Jean-Claude Gobé | |
Birth Date: | 1949 4, mf=yes |
Birth Place: | Charleville, France |
Profession: | Politician |
Party: | Liberal (federal) Action Laval (municipal) |
Otherparty: | Action démocratique du Québec (2008-2012) Quebec Liberal Party (1985-2003) |
Office: | Member of the National Assembly of Quebec for LaFontaine |
Term Start: | December 2, 1985 |
Term End: | April 14, 2003 |
Predecessor: | Marcel Léger |
Successor: | Tony Tomassi |
Allegiance: | France |
Serviceyears: | 1967 — 1971 |
Unit: | 7th Infantry Regiment |
Jean-Claude Gobé (born April 11, 1949) is a Quebec politician. He served as the member for LaFontaine in the Quebec National Assembly as a member of the Quebec Liberal Party from 1985 until 2003. He left the Liberals to sit as an Independent shortly before his term in the National Assembly ended. Until resigning in 2018, he was the leader of the Official Opposition in the City of Laval as head of Action Laval.[1]
Gobé was born in Charleville, France and studied at the College Sainte-Jeanne D'Arc in Orléans and then at the Academy of Montpelier. He served in the 7th Infantry Regiment of the Navy in Fréjus from 1967 to 1971, before emigrating to Canada in 1972.
After serving as a sales manager and then head of Renault Canada, he was director of Ademco and then of Comterm. He was managing director of Norma Rental from 1980 to 1985.
Gobé ran in the 1985 Quebec provincial election for the seat of LaFontaine against former Parti Québécois minister Marcel Léger and won with a narrow majority as Robert Bourassa became Premier for the second time. He served as a backbench supporter in the government and was re-elected in 1989. He served as a parliamentary secretary in the short-lived government of Daniel Johnson Jr.
He was reelected in 1994 and 1998, never facing a serious challenge. On February 20, 2005, Gobé quit the Quebec Liberal party after Leader Jean Charest requested he step aside for Tony Tomassi. He subsequently did not seek re-election in 2003.[2]
After some time working at Iris as the Vice President of Business Development, he ran for the Liberal Party of Canada federally in 2004 in the riding of La Pointe-de-l'Île and then in 2006 in the riding of Alfred-Pellan, finishing a distant second both times. He then became an advisor to the ADQ leader Gérard Deltell and the head of the ADQ riding association in LaFontaine until the party folded.
In February 2013, Gobé founded the Action Laval party. He ran for mayor of Laval and lost to Marc Demers.[3]
Laval mayoral election, 2017 | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Mayoral candidate | Vote | % | ||
bgcolor=#CA0000 | Mouvement lavallois - Équipe Marc Demers | Marc Demers (X) | 50,805 | 46.24 | |
bgcolor=#41B5DA | Parti Laval - Équipe Michel Trottier | Michel Trottier | 22,417 | 20.40 | |
bgcolor=#008EE6 | Action Laval - Équipe Jean Claude Gobé | Jean Claude Gobé | 17,624 | 16.04 | |
bgcolor=#119900 width="30px" | Avenir Laval - Équipe Sonia Baudelot | Sonia Baudelot | 17,155 | 15.61 | |
bgcolor=#006699 | Alliance des conseillers autonomes - Équipe Alain Lecompte et Cynthia Leblanc | Alain Lecompte | 763 | 0.69 | |
Independent | Hélène Goupil | 733 | 0.67 | ||
Independent | Nicolas Lemire | 375 | 0.34 | ||
Total valid votes | 109,872 | 36.32 |
Laval mayoral election, 2013 | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Mayoral candidate | Vote | % | |||
bgcolor=#CA0000 | Mouvement lavallois | 51,151 | 44.19 | |||
bgcolor=#008EE6 | Action Laval | Jean-Claude Gobé | 28,130 | 24.30 | ||
bgcolor=#41B5DA | Option Laval | Claire Le Bel | 14,356 | 12.40 | ||
bgcolor=#119900 width="30px" | Parti au service du citoyen | Robert Bordeleau | 12,574 | 10.86 | ||
Independent | Jacques Foucher | 3,678 | 3.18 | |||
Independent | Hélène Goupil Nantel | 2,361 | 2.04 | |||
bgcolor=#006699 | Nouveau Parti des Lavallois | Guy Landry | 1,453 | 1.26 | ||
Independent | Marc-Aurèle Racicot | 1,451 | 1.25 | |||
Independent | Régent Millette | 611 | 0.53 | |||
Total valid votes | 115,765 | 100 |