Laurent Blanchard

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Succeeded byDenis Coderre
Succeeded byPierre Desrochers
Laurent Blanchard
43rd Mayor of Montreal
In office
June 25, 2013  November 14, 2013
Preceded byJane Cowell-Poitras
Succeeded byDenis Coderre
Member of the Montreal Executive Committee responsible for finances, human resources, and legal affairs
In office
June 28, 2013  November 14, 2013
Preceded byMichael Applebaum
Succeeded byPierre Desrochers
Chair of the Montreal Executive Committee
In office
November 22, 2012  June 25, 2013
Preceded byMichael Applebaum
Succeeded byJosée Duplessis
Member of the Montreal Executive Committee responsible for infrastructure, buildings, real estate transactions, information technology, and corporate communications
In office
November 22, 2012  June 25, 2013
Preceded byRichard Deschamps (infrastructure), Michael Applebaum (corporate communications)[1]
Succeeded byRichard Deschamps (infrastructure), Benoit Dorais (buildings and real estate transactions), Caroline Bourgeois (information technology and corporate communications)
Montreal City Councillor for Hochelaga
In office
2005  June 25, 2013
Preceded byLuc Larivée
Succeeded byÉric Alan Caldwell
Personal details
Born (1952-11-25) November 25, 1952 (age 73)
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
PartyCoalition Montréal (2013)
Other political
affiliations
Independent (2012-2013)
Vision Montréal (2005-2012)

Laurent Blanchard (born November 25, 1952) is a politician in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He represented the east-end Hochelaga ward on Montreal city council from 2005 to 2013, initially as a member of Vision Montreal and later as an independent. On June 25, 2013, he was elected by council as interim Mayor of Montreal,[2] a position he served in until the election of Denis Coderre on November 3, 2013.

Blanchard was born in Montreal's Mercier district and worked in the publishing sector before entering political life. He was for many years the owner and publisher of Les Nouvelles de l'Est and also became assistant to the president of Hebdos Télémédia in the late 1980s. Blanchard was a political attaché in mayor Jean Doré's administration from 1991 to 1994, working in internal affairs, and was director-general of the Corporation de développement de l’Est (CDEST) from 1995 to 2002.[3]

City councillor

Blanchard was first elected to city council in the 2005 municipal election, defeating incumbent councillor Luc Larivée from mayor Gérald Tremblay's Montreal Island Citizens Union (MICU). Tremblay's party won a majority on council, and Blanchard served as a member of the official opposition.

In 2006, Blanchard urged the Montreal Executive Committee to rescind a policy it had approved in camera the previous month, restricting Montreal civil servants from disclosing information deemed to be "confidential," "reserved," "for internal use" or "personal." Blanchard noted that this policy had never been presented to the full council.[4] In the same period, he joined with fellow councillor Gaëtan Primeau in a "bathrobe protest," showing up to a 6 am budget meeting dressed in his bathrobe and arguing that the meeting had been scheduled too early for public participation.[5]

Blanchard was re-elected in the 2009 municipal election. Tremblay's party, now renamed as Union Montreal, again won a majority on council, and Blanchard continued to serve as an opposition member.

In April 2011, following rising concerns about corruption in the awarding of municipal contracts, Tremblay appointed Blanchard to head a committee that would review contracts considered to "deviate from norms."[6] Blanchard acknowledged in September 2012 that there were several restrictions on the types of contracts his committee could review, that it ultimately reviewed only five to ten percent of city council and island council contracts, and that it was almost never able to review borough-level contracts.[7]

Tremblay resigned as mayor in November 2012 amid the backdrop of a growing corruption scandal, and Michael Applebaum was chosen by council as his successor. On November 22, 2012, Applebaum named Blanchard to chair the city's executive committee (i.e., the municipal cabinet) on November 22, 2012. The new mayor had previously announced that the committee chair would be non-partisan, and so, as a condition of his appointment, Blanchard resigned from Vision Montreal to serve as an independent member.[8] He also held executive responsibilities for infrastructure, buildings, real estate transactions, information technology, and corporate communications.[9]

In April 2013, Applebaum and Blanchard announced that the company Dessau would be banned from bidding on public contracts for five years, after a former senior vice-president testified before the Charbonneau Commission on municipal corruption that the company had taken part in collusion and price inflation.[10]

Mayor

Electoral record

References

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