Montreal municipal election, 1998
The city of Montreal, Quebec, Canada held municipal elections on November 1, 1998, to elect a mayor and city councillors. Pierre Bourque was returned to a second term as mayor against a divided opposition.
Various suburban communities on the Island of Montreal also held elections on November 1.
Results (incomplete)
Party colours do not indicate affiliation or resemblance to a provincial or a federal party.
Electoral District | Position | Total valid votes | Candidates | Incumbent | ||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Montreal Citizens' Movement | Vision Montreal | New Montreal | Team Montreal | Democratic Coalition | Others | |||||||||||
Mayor | 311,569 | Michel Prescott 46,298 (14.86%) |
Pierre Bourque 141,814 (45.52%) |
Jacques Duchesneau 84,289 (27.05%) |
Jean Doré 32,167 (10.32%) |
Michel Bédard (Montreal 2000) 3,004 (0.96%) Patricia Métivier 2,224 (0.71%) Michel Dugré 989 (0.32%) Laurent Alie 784 (0.25%) |
Pierre Bourque | |||||||||
Ahuntsic | City councillor | 7,794 | Renée Millette 754 (9.67%)[1] |
Hasmig Belleli 3,900 (50.04%) |
Jimmy V. Capogreco Co-listed with Jacques Duchesneau 2,119 (27.19%)[2] |
Pierre Veilleux 793 (10.17%)[3] |
Néomie Larocque de Roquebrune 137 (1.76%)[4] |
Yvan Tremblay (M2000) 91 (1.17%)[5] |
Hasmig Belleli | |||||||
Saint-Sulpice | City councillor | 6,852 | André-Pierre Duchamp 863 (12.59%) |
Maurice Beauchamp 2,686 (39.20%) |
Jean Des Trois Maisons 2,039 (29.76%) |
France Hubert 1,193 (17.41%) |
Frédéric La Brie (M2000) 71 (1.04%) |
Maurice Beauchamp | ||||||||
Fleury | City councillor | 8,334 | Pierre Lapointe 3,015 (36.18%) |
Pierre de Montigny 2,284 (27.41%) |
Martin Blanc 1,355 (16.26%) |
Henry See 111 (1.33%) |
Pierre Lachapelle (Ind.) 1,410 (16.92%) Stéphanie Dubois (M2000) 159 (1.91%) |
|||||||||
Saint-Michel | City councillor | 5,701 | Valentino Nelson 417 (7.31%) |
Paolo Tamburello 3,308 (58.02%) |
Myrlande Pierre 856 (15.01%) |
Pasquale Compierchio 1,015 (17.80%) |
Marcel Firmin (Ind.) 105 (1.84%) |
Paolo Tamburello | ||||||||
Jean-Rivard | City councillor | 5,190 | Solange Allen 323 (6.22%) |
Nicole Roy-Arcelin 2,100 (40.46%) |
Claude Bricault 981 (18.90%) |
Keder Hyppolite 505 (9.73%) |
Daniel Boucher (Ind.) 1,281 (24.68%) |
Daniel Boucher | ||||||||
François-Perrault | City councillor | 5,346 | Vittorio Capparelli 1,277 (23.89%) |
Frank Venneri 2,622 (49.05%) |
Lanise Hayes 780 (14.59%)[6] |
Yasmin Bautista 420 (7.86%)[7] |
Michel Handfield (Ind.) 247 (4.62%)[8] |
Vittorio Capparelli | ||||||||
Parc-Extension | City councillor | 7,458 | Thanasi Dionisopoulos 176 (2.36%) |
Mary Deros 2,954 (39.61%) |
Effie Gournaki 1,123 (15.06%) |
Christos Karidogiannis 765 (10.26%) |
Sylvia d'Apollonia 89 (1.19%) |
Sofoklis Rasoulis (M2000) 2,124 (28.48%) Naveed Anwar 227 (3.04%) |
Vacant (formerly Konstantinos Georgoulis) | |||||||
Laurier | City councillor | 6,125 | Hélène Jolicoeur 1,846 (30.14%) |
Odile Hénault 1,411 (23.04%) |
Louise Roy 1,454 (23.74%) |
Simon Robillard 1,102 (17.99%) |
Jean-Guy Aubé 107 (1.75%) |
Denis Munger (Ind.) 106 (1.73%) Benoît Mainguy (M2000) 99 (1.62%) |
Louise Roy | |||||||
Décarie | City councillor | 5,241 | Sonya Biddle 1,737 (33.14%) |
Michèle Ciampini 1,274 (24.31%) |
Hubert Simart 561 (10.70%) |
Sam Boskey 1,669 (31.85%) |
Sam Boskey | |||||||||
Saint-Pierre | City councillor | 4,486 | Line Hamel 1,757 (39.17%) |
Germain Prégent 2,016 (44.94%) |
Maria-Ines Osses 456 (10.16%)[9] |
Jo Lechay 257 (5.73%) |
Germain Prégent | |||||||||
Saint-Jacques | City councillor | 6,068 | Luc Belhomme 795 (13.10%) |
Diane Cormier 1,826 (30.09%) |
Serge Lareault 934 (15.39%) |
Sammy Forcillo 2,298 (37.87%) |
Robert Saint-Louis 91 (1.50%) |
Alain Deschambault (M2000) 124 (2.04%) |
Sammy Forcillo | |||||||
Hochelaga | City councillor | 4,374 | Marc Lamarche 655 (14.97%) |
Luc Larivée 1,879 (42.96%) |
Danielle Brazeau 1,122 (25.65%) |
Jacques Beaudoin 610 (13.95%) |
Clément Bouchard 108 (2.47%) |
Luc Larivée | ||||||||
Maisonneuve | City councillor | 4,597 | Jacynthe Simard 719 (15.64%)[10] |
Richer Dompierre 2,179 (47.40%) |
Jean Baribeau 1,047 (22.78%)[11] |
Jean Vianney Jutras 652 (14.18%)[12] |
Nathalie Malépart | |||||||||
Louis-Riel | City councillor | 7,537 | Daniel Thérien 790 (10.48%) |
Jacques Charbonneau 4,077 (54.09%) |
Bernard Lauzon 1,890 (25.08%) |
Nathalie Langlois 698 (9.26%) |
David Bédard (M2000) 82 (1.09%) |
Jacques Charbonneau | ||||||||
Longue-Pointe | City councillor | 6,119 | Nicole Boudreau 975 (15.93%) |
Claire St-Arnaud 2,446 (39.97%) |
Martin Dumont 2,177 (35.58%) |
Jean-Jacques Viger 521 (8.51%) |
Claire St-Arnaud | |||||||||
Honoré-Beaugrand | City councillor | 6,583 | Patrice Lorrain-Chenu 943 (14.32%) |
Ivon Le Duc 3,090 (46.94%) |
André Pothier 1,822 (27.68%) |
Pierre Lizotte 728 (11.06%) |
Ivon Le Duc | |||||||||
Tétreauville | City councillor | 6,602 | Danielle Biron 906 (13.72%) |
Jean-Guy Deschamps 3,605 (54.60%) |
Jacques Gendron 1,511 (22.89%)[13] |
Arthur Prince 580 (8.79%) |
Jean-Guy Deschamps |
Results in suburban communities (incomplete)
Dorval
Electoral District | Position | Total valid votes | Candidates | Incumbent | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Winner | Second place | ||||
Mayor | 4,431 | Peter Yeomans 3,602 (81.29%) |
Jan Eisenhardt 829 (18.71%) |
Peter Yeomans | |
East Ward 1 | Councillor | - | Edgar Rouleau (acclaimed) | Edgar Rouleau | |
East Ward 2 | Councillor | - | Emile LaCoste (acclaimed) | Emile LaCoste | |
East Ward 3 | Councillor | - | Raymond Lauzon (acclaimed) | Raymond Lauzon | |
West Ward 1 | Councillor | - | Robert M. Bourbeau (acclaimed) | Robert M. Bourbeau | |
West Ward 2 | Councillor | - | Ian W. Heron (acclaimed) | Ian W. Heron | |
West Ward 3 | Councillor | - | Heather Allard (acclaimed) | Heather Allard |
Source: "West Island mayors returned," Montreal Gazette, 2 November 1998, A19.
Montreal North
Electoral District | Position | Total valid votes | Candidates | Incumbent |
---|---|---|---|---|
Renouveau municipal | ||||
Mayor | - | Yves Ryan (acclaimed) | Yves Ryan | |
District 1 | Councillor | Antonin Dupont (elected) | Antonin Dupont | |
District 2 | Councillor | Michelle Allaire (elected) | Michelle Allaire | |
District 3 | Councillor | Raymond Paquin (elected) | Raymond Paquin | |
District 4 | Councillor | Georgette Morin (elected) | Georgette Morin | |
District 5 | Councillor | Jean-Marc Gibeau (elected) | Jean-Marc Gibeau | |
District 6 | Councillor | Normand Fortin (elected) | Normand Fortin | |
District 7 | Councillor | René Brabant | ||
District 8 | Councillor | James Infantino (elected) | James Infantino | |
District 9 | Councillor | Robert Guerriero (elected) | Robert Guerriero | |
District 10 | Councillor | Andre Coulombe (elected) | Andre Coulombe |
Sources: "Quebec election results stay true to polls," Montreal Gazette, 3 November 1998, A8; Le Gardien, September–October 2001, p. 28. The former source indicates that Ryan was returned by acclamation, though it does not provide council results. The latter source lists all Montreal North councillors at the time of the city's amalgamation into the new megacity of Montreal in 2001; all listed councillors except Brabant were members of the previous Montreal North council (1994–98), and it may be reasonably assumed that they were re-elected in 1998. The sources listed do not clarify if Brabant was elected in 1998 or in a subsequent by-election, nor do they specify if he was a member of Renouveau municipal.
- Saint-Leonard
1998 Saint-Leonard municipal election results: Councillor, Ward Two
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1998 Saint-Leonard municipal election results: Councillor, Ward Three
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1998 Saint-Leonard municipal election results: Councillor, Ward Four
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1998 Saint-Leonard municipal election results: Councillor, Ward Six
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1998 Saint-Leonard municipal election results: Councillor, Ward Seven
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1998 Saint-Leonard municipal election results: Councillor, Ward Eight
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1998 Saint-Leonard municipal election results: Councillor, Ward Ten
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References
- ↑ Millette was a first-time candidate. There is a noted human rights lawyer in Montreal named Renée Millette, though it is not known if this is the same person.
- ↑ Capogreco was a first-time candidate.
- ↑ Veilleux was a first-time candidate.
- ↑ Larocque de Roquebrune was a twenty-two-year-old first-time candidate. Her father, Yves Larocque de Roquebrune, also ran as a Democratic Coalition candidate, and received media attention due to his atypical aristocratic name. See Eric Siblin, "`Aristos' and the like on the campaign trail," Montreal Gazette, 20 October 1998, A8.
- ↑ Tremblay was a first-time candidate.
- ↑ Hayes was a first-time candidate.
- ↑ Bautista was listed as a school commissioner. See Monique Beaudin, "Dore vague on plan's details: Former mayor unveils team for comeback bid," Montreal Gazette, 23 May 1998, p. 5.
- ↑ Handfield, a sociologist, was a member of the environmental group PARI Saint-Michel. He had been a member of the Montreal Citizens' Movement in the early 1990s and briefly joined Vision Montreal in 1994. In the 1998 election, he said that he was running to protest the city's sale of land at the Hippodrome de Montreal to the province. Handfield later took part in a campaign to shut down the Miron garbage landfill. See Linda Gyulai, "Independents' day?: Unaffiliated candidates could wield power," Montreal Gazette, 6 October 1998, p. 1; Michael Mainville, "Dump's days are numbered: Miron's neighbours will be able to breathe a clean sigh of relief," Montreal Gazette, 25 November 1999, p. 5.
- ↑ Osses was a first-time candidate.
- ↑ Simard had previously been a Democratic Coalition-Ecology Montreal candidate in the 1994 municipal election. A vocal supporter of Quebec sovereignty, she was appointed in October 1995 to a provincial committee on possible sovereignty negotiations with the Canadian government. See Rheal Seguin, "Parizeau announces watchdog committee," Montreal Gazette, 7 October 1995, A4.
- ↑ Baribeau was a first-time candidate. He later sought the Bloc Québécois nomination for a 2009 federal by-election in Hochelaga, describing himself as a committed Quebec sovereigntist and social democrat. He did not receive support from the party establishment and was defeated by Daniel Paillé. He has also served as treasurer of SPQ Libre. See Steve Caron, "Une lutte à deux pour l'investiture du Bloc québécois", Nouvelles Hochelaga-Maisonneuve, 18 September 2009, accessed 26 November 2011; Harris McLeod, "Upcoming byelections a referendum on government", Hill Times, 12 October 2009, accessed 26 November 2011; Jean Baribeau, "Enfin dédouanés!", Le Devoir, 17 March 2010, accessed 26 November 2011.
- ↑ Jutras directed the City of Montreal's Department of Recreation and Community Development (renamed in 1993 as the Department of Parks, Recreation and Community-Development Services) for about twenty years, led Montreal's successful bid to host the 1997 Quebec Summer Games, and was committee treasurer for Montreal's bid to host the 2006 Gay Games. He was appointed to the Montreal-Centre regional health board in 2002. The 1998 election was his only bid for public office. See "Department being revamped to improve city's parks," Montreal Gazette, 20 March 1993, A4; Mary Lamey, "Going for gold: Montreal in running for 2006 Gay Games and its economic spinoffs," Montreal Gazette, 28 April 2001, C1; "Goldbloom named to health board," Montreal Gazette, 15 March 2002, A10.
- ↑ There was a Jacques Gendron who ran as a candidate of the Canadian Alliance in the 2000 Canadian federal election and a different Jacques Gendron who ran for mayor of Longueuil in 1982 and in a 1987 by-election. Media reports do not indicate if either was the same person as the 1998 New Montreal candidate.