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Profile: Canadian Green Party leader Elizabeth May
Elizabeth May is the current leader of the Green Party. She is also an environmentalist, writer, activist and lawyer.
Born on June 9, 1954, May had an interesting upbringing.
May was born in Hartford, Connecticut to a British father and American mother; she has a younger brother Geoffrey.[3][4] Her mother was a prominent anti-nuclear activist and one of the original founders of the peace group SANE while her father was Assistant Vice President of Aetna Life and Casualty.[5][6]
Her family used to own a restaurant and gift shop from 1974 to 2002. Her first environmental act saw her leading a group of 15 landowners in a fight against Stora, which were spraying pesticides.
May also helped found the Canadian Evironmental Defence Fund. She has also worked as a lawyer.
She joined the Green Party's leadership race on May 9, 2006, and on August 26, 2006 she won the election on the first ballot.
She tallied 65.3% of the votes beating her main rival, David Chernushenko (33.3%) and Jim Fannon (0.88%). She said one of the main platforms for the next election would be to renegotiate the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA). She also said that she would insist on the party being represented on the televised debates.[32] At the time of her election as leader, May said she intended to run in the riding of Cape Breton-Canso in the next federal election, although she also said she would stand in a federal byelection if one occurred prior to the next general election.[33]
She is an Officer of the Order of Canada since 2005.
Elizabeth is the author of five books, Budworm Battles (1982), Paradise Won: The Struggle to Save South Moresby (1990), At the Cutting Edge: The Crisis in Canada’s Forests (Key Porter Books, 1998, as well as a major new edition in 2004), co-authored with Maude Barlow, Frederick Street: Life and Death on Canada’s Love Canal (Harper Collins, 2000), and most recently, How to Save the World in Your Spare Time (Key Porter Books, 2006). Frederick Street focused on the Sydney Tar Ponds, and the health threats to children in the community – the issue that led her to protest in front of Parliament Hill over a seventeen-day hunger strike in May 2001.
Her party's platform can be found here.
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Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (2)
at 07:38 on October 31st, 2008
amyjudd, I like this story. It's good stuff.
at 07:38 on October 31st, 2008
nice work!