Green Party of Manitoba
The 31 Candidates
Candidates are displayed alphabetically by constituency.
Questionnaire Response
1. What are the key issues that your party stands for? Why are these issues important?
The key issues are: poverty reduction, greenhouse gas reduction, education tax reform, health care reform and provincial debt and deficit reduction. Poverty reduction is important because it results in a lower demand for very expensive social, health and corrections services and because it leads to improved quality of life for the poor. Greenhouse gas reduction is important because climate change induced by rising GHG emissions is the single most important threat facing human kind. Education tax reform is critical because of the unequal access to education funding imposed by the property tax base and the resulting inequities in school division access to education funds. Health care reform is important because too little funding is going towards prevention and healthy living. Lifestyle related conditions like the rising obesity rates are causing large increases in diabetes and hypertension. Tackling the provincial debt and deficit are important because they burden future generations with rising debt costs which enrich the wealthy who hold the provincial debt.
2. What makes your party different from other political parties?
What distinguishes the Green Party of Manitoba from the others are its bold plans to:
- cut the poverty rate in Manitoba by 45 per cent by financing a Guaranteed Annual Income through reform of the personal income tax system and the elimination of existing provincial income transfer programs;
- to reduce Greenhouse Gas Emissions through a $50/tonne carbon tax which will result in lower tax rates and a $166 million per year Green Fund to finance the measures needed to help Manitobans use less fossil fuels and improve the functioning of the economy;
- to end the unfair system of funding public schools through the education property tax by shifting taxes to the personal and corporate income tax systems and to introduce an equitable funding formula for school divisions;
- to tackle the rising provincial debt and annual deficits by constraining spending to the annual increases in the nominal GDP and to raise additional revenues through the closing of tax loopholes.
3. What are the first things you would like to do if you form government after the 2016 election?
The first things the GPM would do upon forming government is begin the design and implementation of the Guaranteed Annual Income and the Carbon tax, to undertake a review of existing tax expenditures to identify those which should be eliminated.
4. Why should a voter choose to vote for your party?
The other parties do not have the bold plans adopted by the Green Party to tackle the serious problems of poverty, climate change, inequitable financing of public schools. They offer more of the same.
5. Do you have any other comments regarding your party that you would like to share?
The Green Party is not affiliated with any special interests such as the Business community or the Union movement nor does it try to appease everyone. Its focus is on creating a sustainable society – environmentally, economically, politically and socially and all of its policies are developed with that objective in mind. Thus, it is neither left nor right but centered on creating a sustainable future.
Latest Green party news
Recent articles that mention candidates from this party are automatically gathered from Google News.
April 19, 2016
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Wolseley race too close to call - Winnipeg Free Press
Mentions: Rob Altemeyer, David Nickarz, James Beddome, Melanie Wight
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PC Steven Fletcher takes Assiniboia riding - CTV News
Mentions: Ileana Ohlsson, Steven Fletcher, Ian McCausland, Joe McKellep
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Rebel Five member Andrew Swan re elected in Minto - CTV News
Mentions: Virgil Gil, Andrew Taylor, Martha Jo Willard, Greg Selinger, Don Woodstock, Belinda Squance, Demetre Balaktsis, Andrew Swan
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NDP Leader Greg Selinger retains St. Boniface seat amidst PC sweep - CTV News
Mentions: Signe Knutson, Alain Landry
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Manitoba Liberal Leader Rana Bokhari loses bid for seat to NDP's Wab Kinew - CBC.ca
Mentions: Paula Ducharme, Grant Sharp, Matthew Ostrove, Cindy Lamoureux
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NDP's Kevin Chief hangs on to seat in Point Douglas - CTV News
Mentions: Frank Komarniski, Alberteen Spence, Marsha Street, Althea Guiboche, Kevin Chief
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CTV News Winnipeg declares Tory Heather Stefanson re elected in Tuxedo - CTV News
Mentions: Michael Lazar, Bob Krul, Heather Stefanson
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Progressive Conservatives avoiding students: CFS MB - The Manitoban
Mentions: Wayne Ewasko, Rana Bokhari, Brian Pallister, James Allum, James Beddome
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Manitoba political leaders nervous, optimistic as votes cast - CBC.ca
Mentions: Rana Bokhari, Brian Pallister, James Beddome
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Southeast casts votes today - The Carillon
Mentions: Bill Paulishyn, David Sutherland, Kathleen McCallum, Mohamed Alli, Roxane Dupuis, Echo Asher, Dakota Young-Brown, Janine Gibson, John Falk, Loren Braul
News that mentions the Green party leader
News articles are automatically gathered from Google News by searching party leader's full name.
« Previous 1 2 3 4 … 10 Next »Manitoba May Be Latest Province To Offer Composting Of Human Remains
April 14, 2016
Huffington Post Canada - Manitoba Green Party Leader James Beddome said people should have the option of being buried in little more than a shroud and return to the earth in an unmanicured meadow without a marble memorial stone. "If I could become soil again and grow some ...
Students lob hard questions at candidates
April 14, 2016
Winnipeg Free Press - Greg Selinger, Brian Pallister, Rana Bokhari and James Beddome all submitted video responses. â Celebrating Our Right to Vote multimedia contest â Students were invited to submit posters, photos, poems, articles, etc. to commemorate the anniversary of ...
Green Party hoping to grow on Election Day
April 13, 2016
CTV News - With a strong showing in Tuesday night's televised debate, Leader James Beddome, running in Fort Garry-Riverview, is hoping voters give his party a chance. "We're the party of the future today, and we're asking Manitobans to put us into power. You now ...
Hoping for nice Green shade in Wolseley
April 13, 2016
Winnipeg Free Press - Could it be a clue national Green Leader Elizabeth May â the first national leader to campaign in Manitoba's provincial election â will spend Friday with Nickarz and provincial leader James Beddome in Wolseley riding? Nickarz said he expects the NDP ...
The Pollcast: The impact of the Manitoba leaders' debate
April 13, 2016
CBC.ca - A new poll taken just after the debate by Mainstreet Research found that 44 per cent of viewers thought PC Leader Brian Pallister did the better job, followed by NDP Leader Greg Selinger (24 per cent), James Beddome of the Greens (19 per cent) and ...
Tory, Green Party leaders score big in Manitoba election debate: poll
April 13, 2016
CBC.ca - Manitoba Green Party Leader James Beddome was a big success among eligible voters with his performance in the televised leaders' debate on Tuesday. A new poll suggests most people believe Progressive Conservative Leader Brian Pallister won the ...
Manitoba party leaders spar in debate
April 13, 2016
www.muskokaregion.com/ - NDP Leader Greg Selinger, left to right, Liberal Leader Rana Bokhari, Green Party Leader James Beddome and Progressive Conservative Leader Brian Pallister take part in the provincial leaders' debate in Winnipeg on Tuesday, April 12, 2016.
Free Press Head Start for Wednesday, April 13
April 13, 2016
Winnipeg Free Press - Pallister on the hot seat: Progressive Conservative Leader Brian Pallister was the most popular target in Tuesday night's leaders debate as Premier Greg Selinger of the NDP, Liberal Leader Rana Bokhari and James Beddome, leader of the Green Party, ...
Greg Selinger's 'desperation' could lead to nasty Manitoba leaders' debate, analyst says
April 12, 2016
CBC.ca - NDP Leader Greg Selinger, Progressive Conservative Leader Brian Pallister, Liberal Leader Rana Bokhari and Green Party Leader James Beddome face off in a consortium debate hosted at CBC's Studio 41, also set to broadcast on CTV and Global.