- Marc-Boris St-Maurice
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Marc-Boris St-Maurice is an activist, political and Canadian musician,[1] who has campaigned for many years for the legalization of cannabis, and to facilitate access to the drug for health reasons. He lives in Montreal.
Contents
Music career
He first became known in the early 1990s as bassist of punk band Grimskunk. It was then that Marc Saint-Maurice received the nickname "Boris".
Political career
In 1998, he founded the Bloc Pot, a Quebec provincial political party whose main goal is the decriminalization and eventual legalization of marijuana complete. In 2000, he created the equivalent of the federal Bloc Pot, Marijuana Party, which ran candidates in federal elections.
In February 2005, Saint-Maurice left the Marijuana Party to join the Liberal Party of Canada, arguing that the chances of reaching the objectives pursued by both parties pro-marijuana were better in the then ruling party. The movement for marijuana had actually made some progress under Liberal rule in the late 2000s, but Paul Martin, who succeeded Jean Chrétien as Prime Minister and Liberal leader, had been more conservative on the issue.
Election results
Provincial Elections (Quebec)
At the general election of November 30, 1998, Saint-Maurice finishes fourth out of nine candidates with 985 votes, or 3% of the vote in the riding of Mercier. In an election on 1 October 2001, Saint-Maurice finished 5th out of five candidates, winning 323 votes for the Bloc Pot in the riding of Jonquiere, left vacant by Premier Lucien Bouchard resigned and won on that occasion by Françoise Gauthier Party Quebec Liberal.
Federal Elections (Canada)
On September 11, 2000, in a by-election in Okanagan-Coquihalla, British Columbia, Saint-Maurice finished 6th out of eight candidates with 438 votes as an independent candidate. Stockwell Day was elected to the Canadian Alliance.
In the elections of November 27, 2000, Saint-Maurice finished in 4th place with 2156 votes for the Marijuana Party in the riding of Laurier-Sainte-Marie (Quebec), behind leader Gilles Duceppe, the Bloc Québécois, Jean-Philippe Côté, PLC and Dylan Perceval-Maxwell's Green Party.
On May 13, 2002, during a partial in St-Léonard-St-Michel (Quebec), St-Maurice received 197 votes and finished last for the Marijuana Party.
In the elections of June 28, 2004 in Lasalle-Emard (Quebec), he finished sixth and last for the Marijuana Party with 349 votes in the constituency of Prime Minister Paul Martin.
Compassion Club and activism
Saint-Maurice has also experienced trouble with the law when he was a full time volunteer at the Compassion Club, an organization that provides marijuana to seriously ill individual with a medical prescription. The first Montreal Compassion Club, based on the example of those in Toronto and British Columbia was opened on Rachel, Montreal, near a police station.
Following a police raid, St. Maurice and his colleague Alexander Neron were accused of possession and trafficking of narcotics. The lawyers pleaded that the Canadian legislation left a legal loophole, allowing certain individuals to possess cannabis for medicinal purposes, but not supplying the product in question. Judge Gilles Cadieux halted the proceedings against the two men in December 2002.
References
- John David Gravenor; Kristian Gravenor (2003). Montreal: The Unknown City. Arsenal Pulp Press. pp. 185. ISBN 1-55152-119-9. http://books.google.ca/books?id=QhE6xQ-C2-sC&pg=PT185.
- "CBC News - Montreal - Raids highlight gaps in medical marijuana program". CBC. June 6, 2010. http://www.cbc.ca/canada/montreal/story/2010/06/04/mtl-compassion-club-raids-debate.html. Retrieved 2010-06-07.
- "Quatre Clubs Compassion fermés à Montréal". La Presse. http://www.cyberpresse.ca/actualites/quebec-canada/justice-et-faits-divers/201006/03/01-4286587-quatre-clubs-compassion-fermes-a-montreal.php. Retrieved 2010-06-07.
- "Marijuana Party founder joins Liberals". CBC. March 1, 2005. http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2005/02/28/marijuana-050228.html. Retrieved 2010-06-07.
Outgoing: Liberal majority Result: Liberal minority Bloc Québécois (Gilles Duceppe) · Canadian Action (Connie Fogal, candidates) · Christian Heritage (Ron Gray, candidates) · Communist (Miguel Figueroa, candidates) · Conservative (Stephen Harper, candidates) · Green (Jim Harris, candidates) · Independent candidates · Liberal (Paul Martin, candidates) · Marijuana (Marc-Boris St-Maurice, candidates) · Marxist–Leninist (Sandra L. Smith, candidates) · New Democrats (Jack Layton, candidates) · Progressive Canadian (Ernie Schreiber, candidates)
Bold indicates parties with members elected to the House of Commons.Results · Opinion Polling · Timeline Outgoing: Liberal majority Result: Liberal majority Bloc Québécois (Gilles Duceppe) · Canadian Action (Paul Hellyer, candidates) · Canadian Alliance (Stockwell Day, candidates) · Christian Heritage (de-registered, candidates) · Communist (Miguel Figueroa, candidates) · Green (Joan Russow, candidates) · Liberal (Jean Chrétien, candidates) · Marijuana (Marc-Boris St-Maurice, candidates) · Marxist–Leninist (Sandra L. Smith, candidates) · Natural Law (Neil Paterson, candidates) · New Democrats (Alexa McDonough, candidates) · Progressive Conservative (Joe Clark, candidates)
Bold indicates parties with members elected to the House of Commons.Results Categories:- Living people
- Cannabis activists
- Canadian political party leaders
- Bloc pot politicians
- Marijuana Party of Canada candidates for the Canadian House of Commons
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