Green Party Leader Annamie Paul loses her race, party sending at least 2 MPs to Ottawa - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 25, 2024, 08:00 PM | Calgary | -13.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Green Party Leader Annamie Paul loses her race, party sending at least 2 MPs to Ottawa

Green Party Leader Annamie Paul has lost her bid to win Toronto Centre, and her party's support was greatly reduced compared to their 2019 resultsas votes continued to be counted Monday night in the federal election.

Elizabeth May keeps seat as party earns breakout win in Kitchener, Ont.

Green Party Leader Annamie Paul greets supporters at an election night gathering in Toronto, on Monday. (Chris Young/The Canadian Press)

Green Party Leader Annamie Paul has lost her bid to win Toronto Centre, and while her party's national support has beengreatly reduced compared to its 2019 results, it is still sending at least two MPs to Ottawa.

Trailing in fourth place, Paul congratulatedLiberalincumbent Marci Ien on her re-election, which was called by CBC's decision desk Monday.

It's a disappointing result for Paul, who came in second in a byelection in 2020 and had banked on winning the riding as onekey to maintaining her leadership of the Greens.

Speaking late Monday to supporters in Toronto, Paul said she was "disappointed" by the result but did not address her leadership of the Greens.

"It's hard to lose," she said, thanking her campaign workers, supporters and Greens across the country. She said she was heartened that there would continue to be strong Green representatives in Ottawa.

WATCH | Paul speaks on election night:

No one likes to lose, but Im so proud of the effort, the creativity, the innovation that our team brought to this race': Paul

3 years ago
Duration 1:12
Green Party Leader Annamie Paul speaks after 2021 election results in her losing race for Toronto Centre riding.

Former leader Elizabeth May won her riding ofSaanichGulf Islands, while Paul Manly remained, early Tuesday, locked in a tightthree-way contest inNanaimoLadysmith.

The party did earn a breakthrough win in Kitchener Centre, where CBC's decision desk called the race for Mike Morrice. It's the party's first election win in Ontario and only the second outside British Columbia.

Paul spent most of the campaign in Toronto Centre. She left on just a handful of occasions, including to take part in the leaders' debates, one jaunt to B.C., a trip to P.E.I. and another to Kitchener, Ont.

Running in Toronto Centre was a "very daring and risky choice," May told CBC News just before that race was called.

Asked whether she would consider again taking on the party's leadership should Paul eventually step aside, May was firm: "I'm the former leader, that's what I'm staying."

WATCH | May discusses the Green campaign and Paul:

Former Green party leader Elizabeth May reacts to Green Party Leader Annamie Pauls performance in 2021 election

3 years ago
Duration 2:05
Elizabeth May says Annamie Paul has deep connections to her riding, but Green Party leader loses it to Liberal

"The questionsof Annamie's future are really up to Annamie, and we'll see how the rest of the evening goes," she said.

May criticized the party's failure to run a full slate of candidates in the election, calling it "shocking" and suggesting there should be a review of what led to that outcome.

The party experienced a rough start to the night,winning only single-digit support in parts of Atlantic Canada. In 2019 they received 17.2 per cent in New Brunswick, 11 per cent in Nova Scotia and fully one fifth of the vote in Prince Edward Island.

The party saw similarly harsh declines in Ontario and Quebec.

Party rattled coming into election

Going into the election, the Greens were locked in internal conflict overPaul's leadership. The conflict, which burst into the public view after the departure of Fredericton MP Jenica Atwin to the Liberals, prompted a decline in popular support and contributed to significant financial challenges for the party.

Paul said recentlyshe considered resigning as leader becauseofthe crisis, and the conflict between her and the party's federal executive bogged the Greens down for months.

They ran just 252 candidates across Canada's 338 ridings. There were no candidates in Newfoundland and Labrador, just one on the eastern arm of Quebec and two in Edmonton.

The party released its platform costing just a day before the election, promising universal pharmacare and a reformed universal long-term care system. Other platform planks included a guaranteed livable income and student debt cancellation.

Paul spent much of the campaign arguing that only the Greens had the ambition to tackle the climate crisis. The party pitched an emissions reduction target of 60 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030.

May led the party to its best-ever result in 2019, when she was joined in Parliament by Manly and Atwin. But the party had hoped for more seats, and May resigned as leader shortly after the election. That prompted a closely divided leadership in which Paul eventually emerged victorious.

Kitchener Centre candidate Mike Morrice poses with Paul in downtown Kitchener, Ont., on Wednesday. (Josette Lafleur/CBC)

Add some good to your morning and evening.

Your weekly guide to what you need to know about federal politics and the minority Liberal government. Get the latest news and sharp analysis delivered to your inbox every Sunday morning.

...

The next issue of Minority Report will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.