Stéphane Gendron

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stéphane Gendron (born December 22, 1967, in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu) is the current mayor of Huntingdon, Quebec and a political analyst for several media outlets. He hosts the current affairs TV show "L'avocat et le diable" on the TQS network and a radio show on Montreal-based station 98,5 FM.

Gendron gained media attention by enacting a municipal curfew forcing minors to stay off the street after 10 p.m. in Huntingdon, in an attempt to reduce juvenile crime. Following threats of litigation, the municipal council eventually withdrew the proposed curfew.

Gendron is a graduate of Collège Jean de la Mennais in La Prairie and has a law degree from the Université de Montreal and master's degree in history from the University of Massachusetts Lowell.

Prior to his political and media career, Gendron practiced law and taught at the CEGEP level. He was also a political aide to former Parti Québécois politician Jean Garon. He was recently approached by the Conservative Party of Canada to be a candidate for the next federal election [1]. Gendron is viewed as conservative despite being in favour of same-sex marriage and legalized abortion [2].

Gendron is known for making controversial statements. He stated in an August 2006 interview with Le Soleil that Israelis are modern-day Nazis ("Les Israéliens, ce sont les nazis des temps modernes") [3]; he later claimed that he only referred to the current Government of Israel, and that it was not exaggerated to compare that government with the Nazis [4]. In 2005, he claimed that Quebec premier Jean Charest was a "murderer" ("meurtrier") for his government's initial refusal to subsidize Herceptin, a new drug against breast cancer [5]; he later apologized for these comments after being served legal papers [6].

[edit] References

In other languages