Blair Longley | |
Office: | Leader of the Marijuana Party |
Term Start: | 2004 |
Predecessor: | Marc-Boris St-Maurice |
Office1: | Chief Officer of the Marijuana Party |
Term Start1: | 2019 |
Office2: | Chief Agent of the Rhinoceros Party of Canada |
Term Start2: | 1985 |
Term End2: | 1987 |
Birth Name: | Blair Timmothy Longley |
Birth Date: | 25 September 1950 |
Birth Place: | Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada |
Party: | Marijuana (2004–present) |
Otherparty: |
|
Blair Timmothy Longley (born September 25, 1950) is a Canadian politician and activist who has served as the leader of the Marijuana Party since 2004.
Blair Longley was born on September 25, 1950, in Vancouver, British Columbia, and grew up in North Vancouver.[1] [2]
Longley attended the founding meeting of the Green Party of Canada at Carleton University in November 1983. He went on to be an active member of the Rhinoceros Party of which he was an official agent from 1985 to 1987.
He joined the Marijuana Party shortly after its foundation and became the party's leader in 2004, following the resignation of Marc-Boris St-Maurice.[3]
He has been a candidate for the House of Commons of Canada on four occasions, for three different parties. He ran for the Green Party in the 1984 election in the riding of Burnaby placing a distant fourth of four candidates with 364 of 58,991 votes. In 1988, he ran against opposition leader John Turner, with no party affiliation, and placed ninth of twelve candidates with 52 of 54,654 votes.
Longley ran for the Bloc Pot in the 2003 Quebec provincial election. He later ran for the Marijuana Party in the riding of North Okanagan—Shuswap in 2004 and placed fifth of eight candidates with 492 of 51,765 votes, then in 2008 in the riding of Hochelaga, Quebec, placing eighth of nine with 183 of 45,683 votes.
Following the legalization of cannabis in Canada, Longley said it was "going to be harder than ever now for the Marijuana Party to exist".[4] Only four candidates ran for the Marijuana Party in the 2019 federal election.[5] Longley was the Marijuana Party's chief agent and leader, and so was ineligible to run in federal elections. Since legalization, Longley shifted the Marijuana Party's message towards scrutinizing the "rapid capitalization" of the drug.[6]