Montreal municipal election, 1982

The 1982 Montreal municipal election took place on November 14, 1982, to elect a mayor and city councillors in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Longtime mayor Jean Drapeau was re-elected for what turned out to be his final term in office, defeating challenger Jean Doré.[1]

Elections were also held in Montreal's suburban communities in November 1982. Most suburban elections were held on November 7.

Results

Mayor
1982 Montreal mayoral election results
Council (incomplete)

Party colours do not indicate affiliation with or resemblance to a provincial or a federal party.

Electoral District Position Total valid votes Candidates   Incumbent
  Montreal Citizens' Movement   Civic Party   Municipal Action Group   Independents
Longue-Pointe City councillor 6,754   Nicole Boudreau
2,793 (41.35%)
Luc Larivée
3,463 (51.27%)
  Nola Poirier
498 (7.37%)
Luc Larivée
1982 Montreal municipal election results: Councillor, Hochelaga
1982 Montreal municipal election results: Councillor, François-Perrault
1982 Montreal municipal election results: Councillor, Gabriel-Sagard
1982 Montreal municipal election results: Councillor, Jean-Talon
1982 Montreal municipal election results: Councillor, Laurier
1982 Montreal municipal election results: Councillor, Sainte-Marie
1982 Montreal municipal election results: Councillor, Ville-Marie
1982 Montreal municipal election results: Councillor, Saint-Henri

Information about the candidates

Municipal Action Group
  • Gino Gentile (Jean-Talon) was a first-time candidate.
Independents
  • Nicola L. Corbo (Jean-Talon) was a first-time candidate.

Results in suburban communities

Dorval

Electoral District Position Total valid votes Candidates Incumbent
Winner Second place Third place Fourth place Fifth place
Mayor 6,302 Peter Yeomans
4,430 (70.30%)
Roger Blais
1,632 (25.90%)
Pierre Santini
240 (3.80%)
Sarto Desnoyers
East Ward 1 Councillor 3,152 Edgar Rouleau
2,141 (67.93%)
Fernand Claude
1,011 (32.07%)
East Ward 2 Councillor 3,201 Emile Lacoste
1,673 (52.26%)
Denise Descary Cardinale
1,528 (47.74%)
East Ward 3 Councillor 2,940 Jules Daigle
2,176 (74.01%)
Gerard Carpentier
764 (25.99%)
Jules Daigle
West Ward 1 Councillor 3,049 Robert M. Bourbeau
1,400 (45.92%)
Robert Viborg
1,010 (33.13%)
Michel Paquette
639 (20.96%)
West Ward 2 Councillor 3,023 Ian W. Heron
1,365 (45.15%)
Louis Lefebvre
756 (25.01%)
Sandra Keightley
590 (19.52%)
Donald Bilney
175 (5.79%)
Vito Lamorte
137 (4.53%)
West Ward 3 Councillor - Frank Richmond (acclaimed) Frank Richmond

Source: Montreal Gazette, November 8, 1982, A6.

Montréal-Nord

Electoral District Position Total valid votes Candidates Incumbent
Renouveau municipal Others
Mayor 26,070 Yves Ryan
22,490 (86.27%)
Suzel Hébert-Godin
3,580 (13.73%)
Yves Ryan
Ward One Councillor 1,856 Antonin Dupont
1,402 (75.54%)
L. Thibault
454 (24.46%)
-
Ward Two Councillor 2,232 Ernest Chartrand
1,887 (84.54%)
Giuseppe Altomare
345 (15.46%)
Ernest Chartrand (incumbent for West Quarter, Seat Two)
Ward Three Councillor 3,126 Pierre Blain
2,552 (81.64%)
Pierre Lacombe
574 (18.36%)
Pierre Blain (incumbent for West Quarter, Seat One)
Ward Four Councillor 1,902 Georgette Morin
1,022 (53.73%)
Morache
571 (30.02%)

Bernard Lebrun
260 (13.67%)

Petit 49 (2.58%)
-
Ward Five Councillor 2,233 Maurice Bélanger
1,644 (73.62%)
André Elliott
509 (22.79%)

Kenyon
80 (3.58%)
Maurice Bélanger (incumbent for Center Quarter, Seat Two)
Ward Six Councillor 1,902 Réal Gibeau
1,521 (79.97%)
Madeleine Aubertin
381 (20.03%)
Réal Gibeau (incumbent for Center Quarter, Seat One)
Ward Seven Councillor 2,101 Jean-Paul Lessard
1,638 (77.96%)
Roland Gagne
463 (22.04%)
Jean-Paul Lessard (incumbent for East Quarter, Seat One)
Ward Eight Councillor 2,188 Normand Fortin
1,694 (77.42%)
Richard Robert
494 (22.58%)
Normand Fortin (incumbent for Center Quarter, Seat Two)
Ward Nine Councillor 1,924 Armand Nadeau
1,483 (77.08%)
Pierre Laperrière
441 (22.92%)
-
Ward Ten Councillor 2,830 André Coulombe
1,394 (49.26%)
Phemens (sp?)
1,112 (39.29%)

Victor-Levy Beaulieu
324 (11.45%)
-
Ward Eleven Councillor 1,503 Raymond Paquin
1,124 (74.78%)
Pierre Robert
229 (15.24%)

Tiberio
150 (9.98%)
-
Ward Twelve Councillor 1,712 Robert Guerrero
1,367 (79.84%)
André Houle
345 (20.15%)
-

Sources: Montreal Gazette, 6 November 1982, A6; Montreal Gazette, 8 November 1982, A6.

Saint-Leonard
1982 Saint-Leonard municipal election results: Councillor, Ward Two
1982 Saint-Leonard municipal election results: Councillor, Ward Three
1982 Saint-Leonard municipal election results: Councillor, Ward Five
1982 Saint-Leonard municipal election results: Councillor, Ward Six
1982 Saint-Leonard municipal election results: Councillor, Ward Eight
1982 Saint-Leonard municipal election results: Councillor, Ward Ten
1982 Saint-Leonard municipal election results: Councillor, Ward Twelve
subsequent by-elections
Anjou council by-election, Lucie Bruneau, 9 September 1984
Saint-Leonard mayoral by-election, 30 September 1984
Saint-Leonard council by-election, Ward Eleven, 21 April 1985

Information about the candidates in suburban communities

Saint-Leonard

Équipe du renouveau de la cité de Saint-Léonard
  • Pierre Paquet (Ward Ten) was a Montreal lawyer during the 1980s. He was elected to council in 1982 in his first bid for public office. When the Équipe du renouveau dissolved in 1984, he joined Raymond Renaud's Ralliement de Saint-Léonard, but was dropped from that party's list before 1986 election amid disputed circumstances. Renaud said that Paquet had been largely inactive on council, while Paquet said he had been blocked for asking too many serious questions.[2]
Union municipale de Saint-Léonard
  • Eduardo di Bennardo (Ward Six) was elected to the Saint-Leonard city council in 1978 as a candidate of the Parti de l'alliance municipale. He was defeated in 1982, running for Union municipal.
  • Claude Beriault (Ward Ten) appears to have been a first-time candidate.

Results in other Montreal-area communities

Longueuil

Jacques Finet of the Parti municipal de Longueuil was elected to his first term as mayor, defeating incumbent Marcel Robidas from the Parti civique de Longueuil. The Parti municipal also won fifteen council seats, as against four for the Parti civique.

Winning candidates are listed in boldface.

Electoral District Position Total valid votes Candidates Incumbent
Parti municipal Parti civique Independent
Mayor 39,301 Jacques Finet
19,157 (48.74%)
Marcel Robidas
19,075 (48.54%)
Jacques Gendron
1,069 (2.72%)[3]
Marcel Robidas
District 1 Councillor 1,813 Serge Rathier
606 (33.43%)
Jacques Bouchard
802 (44.24%)
Henri Bouclin
205 (11.31%)

V. Bourcier
200 (11.03%)
Jacques Bouchard
District 2 Councillor 1,935 Serge Robillard
1,100 (56.85%)
Marcel Tessier
835 (43.15%)
Georges Touten
District 3 Councillor 1,949 Claude Gladu
1,010 (51.82%)
Léonard Boulet
838 (43.00%)
André Marquette
101 (5.18%)
Léonard Boulet
District 4 Councillor 2,412 Roger Ferland
1,436 (59.54%)
Yves Lalonde
877 (36.36%)
H.-P. Germain
99 (4.10%)
Roger Ferland
District 5 Councillor 2,352 Nicole Béliveau
896 (38.10%)
Géraldine Courchesne
773 (32.87%)
Robert H. Tremblay
253 (10.76%)

M. Robillard
221 (9.40%)

G. Dorais
209 (8.89%)
René Leblanc
District 6 Councillor 2,284 Jacques Morissette
1,183 (51.80%)
Richard Defoy
953 (41.73%)
Luc Salinovich
148 (6.48%)
Lorenzo Defoy
District 7 Councillor 1,621 Roger Lacombe
712 (43.92%)
Gérard Thibeault
342 (21.10%)
Paul-Auguste Briand
567 (34.98%)
Paul-Auguste Briand
District 8 Councillor 2,105 Gilles Déry
1,284 (61.00%)
Nicole Therrien
821 (39.00%)
Gilles Déry
District 9 Councillor 2,567 M. Richard
1,200 (46.75%)
Pierre Nantel
1,367 (53.25%)
Pierre Nantel
District 10 Councillor 2,267 Florence Mercier
1,492 (65.81%)
Louis-René Simard
775 (34.19%)
Jacques Finet
District 11 Councillor 1,911 Serge Sévigny
1,016 (53.17%)
Lucien Lebrun
895 (46.83%)
Serge Sévigny
District 12 Councillor 1,506 Lise Sauvé
814 (54.05%)
Jean-Paul Vermette
692 (45.95%)
Jean-Paul Vermette
District 13 Councillor 2,018 Solange Boiteau
676 (33.50%)
Jean-Pierre Trahan
839 (41.58%)
Omer Leclerc
503 (24.93%)
Jeannine Labelle
District 14 Councillor 2,018 Michel Timperio
1,091 (54.06%)
Jeannine Lavoie-Picard
927 (45.94%)
Paul-Émile Paquin
District 15 Councillor 1,899 Florent Charest
810 (42.65%)
Paul-Émile Paquin
707 (37.23%)
M. Turgeon
382 (20.12%)
Jacques Laplante
District 16 Councillor 1,948 Georges Touten
960 (49.28%)
Gaétan Baillargeon
988 (50.72%)
Benoît Danault
District 17 Councillor 1,589 André Létourneau
1,015 (63.88%)
Didier Robidas
574 (36.12%)
André Létourneau
District 18 Councillor 2,208 Jacques Laplante
1,176 (53.26%)
Laurence Juneau
1,032 (46.74%)
new division
District 19 Councillor 2,979 Benoît Danault
1,978 (66.40%)
G. Grenier
1,001 (33.60%)
new division

Source: Le Parti municipal de Longueuil: Le premier mandat 1978 - 1982, Société historique et culturelle du Marigot, accessed January 22, 2014.

References

  1. Election results, 1833-2005 (in French), City of Montreal, accessed May 16, 2011.
  2. "New party enters St. Leonard race," Montreal Gazette, September 25, 1986, p. 14; "Five new candidates join St. Leonard mayor's slate," Montreal Gazette, October 2, 1986, p. 8.
  3. Gendron ran for mayor of Longueuil in 1982 and 1987. During the latter campaign, he was described in the Montreal Gazette as a 49-year-old theatrical production company owner. See James Mennie, "Voters choose mayor Sunday in Longueuil," Montreal Gazette, May 28, 1987, I1. A candidate named Jacques Gendron ran for the House of Commons of Canada in Longueuil as an independent candidate and finished fifth against Liberal Jacques Olivier with 4,548 votes (9.17%); this was presumably the same person. A different Jacques Gendron ran as a candidate of the Canadian Alliance in the 2000 Canadian federal election and for the Quebec Liberal Party in the 2014 provincial election and has twice sought election to Montreal City Council.
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