2020 Green Party of Canada leadership election


The 2020 Green Party of Canada leadership election will take place on October 4, 2020 to elect a leader to replace Elizabeth May, who resigned on November 4, 2019 after leading the party for more than a decade and achieving a record three seats in Parliament in the 2019 federal election. Nine candidates are running to replace her. While the candidates offer different visions for the future of the party and make various policy proposals, they all agree that climate change is a serious issue and oppose the construction of new pipelines.

Rules

The vote will be held online between September 26 and October 3. All party members before September 3, 2020, who are 14 years of age or older are eligible to vote, with one vote each. The vote uses ranked voting, and the candidate with a majority of votes wins the leadership.

Timeline

2019

Current candidates

Judy N. Green

;Background
Judy N. Green is a computer scientist, veteran and small business owner from Nova Scotia who was the candidate for West Nova in 2019.
;Policies
;Notes
Green's candidacy was rejected by the party's vetting committee on June 2, which was appealed. The appeal was accepted and her candidacy was reinstated on June 10.

Meryam Haddad

;Background:
Meryam Haddad, 32, is an immigration lawyer from Montreal, Quebec who was the candidate for Châteauguay—Lacolle in 2019. Haddad immigrated from Syria at the age of 5 and has been a resident of Montreal since. She holds a bachelor's degree in law from the University of Ottawa. She is openly lesbian.
;Policies
;Background:
Courtney Howard is an emergency room physician from Yellowknife, Northwest Territories and president of the Canadian Association of Physicians for the Environment.
;Policies
;Background:
Amita Kuttner, 29, is an astrophysicist from North Vancouver, currently living on Lasqueti Island. They formerly served as the Green Party's Science and Innovation Critic. During the 2019 federal election, Kuttner was the party's candidate for Burnaby North—Seymour. They are openly non-binary and pansexual, and use they/them pronouns. Kuttner has refused to hold fundraising events with former leader Elizabeth May, saying the offer of assistance with fundraising does not address other systematic inequalities in the race.
;Policies:
;Background:
Dimitri Lascaris is a lawyer and activist from Montreal, Quebec. He was the federal candidate for London West in 2015, is the former Justice Critic in the Green Party's shadow cabinet and a former member of the Quebec Greens' National Executive.
;Policies
;Notes
Lascaris' candidacy was rejected by the party's vetting committee, which was appealed. The appeal was accepted on June 2, and his candidacy was reinstated and approved.

David Merner

;Background:
David Merner, 57, is the former Green Party Critic for Justice, and was the Green Party candidate for Esquimalt—Saanich—Sooke in 2019. From 2012 to 2013, he was the president of the Liberal Party of Canada's British Columbia wing and was their candidate for Esquimalt—Saanich—Sooke in 2015. Prior to entering politics, Merner was a lawyer at the Department of Justice and for the Privy Council Office as well as the Ministry of Attorney General of British Columbia.
;Policies:
;Background
Glen Murray,, is the former Liberal MPP for Toronto Centre and a former cabinet minister under Premiers Dalton McGuinty and Kathleen Wynne, most notably as the Minister of the Environment and Climate Change. Murray previously ran for the Liberals in Charleswood—St. James in 2004. In addition, he has also served as city councillor and Mayor of Winnipeg, where he currently resides. He has also been the CEO of the Canadian Urban Institute, and executive director of the Pembina Institute.
;Policies:
;Background:
Annamie Paul, 47, is a lawyer from Toronto who was the Green Party Critic for Global Affairs. She was the Green candidate in Toronto Centre in 2019. She holds a law degree from University of Ottawa and a master's degree from Princeton University.
;Policies:
Andrew West, 45, is an Ottawa-based lawyer and the Green Party of Ontario critic for the Attorney General. He stood as the provincial candidate in Carleton—Mississippi Mills in 2014, the federal candidate in Kanata—Carleton in 2015 and provincially in 2018, and as the provincial candidate in the 2020 Orléans by-election.
;Policies:

Don Elzer

;Background:
Don Elzer, 62, is an environmental activist, businessman, and former journalist from Vancouver, British Columbia. He is the founder and owner of Wildcraft Forest, a natural health company. He currently resides just outside of Lumby with his family.
;Notes:
Withdrew via email.

Constantine Kritsonis

;Background:
Constantine Kritsonis, 62, is a former Ontario representative on the Green Party Council. He stood as the Green Party of Canada candidate for York Centre in 2015, 2011, 2006, 2004 and 1997, and the Green Party of Ontario candidate in Oakwood in 1995.
;Notes
Withdrew following announcement of the election rules, citing the entrance fee at the time of announcement, $50,000, being too high.

Dylan Perceval-Maxwell

;Background
Dylan Perceval-Maxwell is a Montreal activist and businessman. He was the Green Party candidate in Laurier—Sainte-Marie five times from 1997 to 2008 and the candidate in Alfred-Pellan in 2011. His 2006 campaign is the subject of the NFB documentary Democracy 4 Dummies.
;Notes:
Disqualified by the party after inappropriate statements going against the Greens' core values.

Julie Tremblay-Cloutier

;Background
Julie Tremblay-Cloutier, 48, is a businesswoman from Oka who was the Green Party candidate for Mirabel in 2019, and a candidate for Oka City Council in 2017. Prior to entering politics, Tremblay-Cloutier was the head of a local pool and spa inspection company.
;Notes
Withdrew citing the leadership election rules, her lack of experience and resources to do fundraisers, and her concern that ideas and debates would become secondary to raising funds.

Alex Tyrrell

;Background
Alex Tyrrell, 32, is the leader of the Green Party of Quebec, and was the provincial candidate for Verdun in 2018, Notre-Dame-de-Grâce in 2014, and Jacques-Cartier in 2012. He was also the candidate in the Outremont, Chicoutimi, Gouin, Louis-Hébert, and Roberval by-elections in 2013, 2016, May 2017, October 2017 and 2018, respectively.
;Notes:
Withdrew citing "Elizabeth May and her associates meddling in the election".

Declined

Endorsements

Former leader Elizabeth May was the subject of criticism over perceived implicit endorsements. Alex Tyrrell contended that May appeared with candidates at fundraisers to push them towards the lead. David Merner said it would be wiser for May to stay out of the contest completely. May responded that she was remaining neutral, but would help candidates from equity-seeking groups in fundraising efforts.

Racism

Candidate Meryam Haddad accused fellow candidate Dylan Perceval-Maxwell of racism for comments he made during a TVOntario debate. When asked about calls to defund the police, Perceval-Maxwell suggested having police officers "give $20 to every person of colour they stop". Haddad called the suggestion racist, and said it would not further the goal of ending systemic racism. Perceval-Maxwell suggested that Haddad was "angry that a white person came up with an idea." On July 8th, the party announced that Perceval-Maxwell was no longer a candidate for the leadership, citing statements "not aligned with the party's values".