Adriane Carr

Adriane Carr
Carr in 2014
Vancouver City Councillor
In office
December 2011 (2011-12) – 15 January 2025 (2025-01-15)
Deputy leader of the Green Party of Canada
In office
2006 (2006) – 22 January 2014 (2014-01-22)[1]
Serving with Georges Laraque
LeaderElizabeth May
Leader of the Green Party of British Columbia
In office
2000–2006
Preceded byStuart Parker
Tom Hetherington (interim)
Succeeded byJane Sterk
Christopher Bennett (interim)
In office
1983–1985
Preceded bynone
Succeeded bynone
Personal details
Born1952 (age 73–74)
Vancouver
PartyGreen Party of Canada
Green Party of British Columbia
Green Party of Vancouver
Alma materUniversity of British Columbia (B.A., M.A.)

Adriane Carr (born 1952) is a Canadian academic, activist and retired green politician.[2] She served on Vancouver City Council from 2011 until her resignation in 2025.[3][4] Carr was a founding member of the Green Party of British Columbia (BC Green Party) and was the party's first leader, then known as "spokesperson", from 1983 to 1985. In 2000, she became the party's leader again.[2] In the 2005 provincial election, she received over 25 percent of the vote in her home riding of Powell River-Sunshine Coast. In September 2006, she was appointed by federal Green Party leader Elizabeth May, to be one of her two deputy leaders.

After two losses as a federal candidate in the Vancouver Centre electoral district (2008 and 2011), Carr was elected to Vancouver City Council in November 2011. She was the sole candidate of the Green Party of Vancouver for one of 10 seats in the at-large election held in the 2011 municipal election. This was her first electoral success in eight attempts, and she was the first person elected under the Green Party banner to the council of a major Canadian city.[3] She was re-elected in 2014, 2018, and 2022. She resigned in January 2025, citing disagreements with Mayor Ken Sim.[5]

Early life

Carr was born in Vancouver and raised in the Lower Mainland and the Kootenays. She earned a master's degree in urban geography from the University of British Columbia in 1980 and taught at Langara College.[2]

Environmentalism

Carr was a co-founder of the Green Party of British Columbia, the first Green Party in North America, and served as its unpaid spokesperson (leader) from 1983 to 1985. She left teaching at Langara College in 1989 to work full-time for the Western Canada Wilderness Committee, having been a volunteer for WCWC from shortly after it was co-founded by her later-to-be husband, Paul George and Richard Krieger.

During her time working for WCWC, among other things, Carr led the organization's international campaigns and played a lead role in bringing together First Nations, environmental groups, logging companies and all levels of government in the successful campaign to establish a UNESCO Biosphere Reserve in Clayoquot Sound. From 1992 until 2000, WCWC (now called the Wilderness Committee) was led by a four-person committee of paid employees comprising Carr, Paul George, activist Joe Foy, and the organization's chief financial officer. Carr left the organization in 2000 to run for the leadership of the Green Party of British Columbia (BC Green Party).

Provincial and federal politics

Carr has been the BC Green Party leader on two separate occasions. She was the party's leader in the 1983 provincial election, held shortly after the party's founding. Carr ran in the two-member electoral district (called a riding in Canada) of Vancouver-Point Grey, and finished last in a field of eight candidates with 1549 votes. She also ran as a Green candidate for the Vancouver School Board in 1984, but after this, besides maintaining her membership, she had little further involvement with the provincial Green Party until the late 1990s.

The BC Green Party was led from 1993 to 2000 by Stuart Parker (whom Carr endorsed during both of his runs for the party leadership in 1993 and 1997) and its ideological direction was largely guided by former members of the New Democratic Party during this period. Carr emerged as a rival to Parker at the party's 1999 policy convention. Parker was defeated in a non-confidence motion at an annual general meeting held in Squamish in March 2000. Tom Hetherington was selected as interim leader by the new directors elected at that March meeting. A leadership contest was held, and on 23 September 2000, Carr defeated Andy Shadrack and Wally du Temple to become party leader for a second time.

Carr ran in the 2001 election in the riding of Powell River-Sunshine Coast, against former Liberal leader and then-NDP cabinet minister Gordon Wilson. She was included in the televised leaders' debate along with Liberal leader Gordon Campbell and NDP premier Ujjal Dosanjh. The Greens hoped to be viewed as a progressive alternative for voters. Carr finished third in her riding with 6316 votes (27%), against 6349 for Wilson (28%) and 9904 for victorious Liberal Harold Long. The Green Party received 12.4 percent of the provincial vote in this election, a significant increase from its 2 percent total in the 1996 BC election. The party's largest number of votes was received in Saanich-Gulf Islands, one of only 17 constituencies that had been voting Liberal since 1991.

In 2004, Carr ran for the Greens in a by-election in Surrey-Panorama Ridge, held following the resignation of Liberal Gulzar Singh Cheema. She finished a distant third with 8.4 percent of the vote as the NDP recovered to win the riding. This result was a harbinger of the party's decline in popularity in the 2005 general election, where its share of the vote fell to 9 percent.

Carr was a vocal supporter of a mixed-member proportional (MMP) electoral system. In 2002 she became the proponent of an initiative under the Recall and Initiative Act to hold a referendum on whether or not to adopt MMP in BC, dubbed the Free Your Vote campaign. Having obtained nearly 100,000 signatures in support of the initiative, Free Your Vote became the largest voting reform organization in the province and increased awareness and support amongst Greens and non-Greens alike for electoral reform.

When the Citizens' Assembly on Electoral Reform recommended a single-transferable vote system, Carr expressed strong opposition, favouring MMP. However, she supported a resolution at the subsequent BC Green convention that her party officially take a neutral stance letting candidates decide for themselves whether or not to support the Citizens' Assembly proposal. Almost all Green candidates actively campaigned for the electoral reform referendum in the 2005 election.

In the 2005 election, Carr was again included in the leaders' debate, this time with Premier Gordon Campbell and NDP leader Carole James. Carr was expected to be strong competition in her riding of Powell River-Sunshine Coast but finished third again with 25 percent of the vote (a decline of 2%), 14 percent behind the victorious NDP candidate. At the annual Green convention following the 2005 election, Carr received 85 percent approval in a confidence vote among party membership.

After successfully co-chairing a campaign to elect Elizabeth May as leader of the Green Party of Canada, Carr resigned her position of leader of the BC Green Party in September 2006 to become one of two deputy leaders of the federal Green Party.

In the 2008 federal election, Carr ran as the Green candidate in the Vancouver Centre riding against Liberal incumbent Hedy Fry. Fry was re-elected, while Carr garnered 18.3 percent of the vote. Carr had the Green Party's fourth highest percentage of votes in the nation. Carr ran once more against Hedy Fry in the 2011 federal election, receiving 15.4 percent of the vote and placing fourth.

Municipal politics

Carr ran for city council in the 2011 municipal election as the lone Green Party of Vancouver candidate. She received 48,648 votes, putting her in 10th place, 91 votes ahead of the next candidate below her, but securing her election as a city councillor. She was the first Green councillor ever elected in a major Canadian city.

In the 2014 municipal election, Carr received the highest number of votes of any council candidate with 74,077 votes – 5,658 votes ahead of her closest competitor[6] – and helped to create the largest team of elected Greens in Canadian history.[7]

In the 2018 municipal election, Carr was again elected with the highest number of votes and was joined by fellow Green Party members Pete Fry and Michael Wiebe on council. The Greens also elected three candidates each to the Vancouver School Board and Vancouver Park Board.

Carr was re-elected to city council in the 2022 Vancouver election after declining to run for mayor. She placed eighth with 41,831 votes, the highest vote share for a non-ABC Vancouver candidate, though the Greens' popular vote declined along with most other centre-left parties, while the centre-right ABC councillors formed a new council majority.

Electoral record

Election Type Total votes % of popular vote Place
Vancouver-Point Grey 1983 Provincial general 1,549 3.6% (1.8%)[a] 8th
Vancouver School Board 1984[b] Municipal general
Powell River-Sunshine Coast 2001 Provincial general 6,316 27.0% 3rd
Surrey-Panorama Ridge 2004 Provincial by-election 1,053 8.4% 3rd
Powell River-Sunshine Coast 2005 Provincial general 6,585 25.8% 3rd
Vancouver-Centre 2008 Federal general 10,354 18.3% 4th
Vancouver-Centre 2011 Federal general 9,089 15.4% 4th
Vancouver City Council 2011 Municipal general 48,648 10th – elected
Vancouver City Council 2014 Municipal general 74,077 1st – elected
Vancouver City Council 2018 Municipal general 69,730 1st – elected
Vancouver City Council 2022 Municipal general 41,831 8th – elected
2022 Vancouver municipal election: Vancouver City Council
Party Candidate Votes % Elected
ABC Vancouver Sarah Kirby-Yung (X) 72,545 42.30 Y
ABC Vancouver Lisa Dominato (X) 70,415 41.05 Y
ABC Vancouver Brian Montague 68,618 40.01 Y
ABC Vancouver Mike Klassen 65,586 38.24 Y
ABC Vancouver Peter Meiszner 63,275 36.90 Y
ABC Vancouver Rebecca Bligh (X) 62,765 36.60 Y
ABC Vancouver Lenny Zhou 62,393 36.39 Y
Green Adriane Carr (X) 41,831 24.39 Y
OneCity Christine Boyle (X) 38,465 22.43 Y
Green Pete Fry (X) 37,270 21.73 Y
Forward Together Dulcy Anderson 33,985 19.82
OneCity Iona Bonamis 33,745 19.68
Forward Together Tesicca Truong 32,900 19.18
COPE Jean Swanson (X) 32,833 19.15
Green Michael Wiebe (X) 30,377 17.71
OneCity Ian Cromwell 29,833 17.40
OneCity Matthew Norris 29,663 17.30
Forward Together Alvin Singh 29,049 16.94
NPA Melissa De Genova (X) 26,578 15.50
COPE Breen Ouellette 24,881 14.51
Forward Together Jeanette Ashe 22,432 13.08
Forward Together Russil Wvong 22,107 12.89
Green Devyani Singh 21,255 12.39
TEAM for a Livable Vancouver Cleta Brown 20,854 12.16
Green Stephanie Smith 20,408 11.90
Forward Together Hilary Brown 19,902 11.61
COPE Nancy Trigueros 19,152 11.17
TEAM for a Livable Vancouver Sean Nardi 18,353 10.70
TEAM for a Livable Vancouver Grace Quan 17,955 10.47
COPE Tanya Webking 17,675 10.31
TEAM for a Livable Vancouver Bill Tieleman 17,240 10.05
TEAM for a Livable Vancouver Stephen Roberts 16,261 9.48
Vision Stuart Mackinnon 15,865 9.25
NPA Morning Lee 14,083 8.21
TEAM for a Livable Vancouver Param Nijjar 13,950 8.13
VOTE Socialist Sean Orr 13,744 8.01
Progress Vancouver Asha Hayer 13,107 7.64
NPA Ken Charko 12,083 7.47
Vision Lesli Boldt 11,070 6.46
NPA Elaine Allan 10,917 6.37
Affordable Housing Coalition Eric Redmond 10,617 6.19
NPA Arezo Zarrabian 10,361 6.04
Progress Vancouver Marie Noelle Rosa 10,111 5.90
Progress Vancouver Morgane Oger 10,015 5.84
Progress Vancouver David Chin 9,354 5.45
Progress Vancouver May He 8,593 5.01
NPA Cinnamon Bhayani 8,586 5.01
Independent Lina Vargas 7,714 4.50
Vision Honieh Barzegari 6,831 3.98
Progress Vancouver Mauro Francis 6,556 3.82
Independent Mark Bowen 5,706 3.33
Independent Dominic Denofrio 4,927 2.87
Independent Amy "Evil Genius" Fox 3,711 2.16
Independent Jeremy MacKenzie 3,446 2.01
Independent Kyra Philbert 3,382 1.97
Independent Tim Lý 3,339 1.95
Independent Marlo Franson 2,866 1.67
Independent Amie Peacock 2,745 1.60
Independent K. R. Alm 2,301 1.34
"(X)" indicates incumbent city councillor.
Percentage of votes shown is percentage of voters who voted, not votes cast.
"2022 Election results - list view". results.vancouver.ca. City of Vancouver. Retrieved 8 June 2025.
2018 Vancouver municipal election: Vancouver City Council
Party Candidate Votes % Elected
Green (I) Adriane Carr 69,739 39.52 Y
Green Pete Fry 61,806 35.03 Y
NPA (I) Melissa De Genova 53,251 30.18 Y
COPE Jean Swanson 48,865 27.69 Y
NPA Colleen Hardwick 47,747 27.06 Y
Green (O) Michael Wiebe 45,593 25.84 Y
OneCity Christine Boyle 45,455 25.76 Y
NPA (O) Lisa Dominato 44,689 25.33 Y
NPA Rebecca Bligh 44,053 24.97 Y
NPA (O) Sarah Kirby-Yung 43,581 24.70 Y
NPA David Grewal 41,913 23.75
Green David H. Wong 40,887 23.17
Vision (I) Heather Deal 39,529 22.40
COPE Derrick O'Keefe 38,305 21.71
NPA Justin P. Goodrich 37,917 21.49
COPE Anne Roberts 36,531 20.70
OneCity Brandon O. Yan 36,167 20.50
NPA Jojo Quimpo 34,601 19.61
Independent Sarah Blyth 29,456 16.69
Vision Tanya Paz 28,836 16.34
Vision Diego Cardona 27,325 15.49
Vision (O) Catherine Evans 25,124 14.24
Independent (O) Erin Shum 23,331 13.22
Vancouver 1st Ken Low 21,908 12.42
Independent Adrian Crook 17,392 9.86
Vision Wei Q. Zhang 16,734 9.48
Coalition Vancouver Ken Charko 16,366 9.28
Coalition Vancouver James Lin 16,191 9.18
Independent Wade Grant 15,422 8.74
Independent Taqdir K. Bhandal 15,326 8.69
Vancouver 1st Elizabeth Taylor 15,184 8.61
Coalition Vancouver Penny Mussio 14,886 8.44
Yes Vancouver Brinder Bains 13,948 7.90
Yes Vancouver Stephanie Ostler 13,530 7.67
Coalition Vancouver Jason Xie 13,424 7.61
Yes Vancouver Glynnis C. Chan 13,218 7.49
Coalition Vancouver Glen Chernen 13,148 7.45
Coalition Vancouver Morning Li 12,614 7.15
Vancouver 1st Nycki K. Basra 12,133 6.88
Yes Vancouver Jaspreet Virdi 12,124 6.87
Coalition Vancouver Franco Peta 11,193 6.34
Yes Vancouver Phyllis Tang 11,902 6.75
Independent Rob McDowell 11,828 6.70
Independent Penny Noble 11,435 6.48
Independent Graham Cook 11,084 6.28
Vancouver 1st Michelle C. Mollineaux 8,819 5.00
ProVancouver Raza Mirza 8,783 4.98
Vancouver 1st Jesse Johl 8,609 4.88
Independent Barbara Buchanan 8,180 4.64
ProVancouver Breton Crellin 7,856 4.45
Vancouver 1st Elishia Perosa 7,489 4.24
Independent Anastasia Koutalianos 7,469 4.23
Independent Abubakar Khan 7,239 4.10
Vancouver 1st John Malusa 6,597 3.74
Independent Lisa Kristiansen 6,506 3.69
ProVancouver Rohana D. Rezel 6,336 3.59
Independent Françoise Raunet 5,891 3.34
Independent Hamdy El-Rayes 5,381 3.05
Independent Hsin-Chen Fu 5,007 2.84
Independent Justin Caudwell 4,488 2.54
Independent Harry Miedzygorski 4,308 2.44
Independent Gordon T. Kennedy 4,297 2.44
Independent Ashley Hughes 3,965 2.25
Independent Kelly Alm 3,440 1.95
Independent Marlo Franson 3,316 1.88
Independent John Spark 3,287 1.86
Independent Katherine Ramdeen 3,082 1.75
Independent Spike Peachey 2,863 1.62
Independent Larry J. Falls 2,768 1.57
Independent Elke Porter 2,515 1.43
Independent Ted Copeland 1,946 1.10
2014 Vancouver municipal election: Vancouver City Council
Party Candidate Votes % Elected
Candidate Name Party Votes % of votes Elected
(I) Adriane Carr Green Party of Vancouver 74,077 40.77% X
(I) George Affleck Non-Partisan Association 68,419 37.65% X
(I) Elizabeth Ball Non-Partisan Association 67,195 36.98% X
Melissa De Genova Non-Partisan Association 63,134 34.74% X
(I) Heather Deal Vision Vancouver 62,698 34.51% X
(I) Kerry Jang Vision Vancouver 62,595 34.45% X
(I) Andrea Reimer Vision Vancouver 62,316 34.29% X
(I) Raymond Louie Vision Vancouver 61,903 34.07% X
(I) Tim Stevenson Vision Vancouver 57,640 31.72% X
(I) Geoff Meggs Vision Vancouver 56,831 31.28% X
Ian Robertson Non-Partisan Association 56,319 30.99%
Gregory Baker Non-Partisan Association 55,721 30.67%
Suzanne Scott Non-Partisan Association 55,486 30.54%
Ken Low Non-Partisan Association 54,971 30.25%
Rob McDowell Non-Partisan Association 53,596 29.50%
(I) Tony Tang Vision Vancouver 49,414 27.19%
Niki Sharma Vision Vancouver 48,987 26.96%
Cleta Brown Green Party of Vancouver 47,564 26.18%
Pete Fry Green Party of Vancouver 46,522 25.60%
Lisa Barrett Coalition of Progressive Electors 35,234 19.39%
Tim Louis Coalition of Progressive Electors 31,650 17.42%
RJ Aquino OneCity Vancouver 30,050 16.54%
Gayle Gavin Coalition of Progressive Electors 25,547 14.06%
Jennifer O'Keefee Coalition of Progressive Electors 23,121 12.72%
Sid Chow Tan Coalition of Progressive Electors 20,948 11.53%
Audrey "sχɬemtəna:t" Siegl Coalition of Progressive Electors 19,258 10.60%
Keith Higgins Coalition of Progressive Electors 18,219 10.02%
Mercedes Wong Vancouver 1st 17,493 9.62%
Wilson Munoz Coalition of Progressive Electors 13,756 7.57%
Glen Chernen Cedar Party 9,577 5.27%
Federico Fuoco Vancouver 1st 9,041 4.98%
Nicholas Chernen Cedar Party 8,724 4.80%
Lena Ling Independent 8,197 4.51%
Ferdinad Ramos Hotel Workers United – Local 40 7,986 4.39%
Jesse Johl Vancouver 1st 7,953 4.38%
Charlene Gunn Cedar Party 6,512 3.58%
Elena Murgoci Vancouver 1st 6,140 3.38%
David Angus Independent 5,895 3.24%
Jeremy Gustafson Cedar Party 5,098 2.81%
Grant Fraser Independent 5,096 2.80%
Milan Kljajic Vancouver 1st 4,881 2.69%
Anthony Guitar Independent 4,375 2.41%
Kelly Alm Independent 4,038 2.22%
Rick Orser Independent Democratic Electors Alliance 3,548 1.95%
Marc Boyer Independent 3,329 1.83%
Rajiv Pandey Independent 3,229 1.78%
Cord Ted Copeland Independent 3,202 1.76%
Abraham Deocera Independent 3,160 1.74%
Ludvik Skalicky Independent 1,797 0.99%
2011 Vancouver municipal election: Vancouver City Council
Party Candidate Votes % Elected
Candidate name Party affiliation Votes % of votes Elected
(I) Raymond Louie Vision Vancouver 63,273 43.69 X
(I) Kerry Jang Vision Vancouver 61,931 42.76 X
(I) Heather Deal Vision Vancouver 61,368 42.37 X
(I) Andrea Reimer Vision Vancouver 60,593 41.84 X
(I) Tim Stevenson Vision Vancouver 56,638 39.11 X
(I) Geoff Meggs Vision Vancouver 56,184 38.79 X
Tony Tang Vision Vancouver 53,873 37.20 X
Elizabeth Ball Non-Partisan Association 51,607 35.63 X
George Affleck Non-Partisan Association 51,145 35.32 X
Adriane Carr Green Party of Vancouver 48,648 33.59 X
(I) Ellen Woodsworth Coalition of Progressive Electors 48,557 33.53
Bill Yuen Non-Partisan Association 48,407 33.42
Mike Klassen Non-Partisan Association 47,868 33.05
Ken Charko Non-Partisan Association 45,373 31.33
Bill McCreery Non-Partisan Association 45,114 31.15
Francis Wong Non-Partisan Association 44,707 30.87
Tim Louis Coalition of Progressive Electors 43,926 30.33
Sean Bickerton Non-Partisan Association 43,289 29.89
Joe Carangi Non-Partisan Association 41,460 28.63
RJ Aquino Coalition of Progressive Electors 39,054 26.97
Jason Lamarche Non-Partisan Association 37,286 25.75
Sandy Garossino Independent 20,866 14.41
Elizabeth Murphy Neighbourhoods for a Sustainable Vancouver 19,644 13.56
Nicole Benson Neighbourhoods for a Sustainable Vancouver 17,983 12.42
Terry Martin Neighbourhoods for a Sustainable Vancouver 13,025 8.99
Marie Kerchum Neighbourhoods for a Sustainable Vancouver 12,614 8.71
Chris Shaw De-Growth Vancouver 8,219 5.68
Ian Gregson De-Growth Vancouver 7,872 5.44
Amy Fox Independent 6,499 4.49
Kelly Alm Independent 5,525 3.82
Grant Fraser Independent 4,758 3.29
Chris Masson De-Growth Vancouver 4,690 3.24
Lauren R.I.C.H. Gill Independent 4,682 3.23
Michael Singh Dharni Independent 4,167 2.88
Marc Tan Nguyen Independent 4,118 2.84
Rick Orser Independent 3,996 2.76
Wendythirteen Independent 3,926 2.71
Bang Nguyen Independent 3,826 2.64
Cord (Ted) Copeland Independent 3,587 2.48
Aaron R.I.C.H. Spires Independent 2,200 1.52
R H Maxwell N Bur Independent 1,955 1.35


2011 Canadian federal election: Vancouver Centre
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Liberal Hedy Fry 18,260 31.03 −3.47
New Democratic Karen Shillington 15,325 26.04 +4.73
Conservative Jennifer Clarke 15,323 26.04 +0.95
Green Adriane Carr 9,089 15.44 −2.87
Libertarian John Clarke 313 0.53 −0.07
Progressive Canadian Michael Huenefeld 285 0.48
Pirate Travis McCrea 192 0.33
Marxist–Leninist Michael Hill 62 0.11 −0.05
Total valid votes 58,849 100.0  
Total rejected ballots 134 0.23
Turnout 58,983 59.23
Eligible voters 99,527
Liberal hold Swing −4.10
2008 Canadian federal election: Vancouver Centre
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
Liberal Hedy Fry 19,506 34.50 −9.37 $80,974
Conservative Lorne Mayencourt 14,188 25.09 +4.73 $91,239
New Democratic Michael Byers 12,047 21.31 −7.34 $85,957
Green Adriane Carr 10,354 18.31 +12.43 $82,713
Libertarian John Clarke 340 0.60 +0.07 $0
Marxist–Leninist Michael Hill 94 0.16
Total valid votes/expense limit 56,529 100.0     $94,404
Liberal hold Swing −7.05
2005 British Columbia general election: Powell River-Sunshine Coast
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
New Democratic Nicholas Simons 11,099 43.45 +26.30 $108,403
Liberal Maureen Clayton 7,702 30.15 -12.21 $102,008
Green Adriane Carr 6,585 25.78 -1.23 $350
Refederation Allen McIntyre 249 0.62 New $1,110
Total valid votes 25,542 100
Total rejected ballots 109 0.43
Turnout 25,651 72.43
Registered voters
Surrey-Panorama Ridge by-election, 28 October 2004[8]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
  NDP Jagrup Brar 6,740 53.59 +33.68
Liberal Mary Polak 4,194 33.35 -25.59
Green Adriane Carr 1,053 8.37 -0.46
Conservative David James Evans 276 2.19
Reform Shirley Abraham 246 1.96 -0.55
  Independent Joe Pal 68 0.54
Total Valid Votes 12,577 100.00
Total Rejected Ballots 41 0.33
Turnout 12,618 52.15


2001 British Columbia general election: Powell River-Sunshine Coast
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
Liberal Harold Long 9,904 42.36 +24.65 $63,954
New Democratic Gordon Wilson 6,349 27.15 -0.42 $50,409
Green Adriane Carr 6,316 27.01 +24.66 $24,821
Marijuana Dana Albert Larsen 812 3.48 New $4,499
Total valid votes 23,381 100
Total rejected ballots 99 0.43
Turnout 23,480 72.43
Registered voters
1983 British Columbia general election: Vancouver-Point Grey
Party Candidate Votes % ± Expenditures
  Liberal Leopold Auer 1,675 1.98% unknown
Green Adriane Janice Carr 1,549 1.83% unknown
Social Credit Garde Basil Gardom 22,550 26.58% unknown
Social Credit Patrick Lucey McGeer 22,970 27.08% unknown
  Progressive Conservative Lorne Neil MacLean 1,573 1.86% unknown
New Democratic Maureen Patricia Marchak 16,612 19.58% unknown
New Democratic Hilda Louise Thomas 15,849 18.68% unknown
  Progressive Conservative William Fairley 2,511 3.17% unknown
  Liberal Allan Edward Warnke 2,048 2.41% unknown
Total valid votes 84,826 100.00%
Total rejected ballots 480
Turnout %

Notes

  1. ^ Vancouver-Point Grey was a double-member riding; although she received only 1.8 percent of the total votes cast, approximately 3.6 percent of local electors voted for Carr.
  2. ^ Vancouver's school board is elected by a citywide (at-large) vote through which a total of nine positions are filled.

References

  1. ^ "Adriane Carr stepping down as Deputy Leader of the Green Party of Canada". Green Party of Canada. 22 January 2014. Archived from the original on 2 June 2022. Retrieved 16 September 2018.
  2. ^ a b c "About Adriane Carr". Vancouver Centre Federal Green Party Electoral District Association. Archived from the original on 7 September 2011. Retrieved 20 November 2011.
  3. ^ a b Montgomery, Christina (19 November 2011). "Carr takes surprise council seat as final poll goes Green". Vancouver, British Columbia: Vancouver Observer. Archived from the original on 22 November 2011. Retrieved 20 November 2011.
  4. ^ Hui, Stephen (19 November 2011). "Greens' Adriane Carr elected to Vancouver city council". Vancouver, British Columbia: The Georgia Straight. Archived from the original on 21 November 2011. Retrieved 20 November 2011.
  5. ^ Brockman, Charles; Meiklejohn, Michelle (15 January 2025). "Vancouver's longest-serving city councillor announces resignation, citing frustrations with mayor's party". CityNews Vancouver. Retrieved 18 January 2025.
  6. ^ Wendy Stueck And Pauline Holdsworth. "Green Party of Vancouver grows in power despite one win on council". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 25 December 2015.
  7. ^ "Adriane Carr leads Greens into Canadian history". Vancouver Observer. 16 November 2014. Archived from the original on 20 November 2014. Retrieved 17 January 2025.
  8. ^ "Report of the Chief Electoral Officer on the Surrey-Panorama Ridge By-election October 28, 2004" (PDF). Elections BC. 12 April 2005. Archived from the original (PDF) on 3 September 2006.