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- Green Party of Canada - Wikipedia
The Green Party of Canada (French: Parti vert du Canada) is a federal political party in Canada, founded in 1983 with a focus on green politics The Green Party is currently the fifth largest party in the House of Commons by seat count
- Green Party president quits, tells members the dream is dead
In a blunt and blistering resignation letter, Green Party President Lorraine Rekmans announced she has quit in frustration and says the party's dream "is dead " Laying it out over three pages,
- News Press Releases – Green Party Of Canada
OTTAWA — The Green Party of Canada is warning that the Carney government is preparing to bulldoze Bill C-5 through Parliament using an aggressively compressed process that leaves no time […]
- Green Party of Canada - The Canadian Encyclopedia
Founded in 1983 and inspired by the success of sister parties in New Zealand and Germany, the Green Party of Canada set out to replace the traditional left-versus-right political debate in favour of a new emphasis on protecting the environment and conserving natural resources
- Pedneault resigns from Green Party, leaving May as sole . . .
Jonathan Pedneault says he is leaving for personal reasons and that it’s been an honour to serve beside May and the party’s other member of Parliament, Mike Morrice Pedneault, who does not
- With environmental issues relegated to backburner, Green . . .
The Leaders’ Debates Commission revoked the Green Party’s invitation to participate because it said the party intentionally reduced the number of candidates it had running in the election for
- Green Party co-leader Jonathan Pedneault resigns after Canada . . .
Pedneault returned to co-lead the Green Party with Elizabeth May in January after stepping down six months earlier, citing personal reasons He ran in the Liberal stronghold of Outremont in
- Green Party dropped from leaders’ debates for not running . . .
On Tuesday, co-leader Jonathan Pedneault told CBC News that the party had pulled about 15 candidates out of the race in a strategic decision not to run them in ridings where the party thinks Conservatives will likely win
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