| |||||||||
The National Alternative Party was created to fill the lack of a united party on the right in Canada. Registered with Elections Canada in February 2002, this Alma, Quebec-based party was launched on March 4, 2003 with a press conference at the Charles Lynch Press Gallery in the House of Commons by the Leader of the Party, Gilles Lavoie. Lavoie was an independent candidate at federal elections of November 2000.
The National Alternative dissolved itself in March 2004, when Stephen Harper was elected Leader of the Conservative Party of Canada. Gilles Lavoie was candidate for the Conservative Party of Canada in the 2004 Canadian Federal Election.
The party's website is no longer available.
This is a new political approach based upon the right of MPs to vote freely and represent the interests of their constituents while respecting the differences between regions.
See also: List of political parties in Canada