Registered Independent Candidates 2008
Newfoundland
Terry Christopher Butler | St. John’s South-Mount Pearl
Prince Edward Island
Larry McGuire | Cardigan
Nova Scotia
Bill Casey | Cumberland-Colchester-Musquodoboit Valley
Rick Simpson | Cumberland-Colchester-Musquodoboit Valley
Cindy M. Nesbitt | Nova Scotia | West Nova
Quebec
Arthur Andre | Portneuf-Jacques-Cartier
Jean Landry | Richmond-Arthabaska
Daniel Laforest | Laurier-Sainte-Marie
Guy Berger | Saint-Jean
Jean Paradis | Jacques-Cartier
Jocelyne Leduc | Rivière-du-Nord
Louise Thibault | Rimouski-Neigette-Témiscouata-Les Basques
Ghislain Loiselle | Abitibi-Témiscamingue
Régent Millette | Alfred-Pellan
Simon Bédard | Beauport-Limoilou
David Marler | Brome-Missisquoi
Mahmood Raza Baig | Papineau
M. Zamboni Cadieux | Terrebonne-Blainville
David Sommer Rovins | Westmount-Ville-Marie
Antoine Kaluzny | LaSalle-Émard
Ontario
Denis Gagné | Renfrew-Nipissing-Pembroke
David Page | Ottawa West-Nepean
Paul Barnes | Prince Edward Hastings
M. H. Fatique Chowdhury Kabir | Scarborough Southwest
John Richardson | Toronto-Danforth
Bernadette Michael | Willowdale
Wendy Forrest | Davenport
Gerald Derome | Toronto Centre
Carlos Santos Almeida | Trinity Spadina
Ralph Bunag | Mississauga-Streetsville
Viktor Spanovic | Mississauga-Streetsville
Sam Cino | Hamilton East-Stoney Creek
Howard Galganov | Stormont-Dundas-South Glengarry
Jody Di Bartolomeo | Welland
John Turmel | Guelph
Amanda Lamka | Kitchener Centre
Mark Corbiere | Kitchener-Waterloo
Michael van Holst | Elgin-Middlesex-London
Gary McHale | Haldimand-Norfolk
Dennis Valenta | Huron-Bruce
Yves Villeneuve | Nickel Belt
J. David Popescu | Sudbury
David Rowland | Parry Sound-Muskoka
Manitoba
Eduard Hiebert | Kildonan–St. Paul
Ed Ackerman | Winnipeg Centre
Joe Chan | Winnipeg Centre
Saskatchewan
Rick Barsky | Saskatoon-Rosetown-Biggar
Alberta
Roger Richard | Calgary Northeast
Kirk Schmidt | Calgary West
Antony Tony Grochowski | Calgary Centre
James Ford | Edmonton-Sherwood Park
David S. Patrick | Medicine Hat
Dean Shock | Medicine Hat
Shawn Reimer | Fort McMurray–Athabasca
Evans Nicholson | Pitt Meadows-Maple Ridge-Mission
Chum Richardson | Pitt Meadows-Maple Ridge-Mission
Philip G. Ney | Esquimalt-Juan de Fuca
James William Miller-Cousineau | Newton–North Delta
John Shavluk| Newton–North Delta
Wei Ping Chen | Richmond
Dobie Yiu-Chung To | Richmond
Bernadette Keenan | Surrey North
Douglas Gook | Prince George
British Columbia
Jason Draper | Vancouver Island North
09/30/2008
For more information on independent candidates in the Canada Federal Election 2008, you can also go to http://independentcandidates.ca.
10/04/2008
INDEPENDENT CANDIDATES BARRED BY GOLDHAWK LIVE TELEVISION
Independent candidates invited to NOT participate rather than Invited to participate …
Written by admin on October 1st, 2008
http://WWW.INDEPENDENTCANDIDATES.CA
Just finished watching “Goldhawk Live” and the question period for candidates in Etobicoke North. The exclusion of non-party candidates was striking.
At the beginning Mr. Goldhawk announced the format would be that:
First, the candidates for the four major parties would speak; and
Second, at the end, and after the party candidates had spoken, “other” candidates would be given a chance to speak.
The four major party candidates were interviewed and questioned. During this hour the party candidates demonstrated their lack of independence and autonomy from their parties - making them completely irrelevant to residents of their ridings.
This was followed by a break during which the party candidates left the stage. For the final two minutes, Anna Dicarlo (Marxist candidate) was given the opportunity to take the stage by herself (depriving her of the opportunity to be compared to the party candidates) and to give a two minute presentation. She was introduced as though she was some sort of “exotic animal”. This horrible treatment notwithstanding, she performed with grace and dignity. Congratulations to Ms. Dicarlo for the courage she demonstrated!
It was clear that non-party candidates were:
Invited to NOT participate, rather than invited to participate!
_____________________________________________________
Probably, Goldhawk Live would argue that the treatment of non-party candidates is:
“Separate but equal”!
10/06/2008
Independent candidate appears in debate on Goldhawk Live
Written by admin on October 6th, 2008
http://www.independentcandidates.ca
Last week a post on this blog and on Elections Media described a situation where “Independent candidates were invited to NOT participate in a debate.
On Friday night October 3, John Richardson, Independent Candidate for Toronto Danforth appeared in the main debate on Goldhawk. It is hoped that this is the beginning of a new recogntion of independent candidates.
John Richardson will also appear in the live debate for Toronto Danforth which is to be held on Tuesday October 7.
10/06/2008
ElectionsMedia.com congratulates John Richardson, Independent Candidate, Toronto-Danforth Riding, Canada Federal Elections 2008, for inclusion in the open debate format of Goldhawk Live.
10/10/2008
Sudbury police investigate independent candidate over gay comments
Canwest News Servicec
Published: Wednesday, October 01, 2008
SUDBURY, Ont. - A 61-year-old independent candidate with a history of “speaking his mind” is under investigation over an allegation that he broke hate laws by telling a high school audience Tuesday that “homosexuals should be executed,” a Sudbury police spokesman said Wednesday.
Const. Bert Lapalme said police received a complaint about David Popescu following an all-candidates debate at Sudbury Secondary Arts Magnet School.
“The people that have dealt or know him are aware that he is known for speaking his mind and he has his own values and is not shy on sharing what he believes in and that is common knowledge in our area,” said Lapalme.
He said police will hand over their findings to a local Crown prosecutor who would then forward the file to Ontario’s Attorney General for a decision on laying charges.
“Our criminal investigation division will do the investigation, will talk to witnesses and get statements from people at the debate,” said Lapalme.
Popescu said he had not been interviewed by police as of Wednesday afternoon and repeated his comment in an interview, arguing it was based on Biblical passages.
“I said I believe homosexuals should be executed . . . when I say homosexuals should be executed, I am speaking in terms of government actions. That is the way the Bible puts it,” said Popescu.
He said he made the comment after he was asked a question about same-sex marriage.
10/10/2008
Independent Candidate Mahmood Raza Baig makes front page headline news in Montreal Gazette October 9, 2008.
Top vote-getters aren’t only winners
Fringe candidates know they don’t have a chance of getting elected, but most expect increased visibility of being on ballot to bring attention to issues near and dear to their hearts
SIKANDER HASHMI
Freelance
Thursday, October 09, 2008
Looking at election signs in the downtown Westmount - Ville Marie riding, it’s clear there are at least five parties vying for your vote. But on election day, the list on the ballot will be almost twice as long.
There are nine confirmed candidates in the riding, but if the previous general election in 2006 is any indication, the four “other” candidates could end up with less than one per cent of total votes cast - collectively.
Yet, such stark odds, not to mention two previous defeats with a combined vote count of 217, haven’t discouraged Bill Sloan from running in next week’s election as one of four Montreal-area candidates for the Communist Party of Canada.
The reason: he’s just doing it to bring a couple of issues on to the street, literally.
“I picked this riding because I wanted posters on Ste. Catherine St.,” said Sloan, an immigration lawyer. He put up 100 posters voicing disapproval for the Afghan war and Canadian support for “apartheid” Israel, the latter of which have mostly been torn down. He doesn’t have time to campaign nor does he have high hopes for election night.
“I don’t think anyone in my party thinks we’re going to get elected,” he said. “None of us are foolish … we’re running because we want to put forward certain ideas.”
Meanwhile, artist Judith Vienneau is also running in the riding and she too knows she won’t win. The visibility she gets from being a candidate and the opportunity to take part in the political discourse is worth the $1,000 her candidacy has cost her so far along with the long hours spent on making commercials for her party, neorhino.ca.
Her blog receives up to 12,000 visits daily, especially after she sends out updates on her email list. And although her party, the successor to the Rhinoceros Party of Canada, is supposed to be a joke, Vienneau believes it allows disenfranchised voters take part in the political process by giving them an alternative that resonates with them.
“If 40 per cent of the population doesn’t vote, it means it’s a problem of identification.,” she said. “They don’t recognize their identity in mainstream politicians.”
Only five kilometres to the north, independent candidate Mahmood Raza Baig who ran unsuccessfully thrice before, is aiming to highlight issues facing new immigrants in his Papineau riding. Winning the seat is not his priority.
“Actually, I am the winner … the winners are always those people who raise real issues,” he said. “I am not looking at the badges of Member of Parliament right now.”
Baig, a journalist who immigrated from Pakistan 11 years ago, has racked up $2,000 in campaign costs on his credit card. He and some volunteers have put up signs and are giving out business cards door-to-door.
He usually receives a positive response, but some immigrants, especially from countries where authorities and politicians are feared, are afraid to vote for him out of fear of retribution.
“They say perhaps if they vote for me, the Conservatives, Liberals or other parties will get angry at them.”
He explains the concept of a secret ballot and tries to take them in his confidence.
Knocking on doors is something Sloan also did, before launching his campaign. Like all candidates, he needed 100 signatures in order to successfully file his nomination papers with Elections Canada.
“It’s a lot of work to get all the signatures,” he said, noting candidates for major parties can get all the needed signatures in one nomination meeting.
Baig, who lacks the support of a party, is also critical of the system, which he says should allocate space in newspapers for lesser-known candidates and ensure they aren’t left out of debates.
But Brooke Jeffrey, an associate professor of political science at Concordia University and an expert on political parties, says it should be harder for independent candidates to run in elections, since they often run to highlight or promote single issues.
“If you look at the nature of independent candidates associated with no party over time and the issues they raise, probably there are way better venues for them to raise it,” she said. “But maybe they wouldn’t get the media coverage they inevitably get by participating in these kinds of debates.”
Jeffrey ran as a Liberal candidate in the British Columbia riding of Okanagan-Shuswap in the 1993 federal election. While she supports political parties, whether they are mainstream or fringe (such as the Marxist-Leninist Party), she is less supportive of independents who she says often run for publicity they inevitably get and clog up the debate in the process.
Baig meanwhile continues his struggle, hoping for a better showing than the 77 votes he got last time in Outremont.
“I successfully raised the voice of my people,” he said. “Seventy-seven votes is my sacrifice. I sacrifice my time, my money.”
Sloan, the Communist Party candidate, says the exercise would be fun and worth it - if only he had time and his signs had been left alone.
© The Gazette (Montreal) 2008
10/10/2008
Re: Independent John Richardson, Toronto-Danforth
“the dominant voice in the debate was 52-year-old John Richardson, whose jaded Beantown dialect would surely liven up a future mayoral contest”
Jack of all trade-offs
BY Marc Weisblott October 08, 2008 15:10
EYEWEEKLY.COM
Democracy was the biggest loser, and the biggest winner, at the Toronto-Danforth all-candidates meeting held last night at Riverdale Collegiate. Jack Layton, who represents the riding in Parliament, had skipped town — the NDP leader was doomsaying in British Columbia — and sent the local MPP, Peter Tabuns, to debate on his behalf. But not before the auditorium crowd was polled regarding whether Tabuns could be accepted as a surrogate. And the labourious show-of-hands was initially close enough to require an even more labourious recount.
Yet, given the choice, a stand-in for Layton was more undesired than not and Tabuns made a hasty exit from the event he was initially invited to — along with about 15 other New Democratic Party loyalists. At least the vote-induced walkout gave Citytv the airtime-killer they needed without having to hang around for two more hours.
None of this came as a surprise to Liberal candidate Andrew Lang, distributing a leaflet directing folks to an astroturfy Where’s Jack? weblog credited to a mysterious cranky constituent named “Gabe.” Gabe’s annoyance with Layton’s absentee representation of Toronto-Danforth even extends to pointing out that his website features him basking in a glow a la Barack Obama and Joe Biden, hairplugs notwithstanding.
Lang, whose campaign literature need only identify his age as “raised in the glow of the Trudeau government,” is making his inaugural run for office after working on at least 18 different elections, most notably in the office of ex-Toronto Centre MP Bill Graham, whose firm disposition Lang has adopted. But he also has a former politician for a father, Otto Lang, and yet another for a stepfather, Donald Macdonald. And what might have been a historic night for Andrew’s own résumé — the rare opportunity to publicly chip away at a federal party leader — has been diminished by the inability of Layton to show up. (UPDATE: But it did provide fodder for a day-after press release, not directly attributed to Lang, detailing a hallway “heated exchange.” Also quoted is one Gabe de Roche, presumably the aforementioned Layton-hating webmaster.)
What the remaining audience got instead was a rare spotlight for the kind of candidate that the major parties have determined is no longer ideal for downtown Toronto, if not the rest of the country: middle-aged male malcontents with varied enough observational experience to self-motivate a run for office.
Based on the Toronto-Danforth ballot, these types are least likely to have been hatched in this country: John Richardson, running as an independent candidate, grew up in Boston until age 12, when his parents moved here 40 years ago. Bahman Yazdanfar, running for the 9/11 truther squad Canadian Action Party, was born in Iran, went to university in Afghanistan, and spent time in Europe prior to moving here 22 years ago, seemingly enamored with Canada even if one can apparently be excluded from a democratic debate in this country for not responding to an email invitation that was never received.
Since he bothered to turn up anyhow, Yazdanfar effectively took the spot on stage that was reserved for Tabuns, something which the moderator didn’t allow to have happen before yet another arduous hand-count.
Meanwhile, representing the Animal Alliance Environment Voters Party of Canada is Marie Crawford, the former owner of Leslieville vegan restaurant Pulp Kitchen — infamously cited in the May 2008 Toronto Life article, “Baby Wars,” for a passive-aggressive sign asking locals to park their SUV strollers at the door.
Their presence steered the debate into something closer to a live version of the online comment thread of a news story, where the respondents rarely need to acknowledge one another, and the main object of their derision contentedly ignores it all.
But those who drew a couple hundred constituents had to try their best, each one waxing some variation of the argument that the system is broken and somebody’s gotta fix it — in other words, the tenor of Jack Layton’s entire political career. And, unlike the rest of them, he’s won a few elections with it.
Doing his darnedest to have an unheated argument with an incumbent who wasn’t there, Lang stressed his own ties to the community, working the “Local Matters” hook. A recent visit to a tenth-grade civics class reminded him about just how cynical the kids are about politics today — as if that counts as a revelation compared to 20 years ago, when a channel like MuchMusic would certainly not have been hosting interactive youth forums with Stéphane Dion.
The rare individual who grew up in a home where politician was considered an honest way to make a living needs to earn legitimacy somehow, right? At least the “I’m in the LANG GANG” T-shirts sported by campaign volunteers have a swell Trudeau-era vintage look. But for a debate where the questioners — at least those who didn’t have their entreaties sternly shot down for not living in the riding — fixated upon the hardscrabble aspects of mid-east end Toronto, any Ottawa-style campaign platitudes meant little.
So, the 28-year-old Conservative candidate Christina Perrault wasn’t subject to the jeers — whether from offstage or on — that any other party representative must weather in the other downtown ridings. While nothing from Perrault’s personal history would implicate her for the alleged sins of Stephen Harper, no publicity may well have been good publicity — word of a younger Toronto version of Sarah Palin would have brought out the wrong kind of punters.
(Or, for the sensationalist purposes of alt-weekly journalism, the right ones.)
Green Party candidate Sharon Howarth, whose environmental concerns would probably trump all other issues in the Carrot Common core of the actual Danforth, served to highlight how these topics have less resonance a few shady blocks south. She could have better applied her Hana Gartner-esque voice to directly nail Layton to the linoleum floor.
As it turned out, the dominant voice in the debate was 52-year-old John Richardson, whose jaded Beantown dialect would surely liven up a future mayoral contest. But it was Bahman Yazdanfar’s irritation with the elusive Layton that seemed the most intense.
Andrew Lang, meanwhile, steered it back to his hope that the riding can tilt back to the Liberal position held by Dennis Mills from 1988 until the carpetbagging candidacy of Layton in 2004. “I’m not a big fan of strategic voting,” Lang proclaimed, although he endorses making one election exception — for himself.
“Jack Layton is too scared,” concluded Lang, “to say that he’s scared.”
scroll@eyeweekly.com
10/12/2008
So I have been looking to make a change in my vote this year. I have been searching all the candidates in my area and have been able to find info on all entrants but one. This guy - Antony Tony Grochowski (Independent)- cannot be found. If you are in the running. Wouldn’t you think someone who is looking for change should be able to find info on him? I guess I HAVE to vote conservative. What a waste of my time trying to find out about this guy. I am starting to think Independent is a joke. Are these people serious about this election? Not in my eyes.
10/16/2008
Canada’s Liberals sack candidate over anti-Semitic remarks
Party’s Winnipeg candidate Lesley Hughes asked to step down after old penned article containing anti-Semitic views resurfaces. Hughes defends piece, says she is ‘a lifelong friend and supporter of the Jewish community’
Ohad Pas and agencies Published: 10.05.08, 08:42 / Israel Jewish Scene
Canadian Liberal parliamentary candidate Lesley Hughes was asked to forfeit her place on the party’s election roster last week, after being accused of making anti-Semitic remarks, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation has reported.
Hughes, who was a candidate for the party’s Winnipeg roster in the central Canadian province of Manitoba, was admonished by Liberal Leader Stéphane Dion for an article she wrote six years ago, in which she suggested that the Israeli intelligence services warned the US administration of the coming September 11 attack on the World Trade Center, and that Israeli businesses were told to vacate the towers before the attack.
Hughes has defended her article, saying the article is “very clearly innocent of any kind of anti-Semitic feelings.”
The recent news of Hughes’ past article caused an uproar within the Jewish community in Canada, as many, including the Canadian branch of the B’nai B’rith association, have demanded she be replaced with a different candidate.
Canada’s Liberal Party cannot risk alienating its Jewish voters, prompting party head Dion to release the following statement on Friday: “The Liberal party’s commitment to tolerance and multiculturalism is paramount.
“I have reviewed the past comments of Lesley Hughes and it is clear they do not meet this standard. While I appreciate her apology, I cannot condone those sentiments in any way. I have therefore asked Ms. Hughes to step down as the Liberal party candidate in Kildonan-St. Paul,” said his statement.
Hughes said in response that she would be running as an independent candidate: “I’m not a willing victim… the democratic process is a factor here. We need to consider how this is playing out in the community,” she said.
Hughes later described herself as a “lifelong friend and supporter of the Jewish community in Winnipeg” and apologized for the “perception” that she is anti-Semitic.
10/16/2008
MacAulay accused in debate of ‘fear-mongering’ on issues
TERESA WRIGHT
The Guardian
EastLink Television broadcast The Guardian’s election forum Tuesday with the candidates from Cardigan. From left, seated, are Independent Larry McGuire and Mike Avery of the NDP. Standing are Conservative Sid McMullin, left, and Liberal Lawrence MacAulay. Guardian photo
The sparks were flying between the candidates vying for the federal seat in Cardigan during The Guardian’s televised election forum on EastLink Television Tuesday night.
Liberal incumbent Lawrence MacAulay was playing defence for most of the debate as Independent Larry McGuire and Conservative candidate Sid McMullin repeatedly accused him of ‘fear-mongering’ on key issues for the area.
When discussing Employment Insurance (EI), McMullin said the people of Cardigan are tired of MacAulay raising fears about the government planning to cut this fund.
“Lawrence, why would the prime minister of this country want to hurt the vulnerable people who are on unemployment?” McMullin asked.
MacAulay argued Harper’s government placed the fund into an arm’s-length organization to get rid of the program.
But McMullin fired back, saying this was done to protect the fund.
“That was so that the government of the day, like your government, cannot take that money and use it for whatever you want.”
“(Harper) plans to put an envelope of money in the bank,” MacAulay shot back in response.
“No way, don’t you start talking about envelopes of money. You’re a fine one to start on that,” McMullin replied, pointing a finger of warning at MacAulay.
McGuire accused the Liberals of being the worst culprits in endangering the EI. program when they reduced it — something MacAulay himself was part of in 1993, McGuire said.
“He was in the House of Commons and he said, ‘Mr. Speaker, I move that we reduce the EI benefit from 70 per cent down to 53 per cent’,” McGuire said of MacAulay.
“He said Jean Chretien told him to do it, proof again Ottawa needs somebody who won’t toe party lines, we need somebody up there who’s being independent.”
NDP candidate Mike Avery said more understanding is needed by Ottawa with have-not provinces like P.E.I. when discussing EI.
“We need good programs like EI to keep people going through the seasonal work. In a seasonal economy you simply can’t help it.”
MacAulay said he’s never tried to be a ‘fear-mongerer’ in dealing with this or any other issue important to Cardigan.
He said he’s only trying to protect the government services important to the area and the people in the riding.
“There’s issues that are vital to the economy of eastern Prince Edward Island, and you cannot play politics
with these things,” MacAulay said.
“I’m sorry if anybody feels that I’m fear-mongering, but if you don’t start ahead and get some support, not only from your party, but from the business community, the town councils, the groups — it can be a battle and you need the support of the people in order
to make sure this is a big issue.”
12/01/2008
[...] For a complete list of Independent candidates in the October 14 election see: http://www.electionsmedia.com/registered-independent-candidates-2008/ [...]
03/11/2009
I intend to run as an Independent in Moncton-Riverview-Dieppe here in New Brunswick, hopefully with the new federal party, which is presently being orgainzed. The web site http://www.canadian-alternative.com and I can be contacted on SHYPE K2000K2 or joeb@nb.sympatico.ca or 506-384-6232.