Libertarian Party of Canada

Canadian federal political party From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Libertarian Party of Canada (French: Parti libertarien du Canada) is a federal political party in Canada founded in 1973.

LeaderJacques Boudreau
PresidentCoreen Corcoran
FounderMarshall Bruce Evoy
Founded7 July 1973; 52 years ago (1973-07-07)[1]
Quick facts Leader, President ...
Libertarian Party of Canada
Parti libertarien du Canada
LeaderJacques Boudreau
PresidentCoreen Corcoran
FounderMarshall Bruce Evoy
Founded7 July 1973; 52 years ago (1973-07-07)[1]
Headquarters409–207 Bank St. Ottawa, Ontario[2]
Ideology
International affiliationInterlibertarians
International Alliance of Libertarian Parties
Colours  Yellow
Senate
0 / 105
House of Commons
0 / 343
Website
www.libertarian.ca
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History

The party was founded in July 1973 by Marshall Bruce Evoy. The party's founding convention, attended by 64 delegates and modeled on the 1972 Founding Convention of the United States Libertarian Party and the Libertarian Alternative of Alberta's September 1973 rally in Edmonton, took place in Toronto in October 1973; Sieg Pedde was elected leader.[3][4] Evoy ran unsuccessfully for election to Parliament in the 1974 federal election in a Toronto riding.[5][6]

The party achieved registered status in the 1979 federal election by running more than fifty candidates.[7] The party spent $45,818 on the 1984 Canadian federal election running 72 candidates and received 0.2% of the vote.[8]

Stanisław Tymiński, who was briefly the party's leader from 1990 to 1991, ran for President of Poland in the 1990 and 1995 elections.[9][relevant?]

Tim Moen (/ˈmən/) became the party's leader in May 2014, succeeding Katrina Chowne.[10]

In the 2015 Canadian federal election, Lauren Southern was the Libertarian candidate in the district of Langley–Aldergrove.[11] She was briefly removed by the party as a candidate but was reinstated with support from Breitbart News and Rebel Media. She received 535 votes, or 0.9% of the total.[12]

In September 2018, Moen, who had previously offered the leadership of the Libertarian Party to Maxime Bernier, stated that he was open to the idea of a merger with Bernier's People's Party of Canada.[13] When asked by Global News, Bernier indicated he had no interest in a merger.[14]

Jacques Boudreau succeeded Moen as the party's leader in August 2021.[15] The party will be deregistered on March 31, 2026.[16]

Ideology

The party subscribes to libertarian and classical liberal tenets; its stated mission is to reduce the size, scope, and cost of government.[17] Having stated that the party "wouldn't criminalize much except murder and theft",[18] policies include ending drug prohibition, ending government censorship, open borders,[19] lowering taxes, protecting gun rights, legalising sex work,[20] free trade and non-interventionism.[21]

The statement of principles adopted by the founding convention in 1973 called for a new Canadian Constitution to supersede the British North America Act and for privatization of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and the Royal Mail Canada through their sale. No consensus could be reached at the time on age of majority, capital punishment and abortion.[4]

Election results

More information Election, Leader ...
Election Leader Candidates Votes Share of popular vote Share in ridings contested
1979 Alex Eaglesham
60 / 282
16,042 0.1% 0.6%
1980 Vacant
58 / 282
14,656 0.1% 0.6%
1984 Victor Levis
72 / 282
23,514 0.2% 0.7%
1988 Dennis Corrigan
88 / 295
33,185 0.3% 0.8%
1993 Hilliard Cox
52 / 295
14,630 0.1% 0.5%
1997 did not contest
2000
2004 Jean-Serge Brisson
8 / 308
1,949 nil% 0.5%
2006
10 / 308
3,002 nil% 0.6%
2008 Dennis Young
26 / 308
7,300 0.1% 0.6%
2011
23 / 308
6,002 nil% 0.5%
2015 Tim Moen
72 / 338
37,407 0.2% 0.9%
2019
24 / 338
8,281 0.1% 0.6%
2021 Jacques Boudreau
13 / 338
4,765 nil% 0.7%
2025
16 / 338
5,561 nil% 0.6
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Leaders

Top row: Stanisław Tymiński (left) and George Dance (right); bottom row: Jean-Serge Brisson (left) and Tim Moen (right)
More information No., Leader ...
No. Leader Years in office
1 Sieg Pedde 1973–1974
2 Charles "Chuck" Lyall 1974–1976
3 Ron Bailey 1976–1978
4 Alex Eaglesham 1978–1979
5 Linda Cain 1980–1982
6 Neil Reynolds May 1982 – 1983
7 Victor Levis 1983–1987
8 Dennis Corrigan 1987–1990
9 Stanisław Tymiński 1990–1991
10 George Dance 1991–1993
11 Hilliard Cox May 1993 – 1995
(10) George Dance 1995–1996
12 Vincent Pouliot 12 May 1996 – 5 April 1997
13 Robert Morse 1997–1999
14 Jean-Serge Brisson 1999 – 18 May 2008
15 Dennis Young 18 May 2008 – May 2011
16 Katrina Chowne May 2011 – May 2014
17 Tim Moen May 2014 – 2021
18 Jacques Boudreau 15 August 2021 – present
Source[22]
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See also

References

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