Union Nationale candidates in the 1970 Quebec provincial election
Appearance
The Union Nationale fielded a full slate of 108 candidates under the leadership of Jean-Jacques Bertrand in the 1970 Quebec provincial election. Although it entered the election as the governing party, it won only seventeen seats and emerged as the official opposition in the next sitting of the National Assembly. The party, which had dominated Quebec politics at the provincial level for most of the period since 1936, was never again a serious contender for power after this election.
Candidates
[edit]Note: This section is incomplete.
Riding | Candidate's Name | Notes | Gender | Residence | Occupation | Votes | % | Rank |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Abitibi-Est | Réjean Hamel | M | 4,224 | 4th | ||||
Abitibi-Ouest | Dominique Godbout | 1,626 | 3rd | |||||
Ahuntsic | Euclide Laliberté | M | 3,760 | 3rd | ||||
Argenteuil | William McOuat Cottingham | Incumbent; former minister of mines | M | 3,964 | 2rd | |||
Arthabaska | Roch Gardner | Incumbent | M | 5,983 | 3rd | |||
Bagot | Jean-Guy Cardinal | Incumbent; minister of education; later a Parti Québécois MNA | M | 4,591 | 1st | |||
Beauce | Paul-Émile Allard | Incumbent; minister of natural resources | M | 9,360 | 2nd | |||
Beauharnois | Lucien Leduc | M | 5,515 | 3rd | ||||
Bellechasse | Gabriel Loubier | Incumbent; minister of tourism and fishing; led the Union Nationale from 1971 to 1974 | M | 6,111 | 1st | |||
Berthier | Guy Gauthier | Incumbent | M | 5,387 | 1st | |||
Bonaventure | Jean-Guy Roussy | M | 5,074 | 2nd | ||||
Bourassa | Réal Gibeau | Gibeau served on the Montréal-Nord city council from 1978 to 1996 as a member of mayor Yves Ryan's Renouveau municipal party. He died on August 28, 1996.[1] His son, Jean-Marc Gibeau, was a Montréal-Nord city councillor from 1996 to 2001 and a Montreal city councillor from 2002 to 2017. | M | Insurance broker | 4,265 | 8.76 | 3rd |
Source:[2]
References
[edit]- ^ Montreal Gazette, 29 August 1996, C6.
- ^ Les résultats électoraux depuis 1867, National Assembly of Quebec, accessed 22 November 2017.