The Primatial election
Bishop Fred Hiltz elected Anglican Primate
Fifth ballot results:
Bishop Fred Hiltz: Clergy: 60 Laity: 81
Bishop Victoria Matthews: Clergy: 56 Laity: 56
CANDIDATES FOR THE PRIMACY
- The Right Reverend George L.R. Bruce
- The Right Reverend Frederick James Hiltz
- The Right Reverend Dr. Bruce H.W. Howe
- The Right Reverend Victoria Matthews
News Release: Anglican bishops nominate four candidates for primatial election
Apr. 19, 2007 -- Niagara Falls, Ont.
Canadian Anglican bishops have nominated four from among their number to be candidates in the election of a successor to Archbishop Andrew Hutchison, Primate of the Anglican Church of Canada.
Archbishop Hutchison, who was elected 12th Primate in 2004, has announced that he will retire after the Anglican General Synod in June. The synod, the Anglican church’s chief governing body, will choose the next primate on June 22 in Winnipeg.
The procedure to elect a Primate, or national leader, is that bishops nominate no more than five candidates at their last meeting before a General Synod. The bishops, however, do not vote in the actual election. Primates are elected by clergy and lay members of the synod.
Bishops nominated for the election of the 13th Primate are:
- Bishop George Bruce of the diocese of Ontario
- Bishop Fred Hiltz of the diocese of Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island
- Bishop Bruce Howe of the diocese of Huron
- Bishop Victoria Matthews of the diocese of Edmonton
Earlier, the bishops considered two motions on the future of the primacy from a task force they previously established. The bishops defeated a motion that would have suspended part of the Canon on the primacy requiring a newly elected Primate to resign his or her diocese. They approved a second motion asking June’s General Synod to establish a task force to undertake a “detailed and comprehensive study of the nature, role, duties and authority of the Primate.”
The Anglican General Synod, which convenes at the Marlborough Hotel in downtown Winnipeg on June 19, is the church's chief legislative and governing body. It is made up of more than 300 delegates, including lay people, deacons, priests and bishops elected from each of the church's 30 dioceses. General Synod meets every three years.
The primatial election will be held at a nearby church on June 22. The new Primate will be officially installed in office the evening of June 25.