Tuesday, December 16, 2025
ADVT 
National

Greens Won't Run Candidate In Burnaby South As ‘Leader's Courtesy' To Jagmeet Singh: Elizabeth May

The Canadian Press, 16 Aug, 2018 12:49 PM
    VICTORIA — The Green party will not run a candidate against NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh in the riding of Burnaby South.
     
     
    Green Leader Elizabeth May says the decision is an extension of a "leader's courtesy," a long-standing Canadian parliamentary tradition that facilitates a newly elected party leader's entry to the House of Commons in an unopposed byelection.
     
     
    She says in a statement the Greens believe it is right to step aside to allow the leader of "an important part of the political spectrum" to serve in Parliament.
     
     
    Singh announced his candidacy for the federal riding after New Democrat MP Kennedy Stewart indicated he was stepping aside to run for mayor of Vancouver.
     
     
    The Liberal and Conservative parties have not announced candidates in the riding, but the Liberals have said they will contest the byelection.
     
     
    May received the leader's courtesy in 2008 when then-Liberal leader Stephane Dion chose not to run a candidate against her in Central Nova. She extended the same gesture to Dion.
     
     
    In 2002, the Liberals and Conservatives stepped aside for Stephen Harper when he ran in a byelection held shortly after he became leader of the Canadian Alliance.
     
     
    No date has been set for a byelection.
     
     
    Singh sat in Ontario's legislature and served as the provincial NDP's deputy leader before he replaced Tom Mulcair as the federal leader.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Guest Column: Are We Living In A Safe Environment?

    Guest Column: Are We Living In A Safe Environment?
    A mass shooting in Toronto's Danforth neighborhood has left two people dead and 12 people sent to the hospital.

    Guest Column: Are We Living In A Safe Environment?

    Quebec Dentists Threaten To Leave Public System Due To Tense Contract Negotiations

    Quebec's dentists are threatening to pull out of the public health system and deprive more than 620,000 people of subsidized care if the premier doesn't intervene in tense contract negotiations.

    Quebec Dentists Threaten To Leave Public System Due To Tense Contract Negotiations

    Critics Seek 'Discovery Day' Name Change, Saying It Ignores Indigenous Presence

    Critics Seek 'Discovery Day' Name Change, Saying It Ignores Indigenous Presence
    A movement is afoot to change the name of a holiday recognizing Europeans' "discovery" of Newfoundland and Labrador.

    Critics Seek 'Discovery Day' Name Change, Saying It Ignores Indigenous Presence

    Winnipeg Police Warn Of Pond Hazards After Man Drowns Trying To Rescue Dog

    Police say the 58-year-old man was walking with his family last night when the dog ran into a pond at King's Park in the city's south end.

    Winnipeg Police Warn Of Pond Hazards After Man Drowns Trying To Rescue Dog

    Brief Evacuation Order Lifted As Wildfire Crews In B.C. Hit Hard At New Blaze

    VANCOUVER — A wildfire cut Highway 1 through British Columbia's southern Interior late Monday as a fire flared near the community of Spences Bridge, but conditions eased slightly overnight, allowing a pilot car to escort travellers through the area.

    Brief Evacuation Order Lifted As Wildfire Crews In B.C. Hit Hard At New Blaze

    B.C. Fishing Trip Prompts Search When Empty Canoe Found Off Flores Island

    B.C. Fishing Trip Prompts Search When Empty Canoe Found Off Flores Island
    An overdue canoeist off the west coast of B.C.'s Vancouver Island has prompted and air and sea search.

    B.C. Fishing Trip Prompts Search When Empty Canoe Found Off Flores Island