- Source: 2009 Montreal municipal election
The city of Montreal, Quebec, Canada, held a municipal election at the same time as numerous other municipalities in Quebec, on November 1, 2009. Voters elected the Mayor of Montreal, Montreal City Council, and the mayors and councils of each of the city's boroughs.
The election became plagued with allegations of corruption and mafia involvement in city contracts.
Results
Despite being assailed with accusations of corruption, incumbent Mayor Gérald Tremblay led his Union Montréal party to a third victory, although with reduced standings in city council. Union's seat totals remained firm especially in the boroughs merged into the city in 2002; it retained complete control of eight boroughs and near-complete control of three more.
Vision Montréal, led by former Quebec minister of municipal affairs Louise Harel, ran a campaign targeting the mayor on ethics. However, its campaign was blindsided by a scandal involving its second-in-command and former leader Benoit Labonté, who dropped out of the race. Vision increased its council standing but was unable to defeat the mayor. It won complete control of Mercier–Hochelaga-Maisonneuve and majorities in three other borough councils.
Third party Projet Montréal increased sharply in popularity. An Angus Reid poll shortly prior to the election put its leader Richard Bergeron neck-and-neck (32%) with the two other main candidates (34% for Harel, 30% for Tremblay). He would finally come in third, but the party increased from just one seat at the previous election to ten council seats, two borough mayors, four borough councillors, and complete control of the borough of Le Plateau-Mont-Royal. Besides its main issue of public transit and urban planning, the party emphasized ethics, running its campaign on just $200,000.
= Mayor of Montreal
== Composition of city and borough councils
=Depending on their borough, Montrealers voted for:
Mayor of Montreal
Borough mayor (except in Ville-Marie, whose mayor is the Mayor of Montreal), who is also a city councillor
A city councillor for the whole borough or for each district, who is also a borough councillor (Outremont and L'Île-Bizard–Sainte-Geneviève have no city councillors other than the borough mayor)
Zero, one, or two additional borough councillors for each district
Seat-by-seat results
Nomination was open until October 2 at 4:30 p.m.
= Candidate statistics
=Party names are the official ones registered with Élection Montréal.
= Results by party
== Ahuntsic-Cartierville
== Anjou
== Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce
== L'Île-Bizard–Sainte-Geneviève
== Lachine
== LaSalle
== Mercier–Hochelaga-Maisonneuve
== Montréal-Nord
== Outremont
== Pierrefonds-Roxboro
== Le Plateau-Mont-Royal
== Rivière-des-Prairies–Pointe-aux-Trembles
== Rosemont–La Petite-Patrie
== Saint-Laurent
== Saint-Léonard
== Le Sud-Ouest
== Verdun
== Ville-Marie
== Villeray–Saint-Michel–Parc-Extension
=Declined
Johanna Raso - Financial consultant, former lecturer at McGill University, published articles. She was invited to run for borough mayor by both major parties, Union Montreal and Vision Montreal. She declined both invitations, despite campaign support from the business community.
References
External links
Élection Montréal 2009
Official election results
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Kota New York
- New York (negara bagian)
- Daftar jaringan metro
- 2009 Montreal municipal election
- 2021 Montreal municipal election
- List of Montreal municipal elections
- 2013 Montreal municipal election
- 2017 Montreal municipal election
- Renouveau municipal de Montréal
- Projet Montréal
- Mayor of Montreal
- 2005 Montreal municipal election
- Marc-Boris St-Maurice