• Source: 2001 Montreal municipal election
    • The 2001 Montreal municipal election took place on November 4, 2001, to elect a mayor and city councillors in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Gérald Tremblay defeated incumbent Pierre Bourque to become mayor of the newly amalgamated city. This was the only municipal election that was held for the amalgamated city (the amalgamation took effect on January 1, 2002), as the next municipal election was for the defused city.
      All mayoral candidates were also allowed to run for a seat on council, with "alternates" who would assume the council seat if the mayoral candidates were elected to both offices.


      Results




      = Mayor

      =


      = Council (incomplete)

      =


      = Borough councils (incomplete)

      =


      = Composition of city and borough councils

      =
      Depending on their borough, Montrealers voted for:

      Mayor of Montreal
      One, two, or three city councillors for the whole borough or one for each district, who are also borough councillors
      Zero or one additional borough councillors for the whole borough or for each district


      Information about the candidates


      Montreal Island Citizens Union
      Robert Blondin (Louis-Cyr) appears to have been a first-time candidate. During the 1980s, a person named Robert Blondin chaired the Parti Québécois's riding committee in Saint-Henri and criticized René Lévesque's decision to de-emphasize the party's focus on Quebec sovereignty. This may have been the same person.
      Gilles Marette (Louis-Riel) was a first time candidate.
      Nancy Boileau (Maisonneuve) is a community activist. In 2000, she sought to initiate a class-action lawsuit on behalf of commuters who had waited in cold weather for city buses that never arrived or were too full to pick up more passengers. In the 2001 campaign, she campaigned against gentrification and for more affordable housing.
      Vision Montreal
      Lino Colapelle (Saint-Léonard-Est borough council) was a first-time candidate.
      White Elephant Party
      Charles Paradis (Jean-Rivard), Daniel Paré (Louis-Cyr) and Denis Fournier (Saint-Léonard) were first-time candidates.
      Independents
      Steve Gentile (Port-Maurice) was a first-time candidate. There is a noted designer in Saint-Leonard named Steve Gentile, though it is not known if this is the same person.


      Seat-by-seat results




      = Ahuntsic-Cartierville

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      = Anjou

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      = Beaconsfield–Baie-D'Urfé

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      = Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce

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      = Côte-Saint-Luc–Hampstead–Montreal West

      =


      = Dollard-Des Ormeaux–Roxboro

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      = Dorval–L'Île-Dorval

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      = L'Île-Bizard–Sainte-Geneviève–Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue

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      = Kirkland

      =


      = Lachine

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      = LaSalle

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      = Mercier–Hochelaga-Maisonneuve

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      = Montréal-Nord

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      = Mount Royal

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      = Outremont

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      = Pierrefonds-Senneville

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      = Le Plateau-Mont-Royal

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      = Pointe-Claire

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      = Rivière-des-Prairies–Pointe-aux-Trembles–Montréal-Est

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      = Rosemont–La Petite-Patrie

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      = Saint-Laurent

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      = Saint-Léonard

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      = Le Sud-Ouest

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      = Verdun

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      = Ville-Marie

      =


      = Villeray–Saint-Michel–Parc-Extension

      =


      = Westmount

      =


      References

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