The longer term of the Canadian Green Party is within the highlight after a disheartening finish within the 2021 federal election.
The party won at the very least two seats, and remained eager for a 3rd late Monday.
However the night was tinged with disappointment, as party leader Annamie Paul failed a second time to win her seat in Toronto Centre, ending fourth in a blowout to Liberal Marci Ien.
“Actually, I’m upset. It is tough to lose, nobody likes to lose. But I’m so happy with the hassle, the creativity, the innovation, that our team dropped at this race,” Paul told supporters in her concession speech.
“We promised to supply real representation, we promised to supply an actual alternative to the people of Toronto Centre, who’ve a lot need, a lot work to get done, and you probably did that and I thanks for that.”
The party didn’t recapture the seat it won in Fredericton in 2019, though did add its first-ever seat in Ontario, in where Mike Morrice won in Kitchener—Centre.
Even that victory got here with an asterisk, nevertheless, coming in a riding where Liberal contender Raj Saini was forced to withdraw after accusations of sexual misconduct.
And incumbent Paul Manley appeared to be in trouble in Nanaimo—Ladysmith, a too-close-to-call three way battle with the NDP and Conservatives.
Former leader Elizabeth May, who won the party’s first seat in 2011, held on in Saanich—Gulf Islands, and had strong words in regards to the campaign.
“There definitely might be issues the party is discussing internally; we at all times do a post-mortem after every election,” May said.
“This one, I’ve never seen the party so unprepared for an election. To not have candidates in every riding, is something we want to explore and investigate how that happened.”
Of particular concern to the Greens was their popular vote collapse.
After locking in a record-high 6.49 per cent in 2019, the party appeared on target to tug in only 2.3 per cent of the vote late Monday night.
In 2019, the Greens won a historic three seats, including its first-ever seat outside of British Columbia with the election of Jenica Atwin in Fredericton, and held onto Nanaimo—Ladysmith, a seat it had only acquired six months earlier in a byelection.
While climate change has consistently polled as a top issue for Canadians, it took a back seat in a 2021 campaign dominated by COVID-19 and viewed by some as a referendum on Justin Trudeau.
Further complicating matters for the party, former BC Green Party leader Andrew Weaver publicly backed the Liberals’ climate change plan.
Furthermore, the Greens were beset by highly public internal strife of their very own.
They faced a messy summer that began with Atwin defecting in June, crossing the ground to the Liberals amid infighting over the Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
Paul then faced an attempt by party executives to force a membership suspension and vote of non-confidence in her leadership.
Though each were blocked by an independent arbitrator, the revolt proved damaging for the party.
Paul spent many of the election campaigning in Toronto, acknowledging that it was “not a given” that every one candidates wanted her of their riding. She made her first and only visit to British Columbia just two days before the overall vote.
You’ll find full results for the election here, and find your riding here.
Editor’s note: It is a corrected story. Global News previously reported the candidate’s name as Mark Morrice, and that the Greens received 12.5 per cent of the vote within the 2019 election.