-Caveat Lector-

British Columbia Marijuana Party Polls 3.5% in Provincial
Elections, May Morph Into Multi-Issue "Freedom Party"
   http://www.drcnet.org/wol/187.html#bcparty

The British Columbia Marijuana Party (BCMP), the insurgent
provincial electoral force greased with $150,000US of cannabis
entrepreneur Marc Emery's profits and represented by a colorful
cast of campaigners (http://www.drcnet.org/wol/180.html#bcparty),
fell short of pre-election predictions, but managed to garner
some 52,000 votes and score five third-place finishes in the
province's 79 legislative assembly districts.  Party leaders told
DRCNet last month they hoped to pick up some second-place
finishes.

The BCMP's ability to run candidates in all 79 districts put it
in the record books as the first modern British Columbia party to
run a full slate of candidates in its first electoral go-round.
In last week's elections, only the national Liberal and New
Democratic parties managed to do as well, while the other minor
parties, the BC Greens and the Unity Party, were unable to run
candidates for many districts.  (By the way, the Liberals
trounced the reigning New Democrats to take control of the
provincial government.)

The party's best showing was in Peace River North, where
candidate Paul Renaud took 9.4% of the vote.  Other BCMP
strongholds were Port Moody Westwood, where Graeme Smecher polled
6.36% of the vote, and Skeena, where Bob Erb grabbed 6.15%.
Party leader Brian Taylor, who got 785 votes in the West Kootenay
Boundary district, was upstaged by his 25-year-old daughter
Teresa, who captured the party's highest popular vote total with
1,136 and polled 5.6% in the conservative Okanagan-Westside
district.

Taylor, the former mayor of Grand Forks and currently owner of
the Cannabis Research Institute, told DRCNet the party had
nonetheless made valuable strides.  "We had a major impact on the
debate, the press loved us -- or at least to write about us --
and the party has become a significant new voice in BC's
political spectrum," he said.

"I think we have a mandate, although not from those who we
thought would vote for us," Taylor laughed ruefully.  "We didn't
get the pot grower vote or we would have had 25-30%.  Instead we
got the votes of grandmothers, of frustrated teachers, the
conscience vote of young people, and of people who like our
larger platform.  We found a hole in the political landscape."
But, he added, "We hoped to do a little better.  Still, we
understand change takes time," he told DRCNet.  "Our approach is
to go about this in an effective manner, through the vote,
through lobbying, through education -- that was a big part of the
campaign -- and to inch forward incrementally."

Marc Emery, the party's combination eminence grise and sugar
daddy, also looked to the future.  "We want to build a political
infrastructure, so all of those 79 candidates are going to go
back and build a local organization now, to build up credibility
over the next four years," he told the Westender (Vancouver)
newspaper.  "This is all about working for the next election.
Now our plan is to open constituency offices across the
province," said Emery.  "These locations should act as retail
stores, selling books, pipes and hemp products, as well as
becoming headquarters for compassion clubs and other activist
projects."

But building the party may have to compete with defining the
party.  With this campaign, the party began a metamorphosis from
a single-issue "legalize marijuana" party to a generally small-L
libertarian party advocating an ideology of personal freedom and
limited government.  But it's not a done deal, said Taylor.

"This is an ongoing debate within the party," he told DRCNet.
"Now the party will have to grapple with the issue of being only
a marijuana party or going on to forge a broader platform.  There
is heated debate over changing the name, but what we're really
fighting about is whether we're going to take on a broader
political role or whether we're going to continue simply as
marijuana fighters," said Taylor.

"I believe we have to have a solid, rounded platform for people
to vote for us.  It's essential that we have more than the
marijuana issue.  There is a heated debate about whether we
should change the name.  Marc Emery argued that we need to keep
the marijuana issue in people's faces, and on one level he is
correct.  Having marijuana in our name allowed us to get 79
candidates," Taylor averred.  "We couldn't have done that as the
Freedom Party.  We knew we would get beaten up over the name --
people would get so angry they would stutter just trying to say
the word.  It inspires a violent visceral reaction from some
voters."

But, said Taylor, perhaps it is now time to move beyond a single-
issue party with marijuana in its name.  "Now that we've woken up
the electorate, maybe we can create a broader political structure
for this phenomenon," he told DRCNet.  "We see a constituency of
guys just trying to make a living, and I think a broader Freedom
Party will have a broader appeal.  "What we need and what we will
have is a party convention.  So far the party has been shaped by
the candidates, Marc Emery, and myself.  I'd love to lead a
party, but I need to know what that party is and what we stand
for," Taylor sighed.

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