Mario Laframboise

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mario Laframboise
In office
2000 – Present
Riding Argenteuil—Papineau—Mirabel
Preceded by Maurice Dumas
Born November 07 1957 (age 49)
Notre-Dame-de-la-Paix, Quebec
Political party

Bloc Québécois

Profession(s) former mayor and reeve

Mario Laframboise (born November 7, 1957 in Notre-Dame-de-la-Paix, Quebec) is a Canadian politician. Laframboise served as mayor of Notre-Dame-de-la-Paix and reeve of the Papineau MRC before getting into federal politics. In the Canadian federal election, 2000, Laframboise was elected into the Canadian House of Commons as the Bloc Québécois candidate in the riding of Argenteuil—Papineau—Mirabel. He was easily re-elected in the 2004 and 2006 elections in the riding of Argenteuil—Mirabel with large margins. A former notary, he is the former Bloc critic to the Minister of Transport, and is their current critic to the Minister of Infrastructure. He is also since May 2006, the current vice-president of the federal permanent committee of Transport, Infrastructure and Communities. [1]

[edit] Priorities

His recent priorities is centered on the local economy which is especially dominated by the forestery, tourism and agriculture sectors especially in the Petite-Nation region. When the Conservative government of Stephen Harper was elected to power after the 2006 election, Laframboise urged them to adopt a motion by the Bloc Quebecois that would have modified the Employment Insurance Bill which would helped workers who've lost their jobs - at that time a local Thurso sawmill closed in early 2006. [2]

He mentionned that the Conservatives had promised during the election to create an independent Employment Insurance program. [3] The MP and his party also wanted measures to help more aged workers when they lost their jobs.

Despite its support over the Kyoto Accord, Laframboise also supported the completion of Quebec Autoroute 50 between Gatineau and Lachute in the Laurentians which has been planned for years in order to provide an alternative way to the dangerous Quebec route 148 which was the scene of numerous fatal accidents over the years in the Petite-Nation region. During his mandates, he criticized the lack of participation of the federal government (during the Liberal era) over the construction of it. However, the lack of funding forced the Quebec government to build only a Super-2 highway, while Laframboise wanted a 4-lane traditional Autoroute to facilitated a triangular corridor formed by Montreal, Gatineau and the Mont-Tremblant ski resort in the Laurentians. He mentionned that a two-lane highway would became as dangerous as the Quebec route 175 that crossed the Laurentians Wildlife Reserve north of Quebec City. [4]

[edit] Election Results

Official Voting Results

General Election (January 23, 2006)

Argenteuil-Papineau-Mirabel (Quebec)
Candidate Party Number of Votes Percentage
Suzanne Courville Conservative Party of Canada 12 462 23.32%
Mario Laframboise Bloc Quebecois 27 855 52.13%
Francois-Hughes Liberge Liberal Party of Canada 7 171 13.42%
Claude Sabourin Green Party of Canada 2 480 4.64%
Andre Senecal New Democratic Party 3 466 6.48%

Official Voting Results

General Election (June 28, 2004)

Argenteuil-Mirabel (Quebec)
Candidate Party Number of Votes Percentage
Elizabeth Clark New Democratic Party 1 493 3.04%
Laurent Filion Christian Heritage Party of Canada 202 0.04%
Mario Laframboise Bloc Quebecois 28 228 57.40%
David H. McArthur Conservative Party of Canada 3 460 7.04%
Michael O'Grady Communist Party of Canada (Marxist-Leninist) 69 0.01%
Claude Sabourin Green Party of Canada 2 510 5.10%
Yves Sabourin Liberal Party of Canada 13 214 26.87%

Official Voting Results

General Election (November 22, 2000)

Argenteuil-Papineau-Mirabel (Quebec)
Candidate Party Number of Votes Percentage
Mario Laframboise Bloc Quebecois 21 713 43.20%
Lise Bourgault Liberal Party of Canada 21 171 42.12%
Francine Labelle Canadian Alliance 2 897 5.77%
Jean-Denis Pelletier Progressive Conservative Party of Canada 1 848 3.68%
Pierre Audette Marijuana Party of Canada 934 1.86%
Gilles Bisson Green Party of Canada 723 1.44%
Didier Charles New Democratic Party 550 1.09%
Marie-Therese Nault Natural Law Party of Canada 256 0.51%
Laurent Filion Independent 167 0.33%
Preceded by
Maurice Dumas, Bloc Québécois
Member of Parliament for Argenteuil—Papineau—Mirabel
2000-present
Succeeded by
incumbent

[edit] References

  1. ^ Laflamme, Jessy, La Petite-Nation en bref, La Petite-Nation (Saint-Andre-Avellin), Saint-Andre-Avellin, Quebec, May 14, 2006, page 7
  2. ^ Thurso : MacMillan déborde de confiance, Le Droit, Ottawa, April 22, 2006, page 4
  3. ^ Soucy, Yves, Assurance-emploi : Laframboise presse les conservateurs d'agir (Employment Insurance : Laframboise urges Conservatives to act), Le Droit, Ottawa, May 12, 2006, page 10.
  4. ^ Gauderault, Patrice, Élections 2006, Argenteuil-Papineau-Mirabel, Le fief bloquiste, Le Droit, Ottawa, January 5, 2006, page 6
In other languages