Lemon Party Explained

Lemon Party of Canada
Colorcode:yellow
Leader:Pope Terence I
Spokesperson:Mary-Gabrielle Blay II
Ideology:Joke political party
Country:Canada
Native Name:Parti Citron du Canada
Native Name Lang:French
Founder:Denis R. Patenaude
Slogan:For a bitter Canada
Founded:January 8, 1987
Position:Big tent
Colours:Yellow
Seats1 Title:Seats in the Senate
Seats1:
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Seats2 Title:Seats in the House of Commons
Seats2:
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Seats3 Title:Seats in the National Assembly
Seats3:
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  1. ff0000
Country2:Quebec

The Lemon Party of Canada (French: Parti Citron) was a frivolous Canadian political party which has operated on a federal level, and provincially in Quebec. The party was registered on January 8, 1987[1] by then-leader Denis R. Patenaude, and deregistered on November 14, 1998 for failing to have at least ten candidates stand for election.[2] [3] The party was headed by "Pope Terence the First", whose existence is unconfirmed. According to Jean-Simon Poirier, Terence is "sort of a mystical, mythical person" who doesn't spend much time in Canada. "The interesting thing about him is he's never in the country. He's always touring around other countries," he said, adding that at present Terence was visiting southwestern Siberia. Their official agent is Mary-Gabrielle Blay II.

Its 2004 national convention produced a platform of policies which were "Placed in small green plastic boxes and sold to industrial pig farms in Mexico", according to a large party spokeswoman. The subsequent electoral campaign, under the slogan "For a bitter Canada", received minor, but sympathetic, media coverage.[4] Its last press release was published online five days prior to the 2006 Canadian elections, ridiculing both Liberal Paul Martin and Conservative Stephen Harper.[5] The Lemon Party prided itself on its record on fiscal discipline and in pushing for economic growth. Its economic plan was allegedly authored by Montreal economist Ianik Marcil. Members of the Lemon Party refer to themselves as "lemonistas" and "lemons".[6]

The Lemon Party has not been registered as a political party since the early 1990s, when it was registered only in Quebec. They were going to be re-registered in 2004 although they did not fill out the requisite paperwork in time. They thought the deadline for registering candidates was June 9, when in reality it was two days prior to that. A member of the party (Jean-Simon Poirier) admitted that the party had only itself to blame for the predicament. "We're not very organized. We're like Liberals," he said.

Policies and platforms

The Lemon Party pledged to:

Slogans and quotes from party members

Election results

General election
  1. of candidates
  1. of seats won
% of popular vote
1989[7] 1100.22%
19941000.10%

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Political History of Quebec (January). Quebec Politique.
  2. Web site: Partis politiques. Quebec Politique.
  3. Web site: Political History of Quebec (November). Quebec Politique.
  4. News: Analysis & Commentary: The Heirs of the Rhino Party . Dan Brown. 19 June 2004. . https://web.archive.org/web/20071018033129/http://www.cbc.ca/canadavotes2004/analysiscommentary/columns/danbrown190604.html . 2007-10-18.
  5. Web site: 2006 press release. agora.ulaval.ca . dead. https://archive.today/20121129185344/http://agora.ulaval.ca/~phauo/en/press06.html. 2012-11-29.
  6. Web site: 2007-10-18 . CBC - Canada Votes 2004 - Analysis and Commentary - Campaign Watch - Dan Leger . 2023-10-21 . https://web.archive.org/web/20071018033129/http://www.cbc.ca/canadavotes2004/analysiscommentary/columns/danbrown190604.html . 2007-10-18 .
  7. Web site: Élections générales. Directeur général des élections du Québec. 19 June 2007. 5 October 2007. 18 October 2007. https://web.archive.org/web/20071018021308/http://dgeq.qc.ca/fr/resultats_gen.asp?even=1989&mode=n5&section=resultats_gen#resul. dead.