Epilogue: my three weeks with the Green Party of Canada
(Getting tired of repeating myself in email, so here it all is.)
Here is my version of my brief tenure as a federal candidate for the Green Party of Canada in Moncton-Riverview-Dieppe.
Some weeks ago, Sharon Labchuk, Green Party of Canada co-chair, approached my mother, Louisa Barton-Duguay, about being the Green Party candidate in Moncton-Riverview-Dieppe. She declined, partly because she is already quite politically busy with SOS Eau Water Sankwan, a group very influential in keeping Vivendi-US Filter from its bid to privatize the water in Moncton, and partly because she is an artist and her pottery business is very busy this time of year.
On Sunday, November 27, Mom suggested I write to Sharon as a potential candidate. I offered to stand. Moncton has a strong environmentalist contingent and I was baffled that there was no candidate, though I kept hearing about people that were, for unknown reasons, not standing this time around. I stood because the values the Green Party represents are important to me, no other party is addressing them seriously, and it is unacceptable that they not be represented. Also at the time, I agreed with the party strategy of gaming the federal funding system, on the Mother Teresa principle that it doesn't matter where it comes from, it's what you do with it. I thought they were doing good things. I warned Sharon that I am disabled with Environmental Illness, and don't have much money, so was not sure I was the best candidate.
I received mail that morning from Sharon saying - as she was to say again to Jorge Barrera from the Times & Transcript this week - that I would be an "excellent" candidate and she wanted me to run. I told her that I was very busy that week finishing the layout for Mascaret (an independent magazine published monthly, but delayed this time for the election coverage) but would co-ordinate with her that weekend.
I had some trouble getting the paperwork I needed, particularly to collect the 100 signatures every candidate must provide to Elections Canada in order to appear on the ballot, but was also too busy to follow up on it very attentively.
Mascaret had allocated ad space for the Green Party as they usually advertised with us; I asked Sharon if this space should be a generic party ad or if I should make an ad for myself. She said to go ahead and make one for myself, and that I would be getting quite a jump on the other candidates by doing so. However, I had already written an editorial about my candidacy so thought also running an ad for myself was dubious, and ran a generic ad instead.
I asked Sharon about access to the local Green membership list and was told as soon as my candidacy was registered with the party that I would get access to "the database" over the Green Party web site.
After the magazine had gone to print Sharon said it would be bad if I ran an ad for myself, because candidates can't legally campaign until they are registered with Elections Canada. She said that I should plead ignorance if it came up.
I heard from Sharon that my endorsement from the party was in the mail. On Sunday, December 4, she called to say that Jim Harris, party leader, would make a quick stop in Moncton to meet with me at the Open Hands Food Bank.
By the morning of the photo-op, December 5, I was concerned that the paperwork wasn't in order, but showed up, did my thing, was sort of surprised that Jim didn't introduce me to the media as the candidate (and indeed, the media was unaware of my candidacy when I showed up that morning) but, rationalized it in a variety of ways and wrote favourably about the experience. I had been promised a copy of a photo taken of me and Jim, and knew there was a campaign blog with the photos so expected it would show up there, and never asked about it.
I was personally baffled by Jim's political presentation - suit and tie, sound bites and statistics seemed very politics-as-usual, and while I understood with the need to break from the hippie stereotype, felt that donning the "uniform of politics" (as recommended in the Candidates' Handbook from the party) was not a proven alternative. I am doing a masters in marketing as to provide skills to non-profits and broke artists, and have worked as a business methods consultant in another life. So I decided I would look into interning with the party to work on developing alternative ways of getting their message out. I started keeping some notes on things I thought the party could do better.
I have a button press so I made myself 100 Green Party buttons. Figuring there would be another election soon and not expecting to be the candidate again, I put my name in tiny print and made the logo big, so that Green supporters could go on wearing them - recyclable buttons, I thought, well in the party spirit.
I met with a very nice local Green supporter who said he had hoped to be my campaign manager, but had some unexpected work out of town, so couldn't. He said he would do all that he could, and was generally very helpful. I expressed concerns about my inexperience but reiterated that I was standing because I felt it was important and that no one else would.
There were some technical interferences with my candidacy registration getting in to the party HQ, and it wasn't until December 10 that I got access to the internal area of the site. However, I didn't appear to have access to the membership list. I inquired about this repeatedly and got some useful info, but nothing about the list. (In retrospect it is possible that I was asking the wrong people about this, or had access and didn't find it, but you'll see that in a sense it would not have solved a major problem.)
Also on December 10, the not-campaign manager contacted my mother and said that, in looking for a campaign manager for me, they'd found another candidate to run in Moncton - someone with far better resources and a high local profile. He had expected to run and was waiting to hear about a nomination meeting, but there wasn't one, and then he heard I was the candidate, so was willing to stand aside. I was asked to run in Mirimachi instead - a six hour drive away - and told I would not be expected to actually campaign there but that it was important to have a Green name on the ballot there. I agreed, but then my editorial started getting some positive notice, so there was indecision about whether it was a good idea to remove me.
I met with some local environmentalists on Saturday morning and they expressed very strong concerns that they had been cut out of the process, but were also concerned about whether it would hurt the party if I pulled out. A local candidate was found for Mirimachi so I wasn't needed there (a relief to me). I was open to the idea of withdrawing altogether "for health reasons", but also spoke strongly myself that I wanted to be sure the alternative candidate would do a good job. An unexpressed concern was that alternative candidate was an older man (all those at the meeting except me were men, in fact), and Sharon had been excited about my being a young woman (bear in mind there are shockingly few women in politics in Canada). However, I felt the need to involve the locals was more important than my physical properties.
They eventually decided that it was up to me to stay in or withdraw. Then they called a couple of hours later and said I should stay in, that I was a good candidate - one complimented me on my debating skills and another on my political awareness, so my quality as a candidate, disabilities notwithstanding, was not an issue - and they would support me. I thanked him tersely, hung up, and went on thinking. I was very dissatisfied with the party mechanics and felt I should withdraw on ethical grounds. This was not the Green Party I thought it was. I said, "they now support me as candidate, but now I am not sure I support the party." That afternoon I was reluctantly talked into staying, on the logic that I could do more to fix the party from the inside.
My mother had been collecting signatures for me but was increasingly baffled that I didn't have access to a membership list of local Greens.
I started writing up my concerns - which are numerous, and go far beyond this one issue. I felt very uneasy about the path ahead of me, and my disabilities flared up. I spent Tuesday, December 13, swapping between unconsciousness and vomiting. Also on Tuesday, a letter arrived with a "campaign kit on a CD" containing, among other things, a Word document (small and easily emailed) that I had to fax in to get the membership list. The postmark was dated December 6. The Green media HQ called; my mother answered it and blasted them for overall party incoherence. They asked why I didn't just get contacts from the previous candidate; my mother reminded them that the previous candidate died of cancer only a few months ago, and her campaign manager had been her mother-in-law, so it was reasonable for me to prefer to get the information directly from the party.
Meanwhile I was getting emails suggesting that I place orders for campaign buttons, signage, etc, immediately, if it was to arrive in time for post-Christmas campaigning. However, I still couldn't legally collect campaign funds because I wasn't registered with Elections Canada, only with the party! Even if I'd taken care of the signatures without the membership list, no candidate can register with Elections Canada without an auditor, and I had not received my auditor letter.
Literally sick and tired in all directions, I wrote to Sharon that I was standing down. I got a bunch of mails from her, but told her to take up any outstanding issues with my contact person since I was busy being sick.
On Wednesday, I received the auditor letter, making Wednesday, December 14, the first day I could have registered with Elections Canada.
Wednesday afternoon I got a call which somebody else here answered, and mis-identified the caller as probably being from the Green media HQ again. I was nauseated, cranky, yet relieved at not being the candidate anymore, so I started the phone call saying they should already know I'd stood down because of party disorganization. Then the person identified himself.
He was actually Jorge Barrera, reporter from the Ottawa desk of the Times & Transcript. I paused and considered how much I wanted to say. Barrera's got good technique, though - I predict great things for him - plus I'm not much for sitting on my opinions. So I talked for about 45 minutes about everything I'd seen - the nut of which was, the party really needs to grow up and get back in touch with its original principles. I was also quite disenchanted with the federal funding formula that I had been touting in my editorial only a few weeks before.
Feeling broody, I went looking for the picture of me and Jim, and noticed the writeup about Moncton had never mentioned me and the picture wasn't there. Mom went through the whole blog and saw a pattern of its exclusive focus on Jim without much mention of the candidates, even though the blog would be a great way to contextualize the candidates on a national basis and make us all feel like we belonged to the same big thing. Later it seemed this was symptomatic of the larger problems.
That night, Green HQ called saying my nomination papers were on file with them, and that my Elections Canada deposit (each candidate must give Elections Canada a $1,000 deposit to be on the ballot) had been sent. My mother said politely that I had already stood down. The caller said, "Oh crap, I have to get that money back!"
Thursday morning I got email on the internal mailing list for Green Party candidates describing problems with the party acting questionably toward its own candidates in BC and how this problem had been growing for years. That email is pasted at the end of this blog entry.
Saw Barrera's article that afternoon. (Email me if you want a copy.) It gets the main issues right - the party is behaving undemocratically and gaming the funding system. However, the party was looking for a candidate in this area from May onward, they just didn't involve the locals appropriately. Sharon said - as noted in the article - that they couldn't have formal nomination meetings because there was no New Brunswick Riding Association. The reason for this - not mentioned in the article - is the riding association was dissolved by Elections Canada for not following proper procedure. I don't know the details. However, I still feel if they'd turned to the grassroots they're founded on, they would have found locals willing to hold informal meetings and recommend candidates, which would hew to the spirit of the party in a way that wholesale appointments do not. The article also notes that Democracy Watch agreed with me that parties "could not be trusted to uphold democracy in their own ranks and should be subject to Elections Canada scrutiny when it comes to selecting candidates".
Today I read at The Tyee that the Green party admin has been ignoring the grassroots in a serious way for over a year - the membership voted overwhelmingly (83%) to split the federal funding amongst the riding associations, electoral district associations, and head office, but Jim Harris decided this was no good. I personally have no idea where the extra million dollars went but find it curious that the Financial Controller position in the party is vacant.
The party's also announced it won't release its new platform until early January (interestingly the Policy/Platform officer position is also vacant). Actually, five of eleven of the officer positions in the party are vacant.
I have not torn up my Green Party membership (though I also still haven't received it in the mail yet...) and still believe in the core principles of the party - fiscal responsibility, democratic reform, social justice, equal rights, and an intelligent attitude toward the environment - that made me stand up for it. But the reality has diverged unacceptably from the ideals and I won't support that, or conceal it; concealing abuse enables it to continue, whether it is domestic abuse, corporate abuse of the environment, or a party touting democratic reform while behaving undemocratically. I've been following politics since I was two years old and I know it's a disgusting business. However, good enough for the other parties is not good enough for the Green Party. It is not allowed to act like this. In doing so, it contravenes its very existence.
I am reminded of a minor feud I had with someone at the David Suzuki Foundation. The DSF doesn't take government money, for fear that it would compromise their principles. I felt that was foolish - they should apply the Mother Teresa philosophy. But now that I've seen what an ultimately tiny amount of money - a million dollars a year - has done to the Green Party, I viscerally understand why the DSF has taken such a hard line against temptation. I still disagree in principle, but in reality... No, there must be a middle path, between corruption and opting-out. There must be a way of doing this that is both efficient and ethical. But I definitely see their point much better than before.
Sure, I'm inexperienced in running a political campaign, and certainly some of the problems resulted from that. I'm more than willing to take my share of responsibility here. But only that much, and no more. Remember that I was the candidate, and could have stayed such, but as I said, I'm not much for sitting on my opinions. Jim Harris said at our photo-op that, "we like mouthy people in the Green Party". Would that that were true.
From: GreenParty@Krownstone.com
Subject: Fw: Be careful not to dissent
Date: December 15, 2005 6:07:43 AM AST
To: election2006@members.greenparty.ca
Greetings, former fellow EDAs.
It has just come to my attention tonight that our
electoral district association - Delta-Richmond East,
B.C. - has been deregistered by the central unit of
our party without providing us with prior notice of
this intended action.
I understand this to be a covert and politically
motivated action taken against our EDA by our party's
leadership group.
Furthering my understanding of this, a couple of weeks
ago I found out that the front runner in this election
to be our riding's candidate, Dana Miller - who
achieved the third-highest vote total in the last
election for the GPC in the Vancouver Lower Mainland,
which was 3rd of 20 ridings - had her membership
status removed by the central unit, which didn't
follow due process. (The details of this matter are
laid out in the email exchange now forwarded to you
below - between myself, a staff member at head office
and Bruce Abel, our party's Chair- with the newest
email at top.)
The reason our EDA felt Dana was the right choice for
our members is that she has a substantial amount of
support from the community and had a unique
opportunity to raise our membership from the student
body of the riding's only post-secondary institute,
Kwantlen University College.
Dana is a public relations student at Kwantlen (I'm
also a student there, though in the journalism
program) and she'd be certain to receive an effective
amount of press in the student paper, the Kwantlen
Chronicle, a weekly that focuses exclusively on
Kwantlen's student life and politics, so only a
candidate that is also a student at Kwantlen would
have this possibility (of course, due to ethical
reasons, I wouldn't have been writing any of these
articles myself). There are currently no other
political parties with a presence on our campus. There
are close to 20,000 students studying at Kwantlen,
which is an impressive number to look to as a
potential resource, and not only for our riding but
for the other communities that also house Kwantlen
campuses (there are five).
I offer two points regarding the revocation of Dana's
membership status:
1) The constitution says Dana should have been made
aware previously, so that she could speak on her own
behalf if her membership status was to be revoked; she
was not made aware, which suggests to me it was also a
covert and politically motivated action.
2) Months after removing her status, I was told it was
by virtue of our party's constitution that the central
unit had this authority, citing the nature of article
8.1, which, if considered against their argument, the
article clearly did not provide them with this
authority.
I pointed out this error in their judgement, so I
gather they worked out another plan to be sure to
hamper our efforts - deregistering our EDA, which
allows them to now circumvent the EDA and its
contractual processes within the party structure,
which is why I thought all of you, the reps for our
party's other EDAs, would be interested to know of
these tactics. After all, if it can happen to us, it
can happen to any others who someday find themselves
in disfavour with the central unit for whatever
reasons. In the future, we need to workout stronger
guidelines to prevent this abuse from occurring again.
As I know it from personal and shared experiences,
similar issues in the past have failed to be acted
upon by our Ombuds Committee when submitted by
dissenting voices, so the Ombuds is not a reasonable
option for recourse. If there is to be any justice in
our party regarding this situation it has to come from
the EDAs and their membership - hence this email- so
please forward my message to all your membership
contacts, as it's apparent we need to pressure our
leadership to force proper procedure to be followed.
Eventually - sometime soon after this election, I
hope - we desperately need a leadership review to take
place, so that we may elect others with more foresight
and a stronger sense of eco(logical)centric thought to
bring this party back on track.
Dana, our EDA's External Affairs Official, myself, our
President, and a number of others spoke out during
(and previous to) the last Annual General Meeting (via
its associated internal elections), voicing
dissatisfaction for a number of failed-democracy-type
issues and the redirecting of our party away from an
ecocentric model to one of a capitalist green model,
all of which was connected to Jim Harris and
supporters of his in high-up positions who appeared
not to care much for due process or to be turning away
from the spirit of our party's constitution and
policy.
As it goes, our dissent back then was not taken
lightly, and it was threatened that my federal
candidacy papers would not be signed (Canada's 38th
General Election was taking place right around the
same time, and I was set to run in our neighbouring
Richmond riding, where I had previously run for
mayor).
Since then, I've decided to step back from ever
running federally as a candidate for MP while Jim is
our leader; I don't feel comfortable putting my name
on a federal ballot while the party is under his
leadership. Despite what has happened and is
happening, I still feel the membership is true to its
green roots and would be disapproving of these
breakdowns in democracy if they only knew of them.
This is why I'm still around; I know that the GPC is
not Jim Harris, and I have hope that this party will
and can achieve good things despite him and his
supporters who understand, though disregard, these
failures (or perhaps see them as victories).
More recently, Tom Cornwall, our appointed B.C.
organizer, told me there was no way that Dana's
candidacy papers were ever going to be signed by Jim
Harris. Also, Tom had bypassed our EDA to find a
candidate for our riding from another across the
river. This parachute candidate was not a member of
our party previous to meeting Tom only about a week
ago.
Perhaps also of interest, Dana, who is a former
health-care worker, has told me that Tom was an active
member in the screening process that denied her the
chance to run under the provincial banner of the GPBC.
In that process, Dana received a letter from her GPBC
screeners telling her, explicitly, to seek
professional counselling, which was a shocking insult.
It's my opinion that the people currently running the
party are not out there trying to be green, but rather
to be elected and gain more power at any cost, which
is disturbingly similar to the nature of our society
in the 1980's, when endless growth became the theme,
and corporations became the big players, who's profits
were (and are) sought at any cost. It was my
perception of the corporate threat that drove me to
join the Green party six years ago, as I realized the
greens had the opportunity to be the global-political
force needed to combat the measures taken by the
corporations that were also organized under global
associations, albeit much stronger and more organized
ones.
Other than asking you to consider taking action on, or
protesting this matter on the behalf of the members in
our electoral district, I leave this for you to digest
as you see fit. I don't expect you to abandon your
campaigns, but members can be made aware.
I doubt I'll have access to this list for much longer
to reply to any responses, and possibly also face
banishment from the party for being a dissenting
voice, so please feel free to contact me personally.
Best of luck to you all in this election.
Sincerely,
Stephen Kronstein
former President
D-RE GPC EDA
GreenParty@Krownstone.com
www.Krownstone.com
(If you visit my website, please be sure to check out
the ecocentric discussion boards I'm working on.)
--- Note ---
Regarding the email exchange below, the last email
came on Dec. 7 suggesting the matter was to be handed
over to our party's executive director. The next
communication I received from the central unit came a
week later telling me that we were deregistered and no
longer a unit of the party. No further responses were
received from Bruce Able to clarify his position on
the matter. If you ever feel the urge to question any
faulty processes within our party, I warn you and your
members that it is not to be tolerated. I suggest
reading the following emails from bottom to top.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Green Party of Canada - Parti Vert du Canada"
To: "'Stephen Kronstein'"
Sent: Wednesday, December 07, 2005 11:22 AM
Subject: RE: Dana Miller's membership status
Stephen,
I have passed your questions and concerns onto the
Executive Director, Jean
Langlois.
Thank you,
Suzanne Boileau
Administrative Coordinator/Coordonnatrice
administrative
Green Party of Canada/Parti Vert du Canada
Real Change, Real Choice -- Vrai Changement, Vrai
Choix
PO BOX 997 Station B Ottawa ON K1P 5R1
(ottawa phone) 613-562-4916 (toll free) 1-866-868-3447
(fax) 613-482-4632
office@greenparty.ca bureau@partivert.ca
www.greenparty.ca
-----Original Message-----
From: Stephen Kronstein [mailto:SK@Krownstone.com]
Sent: Monday, December 05, 2005 6:22 PM
To: Green Party of Canada - Parti Vert du Canada
Cc: bruceabel@hotmail.com
Subject: Re: Dana Miller's membership status
Hi Suzanne, (Cc'd Bruce Able: I ask that Bruce comment
on this email, as well.)
There are a number of things that I need to understand
better before I can properly respond to this.
Did you mail this money to Dana? If not who did? If
money for her membership was returned, Dana has told
me she's never received it. You should be able to
verify this by checking back on the party's records of
cashed cheques.
If someone at the federal office has returned her
money, why does Bruce's message below contradict
yours?
I'm confused. Bruce says there's no record of any
motion, but you say there was, and that Dana's status
has thereby been revoked. Could you be more clear
somehow? Is there some motion you are referring to
that Bruce doesn't have, or is this just what your
memory is telling you? If there was a motion, what was
the vote tally? Who moved that her membership be
revoked? On what day did the vote take place? Why was
Dana not made aware that there was to be a vote, or
even of the result? The constitution says she should
have been.
If there was discussion of the issue but no motion
passed through council, then there is probably a good
reason for that. At least, I know a good reason: the
constitution doesn't cover what you think it does.
The article that you are alluding to is 8.1 of our
constitution, but it doesn't support removing Dana's
membership status in anyway, so if there has been a
motion made it was obviously out of order.
Article 8.1:
1. Any citizen or resident of Canada is eligible
for membership in the party provided s/he is not a
member of any other political party registered under
the Canada Elections Act.
The Peace and Ecology Party that Dana is associated
with is not a registered party under the Canada
Elections act. And I'd think our federal council would
have looked into this before allowing any motion of
the sort to go forward, as the constitution is very
clear on the matter.
Furthermore, if you check out the PEP website, as I've
just done, you'll find there's no mention of running
any candidates; it's an activist group that follows
the Global Green Principles, which is what our party
is founded on.
Unless you know something I don't, there's no legal
basis that provides for removing her membership
status.
If there's no information that would suggest
contractual reasons under the constitution for
removing Dana's membership status, please ensure that
our party's membership records are updated to include
Dana.
Sincerely,
Stephen Kronstein
President, D-RE GPC EDA
----- Original Message -----
From: "Green Party of Canada - Parti Vert du Canada"
To: "'Stephen Kronstein'"
Cc: "'Bruce Abel'"
Sent: Sunday, December 04, 2005 6:01 PM
Subject: RE: Dana Miller's membership status
Dana's membership was revoked and her membership money
returned to her. It is against Green party
constitution to be a member of another political
party. It does happen that these kind of details are
not brought our attention until after the fact.
Suzanne Boileau
Administrative Coordinator/Coordonnatrice
administrative
Green Party of Canada/Parti Vert du Canada
Real Change, Real Choice -- Vrai Changement, Vrai
Choix
PO BOX 997 Station B Ottawa ON K1P 5R1
(ottawa phone) 613-562-4916 (toll free) 1-866-868-3447
(fax) 613-482-4632
office@greenparty.ca bureau@partivert.ca
www.greenparty.ca
-----Original Message-----
From: Stephen Kronstein [mailto:SK@Krownstone.com]
Sent: Sunday, December 04, 2005 8:51 PM
To: chair_gpc_pvc
Cc: Green Party of Canada - Parti Vert du Canada
Subject: Dana Miller's membership status
Hi Bruce,
Dana has shown me a tax receipt of her membership
payment made on Feb. 4, 2005, which means her
membership status is in good standing until the same
time next year.
This message is also being forwarded to head office.
Please ensure party records are updated to show this.
Sincerely,
Stephen Kronstein
President, D-RE EDA
----- Original Message -----
From: "chair_gpc_pvc"
To:
Cc:
Sent: Wednesday, November 30, 2005 12:31 PM
Subject: -s-S Dana's membership
Stephen,
I reviewed Council's minutes and I find no indication
that Council denied or removed Dana's membership.
It is my understanding that Dana's GPC membership
expired and she didn't reapply.
I had requested Staff (via Management Cttee) not to
pursue renewals to expired memberships where it was
common knowledge that the individual had joined
another party or is/was a founding member of a new
party.
If Dana has an up-to-date membership card or proof of
application, please inform the Office.
Green regards,
Bruce
-----Original Message-----
From: "Green Party of Canada - Parti Vert du Canada"
Date: Wed, 30 Nov 2005 10:56:53 -0500
Sorry for the delay Stephen. Email communication may
be time delayed due to higher than normal volume.
Bruce can be reached at bruceabel@hotmail.com.
Regards,
Suzanne Boileau
Administrative Coordinator/Coordonnatrice
administrative
Green Party of Canada/Parti Vert du Canada
Real Change, Real Choice -- Vrai Changement, Vrai
Choix
PO BOX 997 Station B Ottawa ON K1P 5R1
(ottawa phone) 613-562-4916 (toll free) 1-866-868-3447
(fax)
613-482-4632 office@greenparty.ca
bureau@partivert.ca
www.greenparty.ca
-----Original Message-----
From: Stephen Kronstein [mailto:SK@Krownstone.com]
Sent: Tuesday, November 29, 2005 6:38 PM
To: Green Party of Canada - Parti Vert du Canada
Subject: Re: Membership list
Hi,
This is a follow up on my last message. I've not yet
received a reply to my message below.
Stephen
----- Original Message -----
From: "Stephen Kronstein"
To: "Green Party of Canada - Parti Vert du Canada"
Sent: Monday, November 28, 2005 9:35 AM
Subject: Re: Membership list
Thanks for the update. Please send to me Bruce Abel's
email/phone number.
Stephen
----- Original Message -----
From: "Green Party of Canada - Parti Vert du Canada"
To: "'Stephen Kronstein'"
Cc: "'Bruce Abel'"
Clarke'"
Sent: Monday, November 28, 2005 8:08 AM
Subject: RE: Membership list
Hi Stephen,
Dana Miller is NOT a member or contact of the Green
Party of Canada. Dana's membership privileges were
removed by a council decision. If you require further
information please get in touch with Bruce Abel,
Communications Chair, for the GPC.
Regards,
Suzanne Boileau
Administrative Coordinator/Coordonnatrice
administrative
Green Party of Canada/Parti Vert du Canada
Real Change, Real Choice -- Vrai Changement, Vrai
Choix
PO BOX 997 Station B Ottawa ON K1P 5R1
(ottawa phone) 613-562-4916 (toll free) 1-866-868-3447
(fax) 613-482-4632
office@greenparty.ca bureau@partivert.ca
www.greenparty.ca
-----Original Message-----
From: Stephen Kronstein [mailto:SK@Krownstone.com]
Sent: Saturday, November 26, 2005 9:44 PM
To: Green Party of Canada - Parti Vert du Canada
Subject: Re: Membership list
Hello,
I was checking through the membership list for
Delta-Richmond East that I received from head office
recently and noticed that our candidate from the last
election, Dana Miller, is not on it. She was on the
previous list sent to me from head office last year,
so I emailed her and she's told me that her membership
should still be in good status.
Is this a mistake or is there a reason for this?
Stephen Kronstein
President, D-RE GPC EDA
----- Original Message -----
From: "Green Party of Canada - Parti Vert du Canada"
To: "'Stephen Kronstein'"
Sent: Monday, November 14, 2005 8:12 AM
Subject: RE: Membership list
Hi Stephen,
Please find attached the requested list.
Thank you,
Suzanne Boileau
Administrative Coordinator/Coordonnatrice
administrative
Green Party of Canada/Parti Vert du Canada
Real Change, Real Choice -- Vrai Changement, Vrai
Choix
PO BOX 997 Station B Ottawa ON K1P 5R1
(ottawa phone) 613-562-4916 (toll free) 1-866-868-3447
(fax) 613-482-4632
office@greenparty.ca bureau@partivert.ca
www.greenparty.ca
-----Original Message-----
From: Stephen Kronstein [mailto:SK@Krownstone.com]
Sent: Wednesday, November 09, 2005 3:39 PM
To: GPC Office
Subject: Membership list
Green greetings,
I'd like to make sure we have the latest contact info
for the members in our riding, Delta-Richmond East.
Could you please send this to me?
Stephen Kronstein
President, D-RE GPC EDA