Green MP Jenica Atwin crossing the floor to join the Liberals - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 21, 2024, 05:09 PM | Calgary | -10.8°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Politics

Green MP Jenica Atwin crossing the floor to join the Liberals

Fredericton MP Jenica Atwin bolted from the Green party caucus today, crossing the floor of the House of Commons to join the governing Liberals.

A senior Liberal source said Atwin initiated the floor-crossing several weeks ago

MP Jenica Atwin speaks to the media in Fredericton on Tuesday, October 22, 2019. (Keith Minchin/The Canadian Press)

Fredericton MP Jenica Atwin bolted from the Green party caucus today, crossing the floor of the House of Commons to join the governing Liberals.

Atwin accomplished a historic breakthrough for the Greens in the last election,winning their first ever seat in Atlantic Canada when she defeated Liberal incumbent Matt DeCourcey in Fredericton. Atwin,along with Paul Manly and former leader Elizabeth May, gave the Greens three MPs and their largest caucus in history.

Atwin'sdeparture is a setback for a party that has long sought more influence in Parliament and a coup for the Liberals as they look to rally progressive voters around the party ahead of a possible fall election.

In announcing her shock move today, Atwin, a former teacher and communityorganizer in Oromocto, N.B.,said there were too many "distractions" in the Green Party and she wanted to work in a more "supportive and collaborative" environment.

WATCH: MPJenica Atwinleaves Greens to join Liberals

Jenica Atwin leaves Green Party to become new Liberal MP in New Brunswick

3 years ago
Duration 1:44
New Brunswick MP Jenica Atwin talks about crossing the floor to join the Liberal Party.

Recent party infighting over issues like the Israeli-Palestinianconflict took her away from the issues that matter most to her constituents, Atwinsaid.

"It certainly played a role," she said, when asked whether a recent disputeover Green Party Leader Annamie Paul's public statements about the Middle Easternconflict pushed her to join the Liberals. Paulhas been accused of ignoring established party policy on Israel.

At a press conference alongside Intergovernmental Affairs Minister Dominic LeBlanctoday, Atwin said thatwhile she'll stand for a different party in the comingelection, "my priorities, my values remain the same."

She said she was never particularly partisan."For me,it was always difficult to choose whichparty flag to fly over my head."

She vowed tocontinue her fight for aggressive climate action and to oppose fracking and projects like the Trans Mountain pipeline expansion, which the government is in the process of building afteryears of delays.

"I haven't changed my views," she said.

Atwin said the Liberals offered nothing in exchange for her floor-crossing and she was not promised a cabinet post.

"We haven't discussed anything like that,"she said."One step at a time."

A senior Liberal source saidAtwin initiated the floor-crossing several weeks ago when she reached out to the governing party.

The source saidAtwin expressed comfort with the Liberals' approach tocore issues such as the environment and reconciliation. Atwin's husband Chris Atwin is a councillor with the Oromocto First Nation.

A fracture over the Middle East

Atwin's departure comes after the Israeli-Palestinian conflict exposed fault lines in the Green party ranks.

Atwin directly challengedPaul's position on the conflict, saying Paul's call for de-escalation and a return to dialogue between the two was "totally inadequate."

"I stand with Palestine and condemn the unthinkable airstrikes in Gaza. End Apartheid!" Atwin tweeted on May 11.

The day before, Manly tweeted that the removal of Palestinian families from the East Jerusalem neighbourhood of Sheikh Jarrah "is ethnic cleansing."

More recently, theGreen executive committee voted not to renew the contract of one of Paul's senior advisers.

The adviser, Noah Zatzman, had expressed solidarity with Israel in a May 14 social media post that accused many politicians, including unspecified Green MPs, of discrimination and antisemitism, sparking a letter-writing campaign calling for his removal.

After Atwin's tweet and pushback from Manly, Zatzmanresponded with a Facebook post stating that Greens "will work to defeat you and bring in progressive climate champions who are antifa and pro-LGBT and pro-Indigenous sovereignty and Zionists!!!!!"

Separately, two party executives recently announced they would step down early. One of them wasJohn Kidder, a vice-president on the party's governing body and husband to MP and former leader Elizabeth May.

In a media statement, May and Manly said they were "heartbroken" by Atwin's decision and thatZatzman was to blame.

"Unfortunately, the attack against Ms. Atwin by the Green Party leader's chief spokesperson on May 14th created the conditions that led to this crisis," the two said. The MPsadded that, while they were frustrated,they have "no intention of leaving the Green Party of Canada."

Speaking to reporters later Thursday, Paul said she was blindsided by Atwin's departure and only learned about the floor-crossing from media reports.

Paul said that while the party supports cross-party cooperation and rejects excessivepartisanship, she said there are "significant differences" between the Green and Liberal parties and calledAtwin'sfloor-crossinga "disappointment."

Paul said a byelectionshould becalled in Fredericton because voters there chose to elect a Green MP in the 2019 campaignand Atwin'sflip has now denied them that representation.

Paul said she doesn't believe the internal squabbling over Israel was what pushed Atwin to switch sides. She said she understands Atwin was in talks with the Liberals for "numerous weeks," before the internal debate overMiddle East issues flared up. She refused to say ifZatzman is still a member of her team.

In the 2019 campaign,Atwin said left-leaning voters felt "betrayed" when Trudeau broke a promise to reform the electoral system and said they were now looking at the Greens as a more genuine progressive choice.

"We think we're that option," she said."We think we're the ones to look to for voters looking for change, and looking to get better outcomes than what we've seen in the last four years."

She also accused Trudeau of "fear-mongering"when he warned voters that a Liberal-Green vote split would help elect a federal Conservative government.

But she welcomed his promise during that campaign to pressure the New Brunswick provincial government of Premier BlaineHiggsto fund abortions at Fredericton's Clinic 554.

"It is interesting that he hasn't brought it up before, but support is support,"she said at the time. "I want to see Clinic 554 stay open ... so I appreciate that he's now stepping forward. It would have been nice to see during the Gallant government as well."

Atwin criticizedthe government as recently as last month,saying the latest federal budgetshows the governing party"lacks the courage required to lead this country into a bold, new future."

"This budget is just another example of symbolism over substance, where we maintain the status quo under the guise of transformation," she said, addingthe government has not made meaningful progress on climate issues or reconciliation with Indigenous peoples during its nearly six years in office.

Atwin said Thursdaya lot has changed since she made those criticisms of Trudeauin the 2019 campaign, adding that the COVID-19 pandemic has dramatically altered the political dynamic.

"Canada is different. We're different," she said.

Asked about Atwin's past criticisms, LeBlanc said there's room for disagreement within the party. "All ofmy caucus colleagues don't have identical views on all of these issues all of the time," he said.

Wearing what he described as a "big smile," LeBlanc said Atwin's defection was a "very, very happy moment" for the Liberal Party. "We're convinced she'll make an enormous contribution to our government and the people of Canada," he said.

With files from the Canadian Press

Add some good to your morning and evening.

Your weekly guide to what you need to know about federal politics and the minority Liberal government. Get the latest news and sharp analysis delivered to your inbox every Sunday morning.

...

The next issue of Minority Report will soon be in your inbox.

Discover all CBC newsletters in theSubscription Centre.opens new window

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Google Terms of Service apply.