B.C. Green Party votes in climate activist Emily Lowan as new leader
VICTORIA — Little more than five years ago, Emily Lowan ran and won a spot on the student council at the University of Victoria. On Wednesday, the 25-year-old climate activist celebrated her election as the new leader of the British Columbia Green Party.
“It’s like every molecule in my body is buzzing,” Lowan said during her first question-and-answer session with reporters after learning she was the new leader.
Lowan won with 3,189 first-place votes, ahead of second-place Jonathan Kerr with 1,908 votes, while Adam Bremner-Akins finished third with 128 votes. A total of 8,641 eligible members cast their votes in the ranked-ballot election for a turnout of 61 per cent.
When Lowan won her campaign to become the university’s campaigns and community relations director, she promised to lobby the University of Victoria to “fully” de-invest itself from fossil fuel extraction, transportation, and refinement companies.
