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词条 Alexandre Boulerice
释义

  1. Early life and career

  2. Federal politics

  3. Bill C-307

  4. Canada Post

  5. Vimy Ridge comments

  6. Electoral record

  7. See also

  8. References

  9. External links

{{Infobox CanadianMP
| honorific-prefix =
| name = Alexandre Boulerice
| honorific-suffix = MP
| image = Alexandre Boulerice 2016-09-10.jpg
| imagesize =
|office = Deputy Leader of the New Democratic Party
|leader = Jagmeet Singh
|alongside = Sheri Benson
|term_start = March 11, 2019
|term_end =
|predecessor = David Christopherson
|successor =
|office1 = Shadow Minister for Labour
|leader1 = Thomas Mulcair
|term_start1 = April 19, 2012
|term_end1 = November 19, 2015
|predecessor1 = Yvon Godin
|successor1 = Gerard Deltell
|office2 = Shadow Minister for the Treasury Board
|leader2 = Jack Layton
Nycole Turmel
|term_start2 = May 26, 2011
|term_end2 = April 18, 2012
|predecessor2 = Siobhan Coady
|successor2 = Mathieu Ravignat
| riding3 = Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie
| parliament3 = Canadian
| term_start3 = May 30, 2011
| term_end3 =
| predecessor3 = Bernard Bigras
| birth_date = {{birth date and age|1973|6|18}}
| birth_place = Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec
| death_date=
| death_place=
| profession= Communications adviser, community activist, journalist
| party=New Democratic Party
| website= www.boulerice.org
| footnotes=
| spouse=Lisa Djevahirdjian
|}}

Alexandre Boulerice {{post-nominals|country=CAN|MP}} (born June 18, 1973 in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu, Quebec)[1] is a Canadian politician, who was elected to the House of Commons of Canada in the 2011 election. He represents the electoral district of Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie as a member of the New Democratic Party.[2] He is currently the NDP's Quebec lieutenant and Ethics critic. Boulerice was appointed as the Deputy Leader of the New Democratic Party on March 11 by party leader Jagmeet Singh.

Early life and career

Alexandre Boulerice was born June 18, 1973 in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu. He started working at age 15 as a lifeguard for the municipality and then went on to become pool manager. After his cégep years, he studied sociology at the Université de Montréal, and then earned his Masters in political science at McGill University.

Subsequently, he worked as a TV journalist (LCN, TVA), while being involved in his local union as vice-president of CUPE 687. He has also worked for a community group, l'Union des travailleurs et travailleuses accidentés de Montréal (UTTAM). He then became a communications consultant for the Canadian Union of Public Employees (CUPE).[3]

Federal politics

Alexandre Boulerice has been active in the New Democratic Party since the late 1990s. He first ran in the 2008 federal election and finished a distant third with 16.26 percent of the vote, well behind Bloc Québécois incumbent Bernard Bigras. He then became the Vice President of Communications for the Quebec section of the NDP, under the presidency of Françoise Boivin.

In the May 2, 2011 federal election, the NDP received 30.6% of the votes, which translated into 103 seats in the House of Commons, of which more than half were from Quebec. This result allowed the NDP to form the Official Opposition in the House of Commons for the first time in history. This electoral breakthrough is now known as "la vague orange" (Orange Crush). One of those seats belonged to Boulerice, who won a decisive victory with 50.8% of the vote, finishing 9,700 votes ahead of Bigras.[4] The NDP had never finished higher than third in the riding or its predecessors before.

On 26 May 2011, Boulerice was appointed as opposition critic for the Treasury Board of Canada. In April 2012, he was appointed as Labour critic, and then as deputy Ethics and Access to Information critic.[5]

After the 2015 election, Boulerice was appointed the NDP's Quebec lieutenant, as well as its critic for Ethics and deputy critic for Democratic Reform in the 42nd Canadian Parliament.[6] He also serves as one of two New Democrats on the Special Committee on Electoral Reform.

Following the 2016 federal NDP Convention's non-confidence vote in Thomas Mulcair, various media outlets mentioned Alexandre Boulerice as a potential candidate, including The Globe and Mail, The Canadian Press, and columnists such as Lysiane Gagon. CBC TV quoted him a few days after the convention saying it was 'too early' to decide whether to run.

In early 2017, Boulerice was named Finance critic for the NDP.

Bill C-307

In fall 2011, Boulerice tabled Bill C-307, a private member's bill "For the reassignment of pregnant and lactating women",[7] to protect the rights of pregnant and lactating women who must leave their jobs to protect their health or the health of their child. This bill was intended to allow all workers to receive a reassignment under the provisions in force in their respective provinces. Quebec workers covered by the Labour Code of Quebec can receive benefits from the Workplace Health and Safety (OSH) in the program, "For safe motherhood." This bill was intended to allow workers covered by the Labour Code of Canada receive the same benefits and not be penalized during their pregnancy.

This bill was rejected with 169 votes against and 108 votes in favour in May 2012.

Canada Post

In December 2013, Canada Post's board of directors announced that it would be gradually putting an end to door-to-door mail delivery, leading to the elimination of 6,000 to 8,000 jobs.[8] Boulerice was one of the first to oppose the cuts by promptly launching a petition[9] to inform citizens of the consequences of such a decision. Bolstered by broad public mobilization and mounting political reactions, he collaborated with the Canadian Union of Postal Workers to tour Quebec in order to explain the changes and to garner support against the decision.[10] He ended his campaign by submitting a brief before the Commission sur le développement social et la diversité of the City of Montreal, which studied the impacts of ending door-to-door mail delivery on the installation of community mailboxes in densely populated areas, and on the quality of life of seniors and disabled people.

Vimy Ridge comments

On April 10, 2007, Boulerice wrote on a Quebec left-wing politics blog, Presse-Toi A Gauche,[11] praising those who objected to and actively resisted Canada's participation in the First World War stating it was "a purely capitalist war on the backs of the workers and peasants". Boulerice further criticised the Harper Conservative Government's celebration of the Battle of Vimy Ridge saying that "thousands of poor wretches were slaughtered to take possession of a hill.[12]

Electoral record

{{Canadian election result/top|CA|2015|percent=yes|change=yes|expenditures=yes|}}{{CANelec|CA|NDP|Alexandre Boulerice|28,692|49.17|-1.9|}}{{CANelec|CA|BQ|Claude André|12,276|21.03|-11.82|–}}{{CANelec|CA|Liberal|Nadine Medawar|12,069|20.68|+11.53|–}}{{CANelec|CA|Conservative|Jeremy Dohan|2,506|4.29|-0.03|–}}{{CANelec|CA|Green|Sameer Muldeen|1,787|3.06|+1.39|–}}{{CANelec|CA|Rhinoceros|Laurent Aglat|495|0.85|+0.08|–}}{{CANelec|CA|Libertarian|Peter d'Entremont|353|0.60|–|–}}{{CANelec|CA|Marxist-Leninist|Stéphane Chénier|171|0.29|+0.03|–}}{{Canadian election result/total|Total valid votes/Expense limit|–|100.0  | |$221,758.95}}{{Canadian election result/total|Total rejected ballots|–|–|–}}{{Canadian election result/total|Turnout|58,349|69.13|+2.22}}{{Canadian election result/total|Eligible voters|83,936}}{{CANelec/hold|CA|NDP|−1.9}}{{CANelec/source|Source: Elections Canada[13][14]}}{{end}}{{Canadian election result/top|CA|2011|percent=yes|change=yes|expenditures=yes}}{{CANelec|CA|NDP|Alexandre Boulerice |27,484 |51.00 | +34.74 | }}{{CANelec|CA|BQ|Bernard Bigras |17,702 |32.85 | -19.15 | }}{{CANelec|CA|Liberal|Kettly Beauregard |4,920 |9.13 | -9.54 | }}{{CANelec|CA|Conservative|Sébastien Forté |2,328 |4.32 | -3.07 | }}{{CANelec|CA|Green|Sameer Muldeen |899|1.67 | -2.92 | }}{{CANelec|CA|Rhinoceros|Jean-Patrick Berthiaume|417|0.77 | +0.16 | }}{{CANelec|CA|Marxist-Leninist|Stéphane Chénier|140|0.26 | -0.06| }}{{Canadian election result/total|Total valid votes/Expense limit|53,890|100.00 | }}{{Canadian election result/total|Total rejected ballots|589|1.08 }}{{Canadian election result/total|Turnout|54,479|66.91}}{{end}}{{Canadian election result/top|CA|2008|percent=yes|change=yes|expenditures=yes}}{{CANelec|CA|BQ|Bernard Bigras|27,260|52.00|-3.99| $52,571 }}{{CANelec|CA|Liberal|Marjorie Théodore|9,785|18.67|+2.91 | $30,634}}{{CANelec|CA|NDP|Alexandre Boulerice|8,522|16.26|+4.71 | $21,117}}{{CANelec|CA|Conservative|Sylvie Boulianne|3,876|7.39|-1.91 | $85,619}}{{CANelec|CA|Green|Vincent Larochelle|2,406|4.59|-2.01 | $903}}{{CANelec|CA|Rhinoceros|Jean-Patrick Berthiaume|319|0.61|–| $228}}{{CANelec|CA|Marxist-Leninist|Stéphane Chérnier|170|0.32|–| }}{{CANelec|XX|Independent|Michel Dugré|83|0.16|–| $690}}{{Canadian election result/total|Total valid votes/Expense limit| 52,421|100.00|$86,436 }}{{Canadian election result/total|Total rejected ballots|614|1.16 }}{{Canadian election result/total|Turnout|53,035|64.65}}{{end}}

See also

  • 41st Canadian Parliament
  • New Democratic Party of Canada

References

1. ^{{Canadian Parliament links|ID=17937|nolist=yes}}
2. ^{{Cite web|url=http://www.parl.gc.ca/Parliamentarians/en/members/Alexandre-Boulerice(58775)|title=Alexandre Boulerice|website=www.parl.gc.ca|access-date=2017-01-05}}
3. ^Bio on NDP website
4. ^[https://www.theglobeandmail.com/places/quebec-ridings/election-fed2011/r24061/ Election 2011: Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie]. The Globe and Mail, May 2, 2011.
5. ^[https://www.ndp.ca/shadow-cabinet Shadow Cabinet NDP website]
6. ^{{cite web | url=http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/ndp-critics-list-mulcair-thursday-1.3315431 | title=Tom Mulcair taps Nathan Cullen, Charlie Angus, Guy Caron for top critic roles | publisher=The Canadian Press | work=CBC News | date=12 November 2015 | accessdate=12 November 2015 | author=Kirkup, Kristy}}
7. ^Parliament of Canada website
8. ^{{Cite news|url=http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/canada-post-changes-mean-8-000-fewer-jobs-1.2459776|title=Canada Post changes mean 8,000 fewer jobs|work=CBC News|access-date=2017-04-27|language=en}}
9. ^{{Cite news|url=http://www.isupport-boulerice.org/stop_service_cuts_at_canada_post|title=Stop service cuts at Canada Post|work=I Support Boulerice|access-date=2017-04-27}}
10. ^{{Cite news|url=http://www.lapresse.ca/le-soleil/actualites/politique/201405/29/01-4771139-le-npd-en-croisade-pour-postes-canada.php|title=Le NPD en croisade pour Postes Canada {{!}} Baptiste Ricard-Châtelain {{!}} Politique|work=La Presse|access-date=2017-04-27|language=fr-CA}}
11. ^Presse-toi à gauche: La butte de Vimy
12. ^{{Cite web |url=http://www.sunnewsnetwork.ca/sunnews/politics/archives/2013/04/20130409-144844.html |title=Sun News: NDP MP slammed Canada's role in First World War |access-date=2013-04-10 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130412040155/http://www.sunnewsnetwork.ca/sunnews/politics/archives/2013/04/20130409-144844.html |archive-date=2013-04-12 |dead-url=yes |df= }}
13. ^Elections Canada – Confirmed candidates for Rosemont—La Petite-Patrie, 30 September 2015
14. ^Elections Canada – Preliminary Election Expenses Limits for Candidates {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304045200/http://www.elections.ca/content2.aspx?section=can&dir=cand%2Fcanlim&document=index&lang=e |date=2016-03-04 }}

External links

  • Official Website
{{Current Members of the Canadian House of Commons}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Boulerice, Alexandre}}

8 : 1973 births|Living people|New Democratic Party MPs|Members of the House of Commons of Canada from Quebec|People from Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu|McGill University alumni|Université de Montréal alumni|21st-century Canadian politicians

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