| Animal Alliance Environment Voters Party of Canada | |
|---|---|
| Party | |
| Political ideology | Animal rights activism, Environmentalism |
| International alignment | none |
| Colours | Forest Green |
| Seats | 0 House, 0 Senate |
| Website | http://www.environmentvoters.org |
Both parent organizations have been particularly vocal in the past opposing the seal hunt in Newfoundland and Labrador, and AAVE is currently urging an international boycott of Canadian seafood. Other causes have included opposition to the use of animals in scientific research, fur farming and trapping, and bear hunting.
Though the party ran a single candidate in the 2006 general election in order to entitle it to political-party status, its role in most ridings is to endorse a major-party candidate which it sees as promoting the organization’s views. In the 2006 general election, AAVE’s free-time political ads specifically endorsed the New Democratic Party, counter-balanced by the statement you “could” vote for AAVE leader Liz White in Toronto Centre.
Canadian electoral laws hinder abuse of this loophole by setting campaign spending limits for parties that are proportional to the number of voters in the electoral districts where the a party is running candidates. Because the Animal Alliance Environment Voters Party of Canada is running only one candidate, it will only be permitted to spend $66,715.37, compared to the $18,225,260.74 limits granted to the major national parties.
AAC and EV have in the past campaigned to elect candidates and parties with positions favourable to animal rights and the environment, respectively, and to oppose those with unfavourable positions. Since 1999, the groups claim to have participated in over 50 campaigns.
In the 2008 general election, AAEVP fielded four candidates, all in Ontario:
| Election | # of candidates | # of votes | % of popular vote | % in ridings run in |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2006 | 1 | 72 | 0.0005% | 0.12% |
| 2008 by-election | 1 | 123 | 0.51% | 0.51% |
| 2008 | 4 | TBD | TBD | TBD |
During the March 17, 2008 by-election, the party managed to improve its vote share, despite low voter turnout.