Civic Party of Montreal | |
Native Name: | Parti civique de Montréal |
Subheader: | Former municipal party |
Leader: | Jean Drapeau |
Ideology: | Quebecer federalism Conservatism Populism |
Position: | Centre-right |
Colours: | Green |
Colorcode: |
|
Blank1 Title: | Fiscal policy |
Blank2 Title: | Social policy |
Seats1 Title: | Seats in the House of Commons |
Seats2 Title: | Seats in the Senate |
Seats3 Title: | Seats on council |
Country: | Canada |
State: | Montreal |
Parties Dab1: | Municipal political parties in Montreal |
Elections Dab1: | Municipal elections in Montreal |
The Civic Party of Montreal (French: '''Parti Civique de Montréal''') was a municipal political party in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It existed from 1960 to 1994. Throughout its history, the Civic Party was dominated by the personality of its leader Jean Drapeau.
It was established in September 1960 when 17 out of the 33 Civic Action League (French: Ligue d'Action Civique or LAC) Councillors, led by Jean Drapeau, crossed the floor to create a new party.
The Civic Party won two thirds of the City Council's seats as well as the office of Mayor in 1960 and remained in power until 1986. It is credited with:
It also helped bringing Major League Baseball to Montreal with the creation of the Montreal Expos.
During the 1970s, Montreal was a virtual one-party state, with the Civic Party facing only token opposition in City Hall.
In the 1980s, the party steadily lost support to the Montreal Citizens' Movement (RCM). In 1982, RCM leader Jean Doré gave Drapeau his closest competition in decades.
Drapeau's retirement in 1986 proved ominous for the party. It was increasingly seen as tired and complacent, and Drapeau had no clear successor. The 1986 municipal elections saw the Civic Party swept from power in a massive RCM landslide. Drapeau's replacement as leader, Claude Dupras, was heavily defeated in the mayoral race by Doré, and only one of its candidates, Germain Prégent, was elected to council.
The Civic Party sank into near-paralysis in opposition. Having spent all but a few months of its existence prior to 1986 in the governing party, it was unable to get the better of the RCM. It was soon torn between a reformist faction led by Dupras and a traditionalist faction. Although Prégent had previously blamed Drapeau for the severe beating the party took in 1986, he identified with the traditionalist faction, and left the party to sit as an Independent by 1988 when Dupras tightened his hold on the party.
The party managed to win a by-election in 1989, which it held at the 1990 municipal election. However, its candidate for mayor, Nicole Gagnon-Larocque, only won 21 percent of the vote. It won another by-election in 1992. It regained the status of Official Opposition by merging with the Parti Municipal (Municipal Party) in July 1992. However, in 1993, it lost further ground when Jérôme Choquette left the party to form the Parti des Montréalais. Choquette had been defeated by Clément Bluteau for the party leadership.[1]
Shortly afterward, the once-mighty party collapsed with dramatic speed. Bluteau resigned as party leader after less than a year, and in August 1994, the rump of the party merged into Choquette's Parti des Montréalais.[2] Choquette ran for Mayor in 1994 and finished third with 13% of the vote. Only two of his candidates were elected to City Hall.
Election | Mayoral candidate | Popular vote | Number of councillors | 1960 | Jean Drapeau | 53% | 44/66 | 1962 | Jean Drapeau | 88% | 39/45 | 1966 | Jean Drapeau | 94% | 45/48 | 1970 | Jean Drapeau | 92% | 52/52 | 1974 | Jean Drapeau | 55% | 37/55 | 1978 | Jean Drapeau | 61% | 52/54 | 1982 | Jean Drapeau | 48% | 39/57 | 1986 | Claude Dupras[3] | 29% | 1/58 | 1990 | Nicole Gagnon-Larocque[4] | 21% | 1/50 |
---|
Victories are indicated with bold fonts.