The Green Party of Manitoba fielded 14 candidates in the 2007 Manitoba provincial election, none of whom were elected. Information about these candidates may be found on this page.
Kristen Andrews (Point Douglas)
editAndrews moved from Morden to Winnipeg in 1988. She owns the Ragpickers Antifashion Emporium vintage clothing store, and is a member of Peace Alliance Winnipeg and the Canadian Federation of Independent Business.[1] In 2006, she criticized the Canadian military's decision to hold a major training exercise on the streets of Winnipeg.[2] She received 213 votes (5.30%), finishing fourth against New Democratic Party incumbent George Hickes.
Christine Bennet-Clark (River Heights)
editBennet-Clark was born in Matsqui, British Columbia on September 24, 1949, and was raised in and around Vancouver and Vancouver Island. She is a registered social worker, having completed Social Service Worker training at Algonquin College in Ontario. She has also completed a Bachelor of Arts degree in Psychology from Athabasca University, and at the time of the election was working toward a Master of Arts degree in Adult Education from the University of Calgary and a diploma in Adult Education from St. Francis Xavier University.[3] In 2005, she delivered a presentation entitled "Enaction: Getting our Minds Around Emergent Cognition".[4]
Bennet-Clark moved to Winnipeg in 1999, and has been involved in public debates over malathion spraying and condominium construction in Assiniboine Park.[5] She received 378 votes (4.05%) in the 2007 election, finishing fourth against Manitoba Liberal Party leader Jon Gerrard.
Basham was born in Manitoba, and holds a Ph.D. in History from the University of British Columbia.[6] She is a volunteer with the Robert A. Steen Community Centre and Friends of the Cornish Library, and has done historical work for both organizations.[7] She served as Green Party of Manitoba president in 2005-06.[8] Her son, Andrew Basham, became party leader in 2006 and led the party into the 2007 provincial election.
Basham's campaign focused on local issues and social housing. She received 763 votes (12.07%), finishing second against New Democratic Party incumbent Rob Altemeyer.
Footnotes
edit- ^ "Kristen Andrews: Election biography", Green Party of Manitoba, accessed 21 May 2007; Holli Moncrieff, "Store relocates to Donald Street", Winnipeg Free Press, 6 October 1999, 3. She was 36 years old in 2006. See Melissa Martin, "Venerable vintage: Ragpickers has been Winnipeg's first-class second-hand store for more than 20 years", Winnipeg Free Press, 29 April 2006, F3.
- ^ "Training exercise in Winnipeg will be peaceful: military", CBC News, 10 March 2006, accessed 26 October 2007.
- ^ River Heights Green Constituency, Your Candidate - Christine Bennet-Clark[permanent dead link], Green Party of Manitoba, accessed 31 July 2007.
- ^ Aera Sig Chaos and Complexity Meeting 2005 Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 31 July 2007.
- ^ Mary Agnes Welch, "Aging beauty needs an overhaul", Winnipeg Free Press, 17 October 2005, B4.
- ^ Her Ph.D. was entitled "Army Service and Social Mobility: The Mahars of the Bombay Presidency, with Comparisons with the Bene Israel and Black Americans".
- ^ "Ardythe Basham: Election biography" Archived 2007-12-26 at the Wayback Machine, Green Party of Manitoba, accessed 8 May 2007.
- ^ "University of Winnipeg student new leader of Manitoba Green Party", Canadian Press, 19 November 2006, 21:16 report.