释义 |
- Results
- Results in suburban communities Dorval Montréal-Nord Saint-Léonard
- Information on elected candidates in suburban communities
- Elections in other Montreal-area communities Longueuil
- References
{{Use mdy dates|date=September 2017}}The 1978 Montreal municipal election took place on November 12, 1978, to elect a mayor and city councillors in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Longtime mayor Jean Drapeau was re-elected to another four-year term in office, defeating Canadian federal parliamentarian Serge Joyal.[1] Elections were also held in Montreal's suburban communities in November 1978. Most suburban elections took place on November 5; the election in Saint-Léonard was held on November 12. Results- Mayor
{{Montreal municipal election, 1978/Position/Mayor of Montreal}}- Council
Party colours do not indicate affiliation or resemblance to a provincial or a federal party. Electoral District | Position | Total valid votes | Candidates | | Incumbent |
---|
MTL|MCM|background| | MTL|MCM|background|Montreal Citizens' Movement | MTL|Civic Party|background| | MTL|Civic Party|background| Civic Party | MTL|Municipal Action Group|background| | MTL|Municipal Action Group|background|Municipal Action Group | MTL|Independent|background| | MTL|Independent|background|Independents |
---|
Longue-Pointe | City councillor | 6,754 | MTL|MCM|background}} --> | Marius Minier 1,429 (20.14%) | MTL|Civic Party|background}} | | Luc Larivée 4,100 (57.80%) | MTL|Municipal Action Group|background}} --> | Gérard Nadeau 1,565 (22.06%) | MTL|Independent|background}} --> | {{Montreal municipal election, 1978/Position/Councillor, Ward Nine}}{{Montreal municipal election, 1978/Position/Councillor, Ward Fourteen}}{{Montreal municipal election, 1978/Position/Councillor, Ward Fifteen}}{{Montreal municipal election, 1978/Position/Councillor, Ward Twenty-Six}}{{Montreal municipal election, 1978/Position/Councillor, Ward Thirty-Three}}{{Montreal municipal election, 1978/Position/Councillor, Ward Thirty-Seven}}{{Montreal municipal election, 1978/Position/Councillor, Ward Forty}}{{Montreal municipal election, 1978/Position/Councillor, Ward Forty-Three}}Results in suburban communitiesDorvalElectoral District | Position | Total valid votes | Candidates | Incumbent |
---|
MTL|Independent|background| Winner | MTL|Independent|background| Defeated candidate |
---|
Mayor | Sarto Desnoyers (acclaimed) | Sarto Desnoyers | East Ward | Councillor | Jean-Paul Bernier (acclaimed) | Jean-Paul Bernier | East Ward | Councillor | Peter Yeomans[2] | Michel Rioux | Michel Rioux | East Ward | Councillor | Jean J. Cardinal (acclaimed) | West Ward | Councillor | Roy Amaron (acclaimed) | Roy Amaron | West Ward | Councillor | Geoffrey Ballance (acclaimed) | Geoffrey Ballance | West Ward 3 | Councillor | Frank Richmond 1,756 (85.62%) | Douglas Worsley 295 (14.38%) | Frank Richmond | Source: Rodolphe Morissette, "Quatre nouveaux maires sur l'île de Montréal," Le Devoir, November 6, 1978, pp. 1-3.Montréal-NordElectoral District | Position | Total valid votes | Candidates | Incumbent |
---|
MTL|Independent|background| Renouveau municipal | MTL|Independent|background| Others |
---|
Mayor | - | Yves Ryan (acclaimed) | Yves Ryan | East Quarter, Seat One | Councillor | - | Jean-Paul Lessard (acclaimed) | Jean-Paul Lessard | East Quarter, Seat Two | Councillor | - | Normand Fortin (acclaimed) | West Quarter, Seat One | Councillor | - | Pierre Blain (acclaimed) | Pierre Blain | West Quarter, Seat Two | Councillor | - | Ernest Chartrand (acclaimed) | Ernest Chartrand | Center Quarter, Seat One | Councillor | - | Réal Gibeau 1,987 (65.00%) | André Elliott 1,070 (35.00%) | Center Quarter, Seat Two | Councillor | - | Maurice Bélanger (acclaimed) | Maurice Bélanger | Source: "Les élections municipales," Le Devoir, 6 November 1978, A3.Saint-Léonard{{Saint-Leonard municipal election, 1978/Position/District Three}}{{Saint-Leonard municipal election, 1978/Position/District Four}}{{Saint-Leonard municipal election, 1978/Position/District Six}}{{Saint-Leonard municipal election, 1978/Position/District Eight}}{{Saint-Leonard municipal election, 1978/Position/District Ten}}{{Saint-Leonard municipal election, 1978/Position/District Eleven}}Information on elected candidates in suburban communities- Parti de l'alliance municipale
- Robert Benoît (Ward Three) was elected in a close contest over five opponents. He did not seek re-election in 1982.
Elections in other Montreal-area communitiesLongueuilThe 1978 municipal election in Longueuil did not produce a clear winner. Marcel Robidas of the Parti civique de Longueuil was re-elected as mayor, but nine of the seventeen council seats were won by the opposition Parti municipal de Longueuil. Winning candidates appear in boldface. Electoral District | Position | Total valid votes | Candidates | Incumbent |
---|
MTL|Independent|background| Parti municipal | MTL|Independent|background| Parti civique | MTL|Independent|background| Parti de la réforme municipale | MTL|Independent|background| Independent |
---|
Mayor | 33,219 | Paul Viau 13,445 (40.47%) | Marcel Robidas 15,828 (47.65%) | Jean Huot 3,946 (11.88%) | District 1 | Councillor | 2,117 | Réal Gendron 396 (18.71%) | Roger Ferguson 619 (29.24%) | Yvon Bourcier 264 (12.47%) | Jacques Bouchard 742 (35.05%)
Roger Courchesne 96 (4.53%) | District 2 | Councillor | 3,156 | Georges Touten 1,204 (38.15%) | Lucile Roy 1,128 (35.74%) | Marc Decelles 824 (26.11%) | District 3 | Councillor | 1,732 | Henri Bouclin 539 (31.12%) | Léonard Boulet 728 (42.03%) | Gilles Bouffard 465 (26.85%) | District 4 | Councillor | 2,621 | Roger Ferland 1,093 (41.70%) | Bernard Brisson 879 (33.54%) | Henri D'Amour 288 (10.99%) | Gilles Leduc 361 (13.77%) | District 5 | Councillor | 2,111 | René Leblanc 835 (39.55%) | Armand Lavoie 438 (20.75%) | Géraldine Courchesne 434 (20.56%) | Fernand Lachapelle 267 (12.65%)
André Marquette 137 (6.49%) | District 6 | Councillor | 2,057 | Robert H. Tremblay 672 (32.67%) | Luc Salinovitch 604 (29.37%) | Lorenzo Defoy 781 (37.97%) | District 7 | Councillor | 1,337 | Paul-Auguste Briand 698 (52.21%) | Olivette Camaraire 464 (34.70%) | Gérard Thibeault 175 (13.09%) | District 8 | Councillor | 1,471 | Gilles Déry 594 (40.38%) | Lorraine Vaillancourt 549 (37.32%) | Guy D'Amour 328 (22.30%) | District 9 | Councillor | 2,170 | Pierre Baril 849 (39.12%) | Pierre Nantel 923 (42.53%) | Régent Simard 398 (18.34%) | District 10 | Councillor | 2,022 | Jacques Finet 996 (49.26%) | André Meunier 871 (43.08%) | Pauline Fleury 155 (7.67%) | District 11 | Councillor | 1,612 | Serge Sévigny 616 (38.21%) | Georges Cowan 554 (34.37%) | Lucien Lebrun 442 (27.42%) | District 12 | Councillor | 1,543 | Omer Leclerc 600 (38.89%) | J. Paul Vermette 874 (56.64%) | Francine Charest Beaucage 69 (4.47%) | District 13 | Councillor | 2,503 | Pauline Nicolas 670 (26.77%) | Jeannine Labelle 924 (36.92%) | André Lizotte 504 (20.14%) | Denis Côté 405 (16.18%) | District 14 | Councillor | 1,623 | Roméo Lescarbeau 437 (26.93%) | Paul-Émile Paquin 709 (43.68%) | Marcel Bertrand 233 (14.36%) | Florent Charest 244 (15.03%) | District 15 | Councillor | 1,822 | Jacques Laplante 868 (47.64%) | Jean Raymond Payette 554 (30.41%) | Michel Timperio 400 (21.95%) | District 16 | Councillor | 2,051 | Bernard Audet 938 (45.73%) | Benoît Danault 947 (46.17%) | Fernand Boudreault 166 (8.09%) | District 17 | Councillor | 1,375 | André Létourneau 827 (60.15%) | Nicole Therrien 408 (29.67%) | Françoise Gagné 140 (10.18%) |
Post-election changes: - Paul-Auguste Briand was subsequently expelled from the Parti municipal for breaking with the party on a vote pertaining to the Place Longueuil. This deprived by Parti municipal of its working majority on council.
Source: Le Parti municipal de Longueuil: Les origines du Parti municipal, Société historique et culturelle du Marigot, accessed January 10, 2014.References1. ^Election results, 1833-2005 (in French), City of Montreal, accessed May 16, 2011. 2. ^Le Devoir describes Rioux as having defeated Yeomans by 1,449 votes to 1,227. This is contradicted by several other sources describing Yeomans as the winner. It is possible that the numbers were accidentally reversed.
{{Montreal-stub}}{{Canada-election-stub}} 3 : 1978 Quebec municipal elections|Municipal elections in Montreal|20th century in Montreal |