Natural Law Party of Canada candidates in the 1997 Canadian federal election


The Natural Law Party of Canada ran several candidates in the 1997 federal election, none of whom were elected.

[Quebec]

[LaSalle-Émard]: Russell Guest

Russell Guest became involved in transcendental meditation in the late 1960s, when he was a student at the University of British Columbia. He later became a transcendental meditation teacher and served on the board of directors for the Transcendental Movement in Canada. Guest paid tribute to the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi upon the latter's death 2008, telling a Toronto Star reporter that the Maharishi "lived in bliss" and "always said that the underlying nature of life is bliss."
Guest ran for the Natural Law Party in two federal elections and one Quebec provincial election.
ElectionDivisionPartyVotes%PlaceWinner
1993 federalParry Sound-MuskokaNatural Law2630.576/8Andy Mitchell, Liberal
1994 provincialArgenteuilNatural Law2240.625/5Régent Beaudet, [Quebec Quebec Liberal Party|Liberal Party|Liberal]
1997 federalLaSalle-ÉmardNatural Law4530.855/5Paul Martin, Liberal Party

[Notre-Dame-de-Grâce—Lachine]: Ronald Bessette

Bessette was a perennial candidate for the Natural Law Party. He listed himself as an architectural technician in the 1997 election.
He first sought election to the House of Commons of Canada in the 1993 election, and received 551 votes in Lachine—Lac-Saint-Louis for a sixth-place finish against Liberal Party candidate Clifford Lincoln. He was listed as residing in Pierrefonds, Montreal, Quebec at the time.
Bessette ran as a candidate of the Natural Law Party of Quebec in the 1994 Quebec provincial election, and received 226 votes in Marguerite-Bourgeoys for a sixth-place finish against Liberal Liza Frulla.
He later campaigned for the Legislative Assembly of Ontario in that province's 1995 provincial election, and received 263 votes for a sixth-place finish in Windsor—Sandwich. The winner was Sandra Pupatello of the Liberal. A newspaper report from the period lists him as residing in North York, Toronto, Ontario.
He received 569 votes in the 1997 election, finishing fifth against Liberal candidate Marlene Jennings.

[Ontario]

Eglinton—Lawrence">Eglinton—Lawrence (federal electoral district)">Eglinton—Lawrence: Robyn Brandon

Brandon was an office worker with an interest in social methods of stress reduction. She received 397 votes, finishing fifth against Liberal incumbent Joe Volpe.

Ottawa—Vanier">Ottawa—Vanier (federal electoral district)">Ottawa—Vanier: Roger Bouchard

Bouchard is an author, and has worked with l'Association des auteurs Franco-ontariens. He argued that the NLP would bring a "peaceful revolution" to Canada, and spoke in favour of an all-party government with experts from various social fields. During the 1993 campaign, he wrote that he had been a practitioner of transcendental meditation for twenty years.
ElectionDivisionPartyVotes%PlaceWinner
1993 federalOttawa—VanierNLP4380.908/10Jean-Robert Gauthier, Liberal
1997 federalOttawa—VanierNLP3306/8Mauril Belanger, Liberal Party

Parry Sound-Muskoka">Parry Sound—Muskoka (federal electoral district)">Parry Sound-Muskoka: Rick Alexander

Rick Alexander is from Huntsville and at one time worked as a teacher. He ran for the Natural Law Party in two federal elections and one provincial election.
He was forty-two years old in the 1993 campaign, lived in Ottawa, and was a project manager for the Heaven on Earth Development Corporation, the centre of the transcendental meditation movement in Canada. He called for an all-party system of government and said that centralization and inefficient social programs had caused the national deficit.
ElectionDivisionPartyVotes%PlaceWinner
1993 federalHuron—BruceNatural Law2430.497/7Paul Steckle, Liberal
1995 provincialLanark—RenfrewNatural Law2370.667/7Leo Jordan, Progressive Conservative
1997 federalParry Sound-MuskokaNatural Law1330.317/7Andy Mitchell, Liberal Party

Sudbury">Sudbury (federal electoral district)">Sudbury: Roy Hankonen

Roy Hankonen described himself as a supervisor. He received 247 votes, finishing sixth against Liberal incumbent Diane Marleau.

[Manitoba]

Larry Decter ([Winnipeg South])

Decter was born in Winnipeg, Manitoba. He has a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Manitoba, and also attended Maharishi European Research University in Switzerland. He worked as a researcher and teacher with the transcendental meditation movement.
Decter campaigned for the Natural Law Party in the 1993 and 1997 Canadian elections. He resided in Huntsville, Ontario during the 1993 campaign, and contested Windsor West in the same province. During this campaign, he has quoted as asserting, "There is no unemployment in nature; there are no unnecessary atoms in the universe. Everything has a place and a purpose. Yet we human beings, the most highly evolved species on the planet, have somehow lost touch with the unlimited intelligence and organizing power of natural law." He received 138 votes, finishing sixth against longtime Liberal incumbent Herb Gray.
He received 153 votes in 1997, finishing sixth against Liberal Reg Alcock.
Decter is likely related to Ron Decter, a prominent figure for the Natural Law Party in Manitoba.

[Saskatchewan]

Patrick James Coulterman ([Wanuskewin])

Coulterman was a maintenance supervisor at Saskatoon's Community Clinic during the 1990s. He wrote against genetically modified foods shortly before the 1997 election, arguing that they were a danger to the health of Canadians and criticizing the provincial government for funding Ag-West Biotech. Others criticized the accuracy of his arguments, noting they were drawn largely from NLP-related sources.
He advocated transcendental meditation to resolve tensions in Kosovo in 1999, claiming that president Joaquim Chissano of Mozambique has successfully used the technique to end twenty years of civil war in his country.
ElectionDivisionPartyVotes%PlaceWinner
1993 federalSaskatoon—Clark's CrossingNLP1886/8Chris Axworthy, New Democratic Party
1997 federalCalgary WestNLP1380.426/6Maurice Vellacott, Reform

[Alberta]

Frank Haika ([Calgary West])

Haika was 48 years old during the 1997 election. He has a Bachelor of Commerce degree in Accounting from the University of Calgary and credentials from the Canadian Securities Institute, and works as an investment adviser. He has also taught transcendental meditation. Haika wrote in support of mandatory labels for genetically modified food in 1996. In 1999, he argued that yogic flyers could bring peace to troubled areas of the world such as Kosovo.
He campaigned for the Natural Law Party in two federal elections, and also ran for the Natural Law Party of Alberta in 1997. He unexpectedly endorsed his opponent, Premier Ralph Klein, in the 1997 provincial election and called for Klein to be re-elected as a reward for his success in balancing the provincial budget.
ElectionDivisionPartyVotes%PlaceWinner
1993 federalCalgary WestNLP4830.846/8Stephen Harper, Reform
1997 provincialCalgary-ElbowNLP755/5Ralph Klein, Progressive Conservative
1997 federalCalgary WestNLP2936/6Rob Anders, Reform