Pubdate: Fri, 11 Aug 2000 Source: Calgary Herald (CN AB) Copyright: 2000 Calgary Herald Contact: P.O. Box 2400, Stn. M, Calgary, Alberta T2P 0W8 Fax: (403) 235-7379 Website: http://www.calgaryherald.com/ Forum: http://forums.canada.com/~calgary Author: Gina Teel MARIJUANA PARTY TARGETS DAY, CLARK The Canadian Marijuana Party has high hopes of bringing down Stockwell Day and Joe Clark in their Sept.11 federal byelections. The four-year-old Quebec-based party is running candidates in British Columbia and Nova Scotia against the leaders of the Canadian Alliance and federal Progressive Conservative parties with a platform centered on legalizing cannabis and softening hemp regulations. "We believe that the only way to end cannabis prohibition and liberalize hemp regulations is by forcing a minority government." says party strategist Sotos Petrides. "We are going to lead the charge with the seniors who know what a strong hold the pharmaceutical companies have on them and the young who grew up watching their parents smoke cannabis and aren't afraid of it." Marc-Boris St. Maurice, 31, of the Quebec punk band Grim Skunk will take on Day in the Okanagan, Petrides said. Vince Gorman, 66, also known as "manifold chef" for refining the fine art of cooking on an automobile manifold while driving, will battle Clark in Kings-Hants. Both will run as independents representing the Canadian Marijuana Party, which applied for but has yet to receive official party status. Petrides, former publisher of the industry magazine Commercial Hemp, says both candidates have been arrested for using cannabis and feel strongly that its use is not a matter of morality but of human rights, Boris St. Maurice expects Day to "stick to true political form and ignore my very existence," but he intends to force Day to address the recent Ontario court decision that indicated a rewriting of Canada's cannabis laws is in order. "My first question to him would be: As prime minister, how exactly would you rewrite that law and what it would mean for me and the people I represent." Petrides, meanwhile, sees Clark as much less of a threat. "Joe Clark needs to take everyone into consideration right about now." Calgary Southeast Alliance MP Jason Kenney, speaking for Day, said laughingly: "That's the majesty of the democratic process - it's open to one and all." "It's totally legitimate, if a single-interest group wants to pursue its policy in the public forum - that's what the Green Party does." - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck