Politics·Video

Greens won't run candidate in Burnaby South as 'leader's courtesy' to Singh: May

The Green party will not run a candidate against NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh in the riding of Burnaby South.

Liberals have yet to nominate candidate but say they will run against Singh

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh speaks during a media availability in the House of Commons foyer on Parliament Hill in Ottawa on Tuesday, June 12, 2018.
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh can expect to face opposition from the federal Liberals when he runs for his own seat in Burnaby South. (Sean Kilpatrick/Canadian Press)

The Green party will not run a candidate against NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh in the riding of Burnaby South.

Green Leader Elizabeth May says the decision is an extension of a "leader's courtesy," a long-standing Canadian parliamentary tradition that facilitates a newly elected party leader's entry to the House of Commons in an unopposed byelection.

CBC first reported that the Greens had decided to take this route last month but that Singh was unlikely to get the same treatment from the other federal parties. 

She says in a statement the Greens believe it is right to step aside to allow the leader of "an important part of the political spectrum" to serve in Parliament.

Singh announced his candidacy for the federal riding after New Democrat MP Kennedy Stewart indicated he was stepping aside to run for mayor of Vancouver.

The Liberal and Conservative parties have not announced candidates in the riding, but the Liberals have said they will contest the byelection.

May received the leader's courtesy in 2008 when then-Liberal leader Stephane Dion chose not to run a candidate against her in Central Nova. She extended the same gesture to Dion.