Rhinoceros Party: Difference between revisions
m Reverted edits by 24.55.220.105 (talk): not providing a reliable source (WP:CITE, WP:RS) (HG) (3.4.6) |
|||
Line 92: | Line 92: | ||
* Nationalize [[Tim Hortons]]<ref name=timmies>[https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2015/08/18/rhino-party-promises-to-nationalize-tim-hortons-move-capital-to-kapuskasing.html "Rhino Party promises to nationalize Tim Hortons, move capital to Kapuskasing"]. ''[[Toronto Star]]'', August 18, 2015.</ref> |
* Nationalize [[Tim Hortons]]<ref name=timmies>[https://www.thestar.com/news/canada/2015/08/18/rhino-party-promises-to-nationalize-tim-hortons-move-capital-to-kapuskasing.html "Rhino Party promises to nationalize Tim Hortons, move capital to Kapuskasing"]. ''[[Toronto Star]]'', August 18, 2015.</ref> |
||
* Move the national capital to [[Kapuskasing]], [[Ontario]]<ref name=timmies/> |
* Move the national capital to [[Kapuskasing]], [[Ontario]]<ref name=timmies/> |
||
* Phase in Left Side of the Road Driving, starting with trucks. |
|||
==Neorhino.ca== |
==Neorhino.ca== |
Revision as of 17:01, 20 January 2019
It has been suggested that this article be merged with Rhinoceros Party of Canada (1963–1993). (Discuss) Proposed since May 2018. |
This article needs additional citations for verification. (January 2016) |
Rhinoceros Party Parti Rhinocéros | |
---|---|
Active federal party | |
Leader | Sébastien CoRhino Corriveau[1] |
Founded | May 21, 2006 |
Headquarters | 125 rang des Bouleaux Saint-Donat-de-Rimouski, Québec G0K 1L0 |
Ideology | Satirical party |
Colours | Red, white |
Seats in the House of Commons | 0 / 338 |
Website | |
www | |
The Rhinoceros Party (French: Parti Rhinocéros) is a Canadian federal-level satirical political party, referred to in English Canada as the Second Rhinoceros Party. It was known as neorhino.ca until 2010, when the party changed names and registered a new party logo. It was created in Montreal on May 21, 2006, and recognized by Elections Canada as being eligible for registration on August 16, 2007, and an official political party on August 23, 2007.[2] It is the successor to the Rhinoceros Party of Canada.
The party was founded by François "Yo" Gourd, who was involved with the original incarnation of the First Rhinoceros Party. He stated he named the new party (then under the name "neorhino") for the Rhinoceros Party and for Neo, the Matrix character.[3] The party is led by Sébastien Corriveau.[1]
It promises, like its predecessor, not to keep any of its promises if elected.[4]
Origins
The Rhino movement was started in 1963 by Jacques Ferron,[5] "Éminence de la Grande Corne du parti Rhinocéros". In the 1970s, a group of artists joined the party and created a comedic political platform to contest the federal election. Ferron (1979), poet Gaston Miron (1972) and singer Michel Rivard (1980) ran against then Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau in his Montreal seat.
The party claimed to be the spiritual descendants of Cacareco, a Brazilian rhinoceros who was elected member of São Paulo's city council in 1958, and listed Cornelius the First, a rhinoceros from the Granby Zoo, east of Montreal, as its leader.[6] It declared that the rhinoceros was an appropriate symbol for a political party since politicians, by nature, are "thick-skinned, slow-moving, dim-witted, can move fast as hell when in danger, and have large, hairy horns growing out of the middle of their faces."[7]
The party abstained from the 1993 federal election as they questioned the constitutionality of new rules that required the party to run candidates in at least 50 ridings at a cost of $1,000 per candidature.[8] On September 23, 1993, Canada's Chief Electoral Officer, Jean-Pierre Kingsley, refused to accept the party's abstention and ordered the removal of the Rhinoceros Party from the Registry of Canadian Political Parties, effectively eliminating them from the Canadian political system. Kingsley also directed the party's official agent, Charlie (le Concierge) McKenzie, to liquidate all party assets and return any revenues to the Receiver General of Canada. On instructions from the party, McKenzie refused. After two years of threatening letters, Ottawa refused to prosecute McKenzie. Within the following year, the Rhinoceros Party of Canada was dissolved.
Platform
If elected, the Rhinoceros Party of Canada has promised to:
- Take Canada off the gold standard, opting instead to use a snow standard to boost the economy[9]
- Repeal the law of gravity[9]
- Promote higher education by building taller schools[9]
- Pave the Bay of Fundy to make more parking for the Maritimes[9]
- Count the Thousand Islands to make sure the Americans didn’t steal any[9]
- Change Montreal’s rue Ste-Catherine into the world’s longest bowling alley[9]
- Ban crappy Canadian winters[9]
- Abolish all laws to end crime[9]
- Tear down the Rockies so Albertans can see the Pacific sunset[9]
- Abolish lawn mowing in Outremont, Que[9]
- Ban guns and butter—both kill[9]
- Reform the retail lottery scheme by replacing cash prizes with Senate appointments[9]
- Forget having two official languages; replace with having two official ears[9]
- Seat the Queen of Canada in Buckingham, Quebec[9]
- Privatize the Queen[10]
- Tax the black market[10]
- Nationalize Tim Hortons[11]
- Move the national capital to Kapuskasing, Ontario[11]
- Phase in Left Side of the Road Driving, starting with trucks.
Neorhino.ca
On August 7, 2007, Brian Salmi, then-president of the Rhinoceros Party, announced a $50-million lawsuit contesting an election reform law that had stripped his party of its registered status in 1993.
Legally changing his name to Sa Tan, he had planned to run under the Rhino banner in the September 2007 by-election. However, a previous law from 1993 stated that registered parties must run candidates in at least 50 ridings, at a cost of $1,000 per riding, to keep their status. In protest of the new law, the party planned to abstain from the election. Canada's then-chief electoral officer, Jean-Pierre Kingsley, rejected the abstention and ordered the party removed from the registry of Canadian political parties. The lawsuit was filed as a result of the removal from the national party registry by Mr. Kingsley. Since Salmi had legally changed his name, the lawsuit was filed as Sa Tan vs. Her Majesty The Queen.
The lawsuit was dropped after the ruling of the chief electoral officer was reversed in a new law passed in 2004 that said a party only had to run one candidate in a federal election or federal by-election to be considered registered.[4]
Electoral record
To date, candidates of Neorhino.ca and the Rhinoceros Party have not recorded any electoral victories. Before the Neorhino.ca candidates that stood for the ridings of Outremont and Saint-Hyacinthe—Bagot in the 2007 federal by-elections, Neorhino.ca and the Rhinoceros Party before them had not fielded a candidate since Bryan Gold's failed bid to win a 1990 by-election in the New Brunswick electoral district of Beauséjour.
Neorhino.ca candidates did not win any seats in the 2007 by-elections, the 2008 federal election, or the 2011 federal election.
2007/2008 by-elections
Candidate | Votes | % | Placement | District | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
François Gourd | 145 | 0.6 | 6/12 | Outremont | September 17, 2007 |
Christian Willie Vanasse | 384 | 1.2 | 6/7 | Saint-Hyacinthe—Bagot | September 17, 2007 |
John Turner | 111 | 0.4 | 5/6 | Vancouver Quadra | March 17, 2008 |
2008 federal election
Election | # of candidates | # of votes | % of popular vote | % in ridings run | # of seats |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2008 | 7 | 2,263 | 0.02% | 0.67% | 0 |
2009 by-elections
Candidate | Votes | % | Placement | District | Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Gabrielle Anctil | 129 | 0.7 | 6/8 | Hochelaga | November 9, 2009 |
Rhinoceros Party
The party changed from neorhino.ca to its new formal name of the Rhinoceros Party in mid-2010. It also registered a new logo with Elections Canada.
Election | # of candidates | # of votes | % of popular vote | % in ridings run | # of seats |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2011 | 14 | 3,800 | 0.026% | 0.57% | 0 |
2015 | 27 | 7,263 | 0.04% | 0 |
2011 candidates
Riding | Province | Candidate | Occupation | Notes | Votes | % | Placement |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ahuntsic | Quebec | Jean-Olivier Berthiaume | 299 | 0.64 | 6/6 | ||
Berthier—Maskinongé | Quebec | Martin Jubinville | 373 | 0.66 | 6/6 | ||
Chicoutimi—Le Fjord | Quebec | Marielle Couture | 340 | 0.67 | 6/6 | ||
Hochelaga | Quebec | Hugo Samson Veillette | 246 | 0.53 | 6/8 | ||
Honoré-Mercier | Quebec | Valery Chevrefils-Latulippe | 181 | 0.38 | 6/7 | ||
LaSalle—Émard | Quebec | Guillaume Berger-Richard | 208 | 0.50 | 7/7 | ||
Laurier—Sainte-Marie | Quebec | François Yo Gourd | 398 | 0.79 | 6/9 | ||
Outremont | Quebec | Tommy Gaudet | 160 | 0.41 | 6/7 | ||
Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie | Quebec | Jean-Patrick Berthiaume | Politician[12] | Born in Saint-Jérôme, Berthiaume contested Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie in the 2008 federal election as a neorhino.ca candidate.[13] He was the leader of the Rhinoceros Party's Laboratoire des Sciences de la Démocratie (LSD) in 2011.[14] | 417 | 0.77 | 6/7 |
Sherbrooke | Quebec | Crédible Berlingot Landry | 233 | 0.45 | 6/6 | ||
Trois-Rivières | Quebec | Francis Arsenault | 256 | 0.51 | 7/7 | ||
Westmount—Ville-Marie | Quebec | Victoria Haliburton | 140 | 0.34 | 6/7 | ||
Peace River | Alberta | Donovan Eckstrom | 345 | 0.72 | 6/6 | ||
Cariboo—Prince George | British Columbia | Jordan Turner | 204 | 0.47 | 7/7 |
2015 candidates [15]
The election of 2015 was very long : it started in beginning August to end on October 19th. On August 17th, Sébastien CôRhino declared in Montréal he was willing to nationalize Tim Hortons and privatize the Royal Canadian Army at the same time : "We'll look at the results after five years, after 10 years, after 50 years and with the results of these studies we'll be able to determine if other economic sectors should also be nationalized or be privatized." Montreal candidate Ben 97 also publicly announce he wants to move the capital to Kapuskasing, Ontario. That would bring democracy closer to Canadians, because Kapuskasing is in the center of Canada. [16]
List :
Riding | Province | Candidate Name | Occupation | Notes | Votes | % | Placement |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Abitibi-Baie-James-Nunavik-Eeyou | Quebec | Mario Gagnon | 258 | 0.75 | 6/6 | ||
Abitibi-Témiscamingue | Quebec | Pascal Le Fou Gélinas | 425 | 0.85 | 6/6 | ||
Ahuntsic-Cartierville | Quebec | Catherine Gascon-David | 285 | 0.51 | 6/6 | ||
Avignon-La Mitis-Matane-Matapédia | Quebec | Éric Normand | 175 | 0.48 | 7/7 | ||
Compton-Stanstead | Quebec | Kevin Côté | 315 | 0.56 | 6/6 | ||
Edmonton Centre | Alberta | Steven Stauffer | 257 | 0.48 | 5/6 | ||
Edmonton Griesbach | Alberta | Bun Bun Thompson | 144 | 0.30 | 7/8 | ||
Edmonton Strathcona | Alberta | Donovan Eckstrom | 133 | 0.24 | 7/10 | ||
Elgin-Middlesex-London | Ontario | Lou Bernardi | 185 | 0.32 | 6/6 | ||
Gaspesie-Iles-de-la-Madeleine | Quebec | Max Boudreau | 300 | 0.76 | 6/6 | ||
Hochelaga | Quebec | Nicolas Lemay | 411 | 0.79 | 6/8 | ||
Jonquière | Quebec | Marielle Couture | 382 | 0.79 | 6/6 | ||
Kings-Hants | Nova Scotia | Megan Brown-Hodges | 184 | 0.39 | 5/7 | ||
La Pointe-de-l'Île | Quebec | Ben 97 Benoit | 358 | 0.65 | 6/8 | ||
Lethbridge | Alberta | Solly Krygier-Paine | 209 | 0.37 | 6/6 | ||
Longueuil—Charles-LeMoyne | Quebec | Matthew Iakov Liberman | 325 | 0.63 | 6/7 | ||
Montmagny—L'Islet—Kamouraska—Rivière-du-Loup | Quebec | Bien Gras Gagné | 287 | 0.58 | 6/6 | ||
Moose Jaw-Lake Centre-Lanigan | Saskatchewan | Robert Thomas | 208 | 0.50 | 5/5 | ||
Ottawa Centre | Ontario | Conrad Lukawski | 167 | 0.22 | 6/8 | ||
Papineau | Quebec | Tommy Gaudet | 323 | 0.64 | 7/10 | ||
Richmond—Arthabaska | Quebec | Antoine Dubois | 384 | 0.66 | 6/6 | ||
Rimouski-Neigette—Témiscouata—Les Basques | Quebec | Sébastien CôRhino Côrriveau | Leader of party | 273 | 0.61 | 6/6 | |
Rivière du Nord | Quebec | Fobozof A. Côté | 261 | 0.46 | 6/6 | ||
Rosemont--La Petite-Patrie | Quebec | Laurent Aglat | 495 | 0.85 | 6/8 | ||
Saskatoon—University | Saskatchewan | Eric Matthew Schalm | 93 | 0.21 | 5/5 | ||
Sherbrooke | Quebec | Hubert Richard | 265 | 0.46 | 7/7 | ||
Ville-Marie-Le Sud-Ouest-Ile-des-Soeurs | Quebec | Daniel Wolfe | 161 | 0.32 | 6/7 |
References
- ^ a b "Registered Political Parties: Rhinoceros Party". Elections Canada. Retrieved 9 April 2011.
- ^ Canada, Elections. "Registered Political Parties and Parties Eligible for Registration". www.elections.ca. Retrieved 6 December 2018.
- ^ "Rhinos return to Canadian political landscape". Canada.com. CanWest. February 29, 2008. Retrieved November 23, 2011.
- ^ a b "Rhino party escapes extinction to run in September byelection". CBC News. 7 August 2007. Archived from the original on 9 November 2012.
- ^ "Rhinoceros Party". The Canadian Encyclopedia.
- ^ Ingrid Peritz (August 8, 2007). "After years of near-extinction, the whacky Rhino party is back". The Globe and Mail.
- ^ Evan Kayne (January 12, 2006). "Federal election in dire need of laughs". FFWD Weekly. Archived from the original on September 27, 2007.
{{cite web}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help) - ^ Paul Hellyer (May 1, 1997). "Marginal characters - A guide to some of Canada's lesser-known political parties". Montreal Mirror.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "14 weird platform promises from the now-defunct Rhinoceros Party". Macleans.ca. 2014-08-30. Retrieved 2017-11-07.
- ^ a b utiliser, Ne pas. "Promises". www.eatgoogle.com. Retrieved 2017-11-07.
- ^ a b "Rhino Party promises to nationalize Tim Hortons, move capital to Kapuskasing". Toronto Star, August 18, 2015.
- ^ History of Federal Ridings since 1867: ROSEMONT--LA PETITE-PATRIE (2011/05/02), Parliament of Canada, accessed 23 November 2013.
- ^ Berthiaume received 319 votes (0.61%), finishing sixth.
- ^ Éric Noël, "Jean-Patrick Berthiaume du parti Rhinocéros: de la folie à la créativité", Rue Masson, 22 April 2011, accessed 23 November 2013.
- ^ "History of Federal Ridings since 1867". lop.parl.ca. Retrieved 6 December 2018.
- ^ "Anything but extinct: Rhinoceros Party back for 2015 federal election - CTV News". www.ctvnews.ca. Retrieved 6 December 2018.
External links
- Official website
- Rhinoceros Party – Canadian Political Parties and Political Interest Groups - Web Archive created by the University of Toronto Libraries