Four mayoral candidates gone from race
Nomination signatures kill election hopes for long-shot challengers
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 22/09/2010 (5718 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
Some of Winnipeg’s long-shot mayoral candidates now have no shot at all.
After a tense scramble Tuesday that saw several candidates troll the downtown for last-minute nomination signatures, four were disqualified — Avery Petrowski, Nancy Thomas, Ed Ackerman and Ron Dyck.
Ackerman, a filmmaker, challenged his disqualification well into the evening, retiring into the bowels of the clerk’s office with chief returning officer Marc Lemoine to go over each name on his forms. Ackerman was short at least 80 signatures.
Mayoral candidates needed at least 250 signatures from registered voters in order to get on the ballot, and the deadline to submit nomination papers was 4:30 p.m.
Council candidates need only 25 signatures and every one of the 51 candidates made the cut.
Petrowski, a young West Broadway resident, was short about 70 signatures, in part because he canvassed students who likely aren’t on the voters’ list. He was philosophical about the disappointment.
“My target audience was people who don’t normally vote. It highlights the exact reason I decided to do this,” he said. “I’m not done.”
Others, including Nancy Thomas and candidate Rav Gill, arrived early in the afternoon to drop off their papers and raced out for more signatures when dozens were disqualified. Gill squeaked in but Thomas did not.
“It’s not like not making it on American Idol,” said Gill, who canvassed for signatures in some condo buildings on Bannatyne Avenue. “But it was a little nerve-wracking.”
The last-minute disqualifications reduce the mayoral field to four candidates — Gill, Brad Gross, Sam Katz and Judy Wasylycia-Leis.
None of council’s 12 incumbents — Katz and 11 councillors — will run unopposed. That means there will be no acclamations in Winnipeg for two straight elections.
On Wednesday evening, city election officials will hold a lottery to determine the order candidates will appear on the Oct. 27 ballot.
maryagnes.welch@freepress.mb.ca
Big-name support
Candidates filed their nomination papers Tuesday. Here are some well-known Winnipeggers who signed them.
MAYOR
Judy Wasylycia-Leis:
Kristine Barr, school trustee
Linda Asper, former NDP cabinet minister
Wayne Helgason, head of the Social Planning Council of Winnipeg
Jean Friesen, former NDP cabinet minister
Sandi Mowat, nurses' union president
Sonia Kowalewich, former head of the provincial NDP
Mike Davidson, CUPE Local 500 president
Muriel Smith, former NDP cabinet minister -- Liam Martin, NDP organizer
Rebecca Blaikie, NDP organizer
Marianne Cerilli, former NDP MLA and mayoral candidate
Fred Morris, frequent candidate and civic affairs gadfly
Sam Katz:
Gord McNaught, owner of McNaught Motors
Scott Taylor, former Free Press sports columnist
Alex Forrest, president of the firefighters' union
Jackie Sneesby, school trustee
Trevor Sprague, former Winnipeg Chamber of Commerce chair and one-time Alliance candidate
Ken Lee, Conservative party treasurer
Brent Olynyk, former provincial Tory candidate
Jeff Browaty, councillor for North Kildonan
Dale Smeltz, former provincial Conservative party president
Heather Stefanson, Tory MLA
COUNCIL CANDIDATES
St. Charles
Grant Nordman: Kelly de Groot, provincial Tory candidate
St. James-Brooklands
Deanne Crothers: Former Manitoba Federation of Labour president Rob Hilliard, NDP-endorsed Daniel McIntyre candidate Keith Bellamy
River Heights-Fort Garry
John Orlikow: Liberal MP Anita Neville, school trustee Jackie Sneesby, Liberal candidate Paul Hesse, NDP strategist Leslie Turnbull
St. Norbert
Louise May: Former NDP cabinet minister Linda Asper
Justin Swandel: Tory MP Rod Bruinooge
Mynarski
Jenny Motkaluk: Trevor Sprague, former Winnipeg Chamber of Commerce chair and one-time Alliance candidate
Ross Eadie: Ron Wasylycia-Leis
Old Kildonan
Devi Sharma: Coun. Mike O'Shaughnessy
St. Boniface
Dan Vandal: Couns. Harvey Smith and John Orlikow
Daniel McIntyre
Keith Bellamy: Justice Minister Andrew Swan, former NDP cabinet minister Jean Friesen
Cindy Gilroy-Price: Ernie Gilroy, former Glenn Murray adviser, now head of the Floodway Authority
Point Douglas
Mike Pagtakhan: Liberal MLA Kevin Lamoureux
Charleswood
Paula Havixbeck: Tory MLA Heather Stefanson, David Filmon
Number of confirmed council candidates: 51
Number of women candidates: 11
Number whose nomination papers were rejected: 4