| Rassemblement des citoyens et des citoyennes de Montréal | |
|---|---|
| n/a | |
| Former Municipal Party | |
| Founded | 1973 |
| Dissolved | 2001 |
| Leader | Jean Doré |
| President | n/a |
| Headquarters | n/a |
| Political ideology | Communitarianism, progressivism |
| International alignment | none |
| Colours | Red |
| Website | n/a |
The Montreal Citizens' Movement (French: Rassemblement des citoyens et des citoyennes de Montréal or RCM) was a municipal political party in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It existed from 1973 to 2001.
Contents |
Origins
It was established in 1973 by Nick Auf der Maur, Bob Keaton and other city activists who were not satisfied with the management style of the administration Jean Drapeau. [1]
Opposition to Jean Drapeau
Eighteen of the party's candidates were elected to City Hall in 1974, constituting the first significant and effective opposition group since Drapeau became mayor more than a decade earlier. However the party was eventually plagued by internal divisions. Auf de Maur and Keaton founded the Municipal Action Group (French: Groupe d'Action Municipale or GAM) with a group of dissidents, which split the opposition vote. In 1978, the total elected opposition in city council consisted of the Nick Auf Der Maur for MAG and Michael Fainstat for the MCM. The MCM was put back on the way to recovery when Jean Doré became its leader and mayoral candidate in 1982. Doré finished a strong second and fifteen of his candidates were elected. In 1984, Doré won a by-election and became the City Coucillor of the district of Saint-Jean-Baptiste.
The Doré administration and its accomplishments
Doré was elected mayor in 1986 and 55 of his candidates were elected. The MCM Executive Committee consisted of Robert Perreault, Vice-Chairman. John Gardiner, 42, who oversaw housing and city planning, Kathleen Verdon, who was in charge of culture, tourism and relations with cultural communities and Jacqueline Bordeleau, who was responsible for public works and fire prevention and Lea Cousineau, who was in charge of recreation, social affairs, health and the status of women. The party was devastated when longstanding members and sitting city councillors Pierre-Yves Melancon, Sam Boskey and Marvin Rotrand, and Pierre Goyer quit the party, accusing Dore of cozying up to powerful interests and betraying the MCM notion of reform. Dore had also lost much anglophone support by encouraging the enforcement of the controversial anti-English sign law Bill 101 and by renaming Dorchester Boulevard to Boulevard Rene Levesque. As well, the Overdale scandal and tax hikes on businesses, as well as a poor financial climate would erode support for the MCM. In 1990, he and his team would be re-elected with a reduced majority. Four more MCM councillors quit during this sitting. The Doré administration is credited with:
- the renewal of the Old Port and the parks and beaches of Ile Ste-Hélène
- the completion of Berri Square (Place Émilie-Gamelin), Place Charles de Gaulle and the Archaeology Museum at Pointe-à-Callière;
- the establishment of the fist public commissions ay City Hall;
- the adoption of Montreal's first Master Urban Plan.
Nonetheless, it faced growing criticism by fiscal conservatives for its perceived ineffective style of government, including lax policies toward city employees, as well as an unwillingness to pay down the massive debt left by the projects of former mayor Jean Drapeau.
Decline and merger
By 1994, the MCM was voted out of office and Doré's political career had seen its better days. Internal struggles over the succession of Jean Doré undermined the party's credibility. After she won the MCM nomination for the 1998 mayoral election, [2] City Councillor Thérèse Daviau left the party and announced that she would support Jacques Duchesneau for Mayor. [3] In 1998, MCM candidate Michel Prescott finished third with 14.4% of the vote. Only four of his candidates were elected. The party survived for a few more years. But in the wake of the province-wide Municipal Merger of 2001, the MCM as absorbed by Gérald Tremblay's organization. In July 2001, the party formally merged with the Union des citoyens et des citoyennes de l’Île de Montréal. A few months later, Tremblay was elected mayor.
Mayoral candidates
| Election | Mayoral Candidate | Popular Vote for Mayor | Number of Councillors | |
| 1974 | Jacques Couture [4] [5] | 39% | 18/55 | |
| 1978 | Guy Duquette | 12% | 1/54 | |
| 1982 | Jean Doré | 36% | 15/57 | |
| 1986 | Jean Doré | 68% | 55/58 | |
| 1990 | Jean Doré | 59% | 41/50 | |
| 1994 | Jean Doré | 32% | 7/51 | |
| 1998 | Michel Prescott [6] | 14% | 4/51 |
Victories are indicated with bold fonts.
Footnotes
- ^ Nick Auf der Maur (1942-1998) Homme politique, Bilan du Siècle, Université de Sherbrooke
- ^ Thérèse Daviau élue chef du RCM, Radio-Canada, March 29, 1998
- ^ Thérèse Daviau quitte le RCM, Radio-Canada, April 27, 1998
- ^ Jacques Couture was the Parti Québécois Member of the provincial legislature for the district of Saint-Henri from 1976 to 1981, as well as a Cabinet Member in the government of René Lévesque.
- ^ Jacques Couture, Assemblée nationale du Québec
- ^ Michel Prescott has been the City Councillor for the district of Jeanne-Mance since 1982. He was a member of the RCM, sat as an Independent from 1992 to 1997 and has been affiliated to Gérald Tremblay's Union Montreal party since 2001.


