bilingual (Unlike Jutt, who only speaks THREE languages, but not French), also has issues with such a high language requirement. However, Tyrrell, who is also considering another run for the federal Greens, said he's more concerned with the shorter campaign. The last time the Greens searched for a leader, the party held a race that lasted at least eight-months.

This time candidates have just over five months to campaign before a final vote is held, and results are announced in November. The federal campaign coincides with the Quebec provincial election, and Tyrrell said it doesn't provide enough time for relatively unknown candidates to build their profile within the party. He fears a high-profile candidate could parachute into the race and have an unfair advantage. Sounds fair.

The party's interim leader is expressing reservations about the language testing requirement.

"I think there are a range of ways that could have been considered for implementing (the language requirement) that would have made it more accessible," said Amita Kuttner. "I'm not sure if they were explored.

"We're trying something new. It's going to be fun. I certainly hope it's going to be interesting."
 

The_Foxer

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Aug 9, 2022
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What an absolute disaster. This is what happens when a 'party' isn't really a party but rather is just a cult of personality. There was no 'green' party, there was just the 'elizabeth may' party and when she left there was literally nothing there. Just a bunch of squabbling children.

Ah well. At least her return will be good news for the local wine merchants and donut shops.
 
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