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Richer Dompierre
Member of Montreal city council

Richer Dompierre

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Member of Montreal city council
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Gender
Male
Age
67 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Richer Dompierre (born July 28, 1957) is a politician in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He served on the Montreal city council from 1998 to 2009, initially as a member of Vision Montreal (VM) and later for the rival Union Montreal (UM).

Early life and private career

Born in Montreal, Dompierre has worked in the printing sector in 1979. In 2010–11, he was the publisher of "Qui est qui du Québec" (English: "Who's who in Quebec").

Councillor

Dompierre was first elected to the Montreal city council in 1998 as a Vision Montreal candidate in the east-end division of Maisonneuve. VM won a landslide majority in this election under Pierre Bourque's leadership; after the election, Bourque appointed Dompierre as an associate member of the Montreal executive committee (i.e., the municipal cabinet) with responsibility for economic development.

Gérald Tremblay's Montreal Island Citizens Union (MICU) defeated Vision Montreal in the 2001 municipal election. Dompierre was re-elected in Maisonneuve and served as a member of the official opposition; he also became a member of the newly created Mercier–Hochelaga-Maisonneuve borough council. In 2003, he filed a police complaint alleging that fellow Vision Montreal councillor Ivon Le Duc had attacked him during a heated borough council debate over a proposed move of the Jean-Paul Riopelle sculpture La Joute. The chief crown prosecutor confirmed there was enough evidence to charge Le Duc with assault, but ultimately no charges were laid. Le Duc instead took part in a program that allowed for the non-judicial treatment of certain infractions.

Dompierre ran for the redistributed Louis-Riel division in the 2005 municipal election and was narrowly re-elected over fellow councillor Nicolas Tétrault. The electoral office initially showed Tétrault elected by twelve votes, but a more thorough scrutiny confirmed Dompierre as the winner. The following year, Dompierre was the only VM councillor to support an unsuccessful plan to rename Montreal's Park Avenue and Bleury Street area after former Quebec premier Robert Bourassa. He left Vision Montreal to join Tremblay's party (by this time renamed as Union Montreal) in June 2008. In the 2009 municipal election, he was defeated by VM candidate Lyn Thériault.

Provincial politics

Dompierre ran as a Liberal Party candidate in the 2003 Quebec provincial election in the east-end Montreal division of Hochelaga-Maisonneuve. He finished second against Parti Québécois incumbent Louise Harel.

Electoral record

Municipal
PartyCandidateTotal votes% of total votes
PartyCandidateTotal votes% of total votes
Vision MontrealLyn Thériault3,78439.95
Union MontrealRicher Dompierre2,92630.89
Projet MontréalMichel Bouchard2,43725.73
IndependentSteve Lamer2552.69
IndependentKristian-Andrew Solarik690.73
Total valid votes9,471100
Source: Municipal Election Results, 2009, City of Montreal.
Vision MontrealLyn Thériault3,78439.95
Union MontrealRicher Dompierre2,92630.89
Projet MontréalMichel Bouchard2,43725.73
IndependentSteve Lamer2552.69
IndependentKristian-Andrew Solarik690.73
Total valid votes9,471100
Source: Municipal Election Results, 2009, City of Montreal.
PartyCandidateTotal votes% of total votes
PartyCandidateTotal votes% of total votes
Vision Montreal(x)Richer Dompierre3,80545.36
Montreal Island Citizens Union(x)Nicolas Tétrault3,75544.76
Projet MontréalDaniel Archambault8299.88
Total valid votes8,389100
Source: Election results, 1833-2005 (in French), City of Montreal.
Vision Montreal(x)Richer Dompierre3,80545.36
Montreal Island Citizens Union(x)Nicolas Tétrault3,75544.76
Projet MontréalDaniel Archambault8299.88
Total valid votes8,389100
Source: Election results, 1833-2005 (in French), City of Montreal.
PartyCandidateTotal votes% of total votes
PartyCandidateTotal votes% of total votes
Vision Montreal(x)Richer Dompierre5,74571.88
Montreal Island Citizens UnionNancy Boileau2,24828.12
Total valid votes7,993100
Source: Election results, 1833-2005 (in French), City of Montreal.
Vision Montreal(x)Richer Dompierre5,74571.88
Montreal Island Citizens UnionNancy Boileau2,24828.12
Total valid votes7,993100
Source: Election results, 1833-2005 (in French), City of Montreal.
PartyCandidateTotal votes% of total votes
PartyCandidateTotal votes% of total votes
Vision MontrealRicher Dompierre2,17947.40
New MontrealJean Baribeau1,04722.78
Montreal Citizens' MovementJacynthe Simard71915.64
Team MontrealJean Vianney Jutras65214.18
Total valid votes4,597100.00
Source: Municipal Election Results (1998), City of Montreal
Vision MontrealRicher Dompierre2,17947.40
New MontrealJean Baribeau1,04722.78
Montreal Citizens' MovementJacynthe Simard71915.64
Team MontrealJean Vianney Jutras65214.18
Total valid votes4,597100.00
Source: Municipal Election Results (1998), City of Montreal
Provincial
2003 Quebec general election: Hochelaga-Maisonneuve
PartyCandidateVotes%±%
Parti QuébécoisLouise Harel13,13855.77−4.84
LiberalRicher Dompierre6,21026.36+0.83
Action démocratiqueLouise Blackburn2,44910.40−1.11
UFPLise Alarie7883.34
Bloc PotAlex Néron4762.02
GreenDaniel Breton3671.56
Marxist–LeninistChristine Dandenault790.34−0.28
Christian DemocracyMario Richard520.22
Total valid votes23,55998.40
Total rejected ballots3831.60
Turnout23,94260.09−7.92
Electors on the lists39,843
Source: Official Results, Le Directeur général des élections du Québec.
The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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