Alexandra Mendès

Alexandra Mendès MP (born November 3, 1963) is a Canadian Liberal politician, currently serving as the Member of Parliament for the riding of Brossard—Saint-Lambert since 2015. She previously served in the House of Commons from 2008 until 2011 as the MP for the Montreal riding of Brossard—La Prairie.

Alexandra Mendès

Member of the Canadian Parliament
for Brossard—Saint-Lambert
Assumed office
October 19, 2015
Preceded byHoang Mai
Member of the Canadian Parliament
for Brossard—La Prairie
In office
October 14, 2008  May 2, 2011
Preceded byMarcel Lussier
Succeeded byHoang Mai
Personal details
Born (1963-11-03) November 3, 1963
Lisbon, Portugal
Political partyLiberal
ResidenceBrossard, Quebec
ProfessionCommunications Officer

Biography

Mendès worked as a constituency assistant to Jacques Saada, who served as a Liberal MP for Brossard—La Prairie from 1997 to 2006. She also taught at the Brossard Portuguese School.[1] Mendès was a Quebec assistant to Bob Rae for a period of eight months during his leadership campaign. She has worked for fifteen years at a settlement organization for new immigrants and refugees at Maison Internationale de la Rive-Sud.[2]

She was elected to the House of Commons in 2008, defeating Bloc Quebecois MP Marcel Lussier, who had defeated her former boss Saada in the previous election. She initially came in second by 102 votes, but a recount ordered by Elections Canada resulted in her winning by a margin of 69 votes.[3] She was defeated in the 2011 election by NDP candidate Hoang Mai.

In August 2011, Mendès announced her candidacy for the presidency of the Liberal Party of Canada.[4] She was defeated in her race for the presidency by Mike Crawley, but remained a committed member of the party, making appearances on CTV and CBC's Power and Politics representing the party. In June 2012, Mendès became President of the Liberal Party's Quebec wing, the Liberal Party of Canada (Quebec).

In the 2015 federal election, Mendès was the Liberal candidate in the newly created riding of Brossard—Saint-Lambert, again facing off against Mai. She defeated Mai, returning to the House of Commons.

On April 6, 2017 Mendés moved a motion "That the House do now proceed to Orders of the Day" during debate on a Question of Privilege of an instance of Members of Parliament having their Rights as Members denied. Such a motion during a debate on a Question of Privilege had never been made before in Canadian Parliamentary History. The Liberal majority voted in favour of Mendés's motion, preventing the issue from being reviewed by the Canadian House of Commons Standing Committee on Procedure and House Affairs.[5]

On April 11, 2017, the Speaker of the House of Commons Geoff Regan said the motion was unprecedented and ruled that the Question of Privilege should be revived.[6]

As a child, Mendés was a member of the Girl Guides of Canada and has spoken in the House of Commons about her view that "much of what (she is) today (she) owes to Guiding".[7]

On February 28, 2019 Mendés created controversy when during an emergency debate on the SNC-Lavalin affair she said "I really do not understand why this is a big deal."[8] [9]

Mendés was re-elected in the 2019 Canadian federal election.

On December 10, 2019 Mendès was appointed Assistant Deputy Speaker and Assistant Deputy Chair of Committees of the Whole. [10]

Electoral record


2019 Canadian federal election: Brossard—Saint-Lambert
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
Liberal Alexandra Mendès 30,537 53.9
Bloc Québécois Claire-Claude Diotte 11,131 19.6
Conservative Glenn Hoa 6,112 10.8
New Democratic Party Marc Audet 5,410 9.5
Green Party Gregory De Luca 2,935 5.2
People's party Sam Nassif 537 0.009
Total 56,652
Total valid votes/Expense limit
Total rejected ballots 657
Turnout 57.309
Eligible voters 83,447
Source: Elections Canada
2015 Canadian federal election: Brossard—Saint-Lambert
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
LiberalAlexandra Mendès28,81850.3+17.55
New DemocraticHoang Mai14,07524.6-12.21
ConservativeQais Hamidi7,21512.6-0.22
Bloc QuébécoisSuzanne Lachance6,07110.6-5.35
GreenFang Hu1,0891.9+0.39
Total valid votes/Expense limit 57,260100.0   $220,572.15
Total rejected ballots 5490.94
Turnout 57,80969.16
Eligible voters 83,194
Source: Elections Canada[11][12]
2011 Canadian federal election: Brossard—La Prairie
Party Candidate Votes%±%
New DemocraticHoang Mai25,51241.02+28.31
LiberalAlexandra Mendès (incumbent)16,97627.30−5.29
Bloc QuébécoisMarcel Lussier10,89017.51−14.96
ConservativeMaurice Brossard7,80612.55−6.32
GreenKevin Murphy9001.45−1.65
Marxist–LeninistNormand Chouinard1100.18−0.09
Total valid votes 62,194 100.00
Total rejected ballots 569
Turnout 62,763
Source: Official Results, Elections Canada.
2008 Canadian federal election: Brossard—La Prairie
Party Candidate Votes%±%Expenditures
LiberalAlexandra Mendès19,10332.59−2.42$36,025
Bloc QuébécoisMarcel Lussier19,03432.47−4.70$55,711
ConservativeMaurice Brossard11,06218.87+1.96$66,126
New DemocraticHoang Mai7,45212.71+5.25$5,453
GreenSonia Ziadé1,8163.10−0.17$1,057
Marxist–LeninistNormand Chouinard1570.27+0.08none listed
Total valid votes 58,624 100.00
Total rejected ballots 563
Turnout 59,187 64.57 −2.49
Electors on the lists 91,662
Sources: Official Results, Elections Canada and Financial Returns, Elections Canada. Italicized expenditures refer to totals submitted by the candidate and are presented when the reviewed totals are not available.

References

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