Alain Tassé
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Russell Copeman (Housing and Urban Planning)
Chantal Rouleau (Water and Water Infrastructure)
Alain Tassé | |
|---|---|
| Member of the Montreal Executive Committee responsible for economic development and urban planning [and for water as of June 23, 2013] | |
| In office 2012–2013 | |
| Preceded by | Richard Deschamps (Economic Development, Infrastructure, and Major Projects (Montreal 2025))[1] |
| Succeeded by | Denis Coderre (Mayor, Economic Development, International Relations, Mont Royal, Montreal’s 375th anniversary) Russell Copeman (Housing and Urban Planning) Chantal Rouleau (Water and Water Infrastructure) |
| Montreal City Councillor for Desmarchais-Crawford | |
| In office 2005–2013 | |
| Preceded by | position created |
| Succeeded by | Sterling Downey |
| Verdun City Councillor, Division 5 | |
| In office 1993–1997 | |
| Preceded by | Jocelyn Beauvais[2] |
| Succeeded by | eliminated by redistribution[3] |
| President of the New Democratic Party of Canada in Quebec | |
| In office 1990–1991 | |
| Preceded by | Paul Cappon |
| Succeeded by | Réjean Bercier[4] |
| Personal details | |
| Party | New Democratic Party Anti-Annexation Party (Verdun) (1985) Municipal Action Party (Verdun) (1993–97) Montreal Island Citizens Union (MICU), renamed as Union Montreal (UM) (2005–12) Independent (2012–13) Coalition Montréal (2013) |
Alain Tassé is a politician in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He served on the Montreal city council from 2005 to 2013, initially as a member of the Montreal Island Citizens Union (MICU)/Union Montreal (UM) party and later as an independent. From 2012 to 2013, he was a member of the Montreal executive committee (i.e., the municipal cabinet). At an earlier time in his life, he held a leading position in the New Democratic Party in Quebec and was a candidate for the House of Commons of Canada.
Tassé's 2013 campaign literature identified him as the owner of a property management firm specializing in the oversight of non-profit housing.[5]
New Democratic Party activist
Tassé was a candidate for the Canadian House of Commons in the 1988 Canadian federal election, running for the New Democratic Party in Verdun—Saint-Paul. He finished third against Progressive Conservative Gilbert Chartrand.
The New Democratic Party experienced serious internal divisions in 1989 over the nature and extent of its support for the proposed Meech Lake Accord on constitutional reform. In December 1989, delegates at the party's convention voted to seek improvements to the accord via a series of amendments. This decision was opposed by many Quebec delegates, particularly those who identified as Quebec nationalists and who opposed any changes to the original text. Tassé was among those opposing the decision; he was quoted as saying, "I'm a socialist before I'm a nationalist, but I remain a (Quebec) nationalist."[6]
Tassé was chosen as interim president of the federal wing of the New Democratic Party in Quebec in June 1990.[7] He stood down from the position in early 1991 and became special assistant on Quebec issues to federal party leader Audrey McLaughlin, a position he continued to hold through to the 1993 Canadian federal election.[8][9] In June 1991, he was involved in developing a compromise resolution on constitutional reform intended to win support for the party in both Quebec and Western Canada.[10]