Michael Baldasaro

Michael A. James Baldasaro (May 23, 1949 – June 9, 2016) was a Canadian political and religious figure from Hamilton, Ontario. He presided over a religious sect known as the Church of the Universe. Baldasaro received significant media coverage over his lifetime for his advocacy on behalf of marijuana legalization, as well as his status as a perennial candidate in numerous Hamilton-area elections.

Michael Baldasaro
Brother Michael Baldasaro
Archbishop of The Church of the Universe
Personal details
Born(1949-05-23)May 23, 1949
DiedJune 9, 2016(2016-06-09) (aged 67)
Hamilton, Ontario
ProfessionReligious leader, marijuana activist
WebsiteChurch of the Universe

The Church of the Universe

Baldasaro was a member of the Church of the Universe, where he was commonly known as Brother Michael. The Church has been in existence since 1969, when it was founded by the late Walter Tucker,[1] and Baldasaro remained continuously active in its operations.[2] Its members use marijuana as a sacrament and previously operated from the Church Headquarters, an abandoned rock quarry near Puslinch, Ontario.

The quarry was named 'Clearwater Abbey', which church members called 'a beautiful oasis' where they could practice naturism and cultivate marijuana.[3] In 2004, after selling small amounts of marijuana on multiple occasions to an undercover police officer at their Barton Street, Hamilton residence, Baldasaro and Tucker were arrested and charged with trafficking. In 2007, they pleaded not guilty to the charges but after a lengthy trial, a jury found them both guilty.[4] At their sentencing hearing in April 2008, Baldasaro, who had 12 previous trafficking convictions, was sentenced to a two-year penitentiary term while Tucker was sentenced to a one-year reformatory term. The Crown also applied to the court to have the property from which they distributed marijuana and their Church forfeited to the federal government as an offence-related property, and the Crown's application was granted.[5][6]

Political activities

Baldasaro, a perennial candidate, saw his support peak in 1988, when he was the sole opponent of incumbent mayor Bob Morrow. He received over 7,500 votes, which was approximately 10% of the vote.[7]

Baldasaro stood in the 2004 Ward 2 by-election, following the resignation of Andrea Horwath, and placed seventh out of eleven candidates with 52 votes.[8] In 2006, Baldasaro again ran for mayor of Hamilton and received 4,520 votes or 3.61% of the total vote.

Baldasaro ran for Parliament three times. In 1984, Baldasaro received 300 votes as a Libertarian candidate in the federal riding of Hamilton West.[7] In 2000, Baldasaro won 573 votes as a Marijuana Party of Canada candidate in Hamilton East.[9] In 2004, Baldasaro received 345 votes as an independent candidate in Hamilton Centre.[10] In 2006, Baldasaro again ran for mayor of Hamilton and received 4,520 votes or 3.61% of the total vote.

Baldasaro also announced he would be a candidate for the Progressive Conservative leadership convention in 1998. He developed a plan to revitalize the party's flagging poll numbers by encouraging direct democracy, pardoning individuals convicted on marijuana possession, cutting government pensions and making the words to O Canada gender neutral.[11][12] Baldasaro was forced to withdraw when he could not meet the filing fee and threatened legal action against the party when they refused to waive $30,000 entrance fee.[13]

Two years later, in 2000, Baldasaro attempted to join the Canadian Alliance leadership race. His plans again involved legalizing marijuana, but this time also favoured abolishing political parties altogether.[14] He openly admitted that the challenge was mostly for publicity, and that he did not expect to win against the likes of Preston Manning or Stockwell Day. He was dissuaded, once more, by the party's $25,000 leadership nomination fee.[14]

In 2007, Baldasaro started a campaign to save Hamilton's Center Mall from conversion into a 'power center' operated by SmartCenters.[15] In 2007, during Hamilton City Council's debate over the renovation of City Hall, Baldasaro and Tucker sent a letter addressed to Mayor Fred Eisenberger and City Council, requesting they move municipal operations to Stelco Tower, in Hamilton's downtown core.[16]

Baldasaro was a candidate for the 2010 Hamilton Municipal Elections, once again running for Mayor.[17] He finished fourth in a field of fifteen candidates, with 2.05% of the vote.[18] In the 2014 Hamilton Municipal Elections Baldasaro stood for Mayor and finished with 2.87% of the vote in a field of twelve candidates.[19]

Death

Baldasaro died of cancer on June 9, 2016, aged 67.[20]

Notes

  1. Nolan, Daniel. "Pot advocate Walter Tucker dies at 79" The Hamilton Spectator, April 27, 2012
  2. Loehndorf, Daniel. "The Canadian Inquisition: History and Beliefs of the Church of the Universe," Cannabis Culture Magazine, Issue 9, Summer 1997.
  3. Loehndorf, 1997.
  4. Brown, Barbara. "Ministers guilty of trafficking 'sacrament'," The Hamilton Spectator, November 30, 2007, Local News (A5)
  5. Clairmont, Susan. "The pot circus comes to the courthouse," The Hamilton Spectator, January 25, 2008, Local News (A2)
  6. Brown, Barbara. "Judge jails pot priests, seizes their church," The Hamilton Spectator, April 25, 2008, Local News (A3)
  7. Peters, Ken. "Pot-puffing candidate could be a spoiler," The Hamilton Spectator, October 23, 1991, Metro Section (B1)
  8. de Almeida, Jacquie and Daniel Nolan. "Bratina, Samson elected to council," The Hamilton Spectator, October 2, 2004, Local News (A1)
  9. The Hamilton Spectator. "Area federal election candidates ready to make a run," The Hamilton Spectator, November 7, 2000, Decision 2000 Canada (D3)
  10. The Hamilton Spectator. "Complete federal election results, Part One," The Hamilton Spectator, June 30, 2004, Canada and World (A8)
  11. Church of the Universe, "Revised O Canada," Michael Baldasaro. http://www.iamm.com/o-canada.htm (Accessed June 3, 2010)
  12. The Canadian Press. "Baldasaro new Tory boss?," The Hamilton Spectator, July 15, 1998, Local News (A10)
  13. Spectator wire services. "Court action threat by Baldasaro on Tory race," The Hamilton Spectator, July 31, 1998, Canada and World (C4)
  14. Prete, Carmelina. "Baldasaro seeks a free shot at the Alliance leadership," The Hamilton Spectator, April 12, 2000, News (A7)
  15. Arnold, Steve. "Centre Mall reno lifts local economy", The Hamilton Spectator, September 27, 2007, Local News (A4)
  16. City of Hamilton, "Correspondence from Brother's Michael Baldasaro and Walter Tucker concerning Stelco Tower," Hamilton City Council. http://www.hamilton.ca/NR/rdonlyres (Accessed June 3, 2010)
  17. City of Hamilton, "Municipal Election – Nominated Candidates," City of Hamilton Corporate Services. http://www.hamilton.ca/CityDepartments/CorporateServices/Clerks/MunicipalElection (Accessed June 3, 2010) Archived August 20, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
  18. City of Hamilton, Ontario, Canada – 2010 Municipal Election Results
  19. City of Hamilton, Ontario, Canada - 2014 Municipal Election Results Archived 2014-11-09 at the Wayback Machine
  20. Teviah Moro (June 9, 2016). "Michael Baldasaro, Hamilton's high priest of pot, dead at 67". The Hamilton Spectator.
gollark: Hypothetically, if I *was* transmitting a file over this, it would probably be nearly done now.
gollark: Goodbye. Unfortunately, I need """"sleep" now.
gollark: Why are there no ringworld earth theorists?
gollark: Why does all the interesting voice chat activity have to happen when I can't really interact with it at all?
gollark: Honestly this is boring, bye.

References

  • The Hamilton Spectator archives 1991 to Present, via Lexis Nexis Academic – Accessed June 3, 2010
  • City of Hamilton Website, public correspondence – Accessed June 3, 2010
  • Church of the Universe Website, to provide extra reference – Accessed June 3, 2010
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.