Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Seating plan following the election. The 2008 Quebec general election was held in the Canadian province of Quebec on December 8, 2008. The Quebec Liberal Party, under incumbent Premier Jean Charest, was re-elected with a majority government, marking the first time since the 1950s (when the Union Nationale of Maurice Duplessis won four consecutive elections) that a party or leader was elected ...
Polling firm Last date of polling Source CPC LPC NDP BQ GPC; Election 2008: October 14, 2008 HTML: 37.6: 26.2 18.2 10.0 6.8 Asking Canadians [1]: October 13, 2008
Electoral results by parties and independent MNAs (as a percentage of total National Assembly seats) from 1927 to 2008. This article provides a summary of results for the general elections to the Canadian province of Quebec's unicameral legislative body, the National Assembly of Quebec (and its predecessor, the Legislative Assembly of Quebec).
Before joining the ADQ, he was a member of the Quebec Liberal Party. [6] He was the ADQ's vice-president in the buildup to the 2008 election and helped draft the party's economic platform. In November 2008, he contradicted party leader Mario Dumont on a proposed increase to Quebec's minimum wage. (Dumont had said the ADQ would likely support an ...
The poll shows Conservatives taking early leads in Ontario, British Columbia and the Prairies. In Atlantic Canada, Liberals still hold a strong majority, while in Quebec the Bloc Québécois leads while the Conservatives and Liberals are almost tied for second. When asked, most Canadians said the Conservatives would handle the economy better ...
The 40th Canadian federal election was held on October 14, 2008. The Conservative Party of Canada, led by Stephen Harper, won a minority government. The Conservatives won 143 seats. The Liberal Party of Canada, won 77 seats. The separatist Bloc Québécois won 49 seats and the social-democratic New Democratic Party won 37. Two independent ...
A veteran member of the Quebec sovereigntist movement, [6] Leclerc also ran for the PQ in Brome—Missisquoi in 2007 and 2012. M Publicist [7] 8,325 27.32 2nd Jean-Lesage: Hélène Guillemette: Guillemette was a political attaché to Parti Québécois MNA François Gendron from 2003 to 2005.
Charbonneau was a Liberal candidate in the 2007 and 2008 Quebec provincial elections. He is not to be confused with a former Montreal city councillor of the same name. [1] M: 9,125: 32.63: 2/6 Nicolet-Yamaska: Mario Landry Landry was a financial director at CSSS Bécancour-Nicolet-Yamaska at the time of the election. [2] M