Coalition Démocratique–Montréal Écologique (English: Democratic Coalition–Ecology Montreal) was a municipal political party in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, from 1994 to 1998. The party was led by Yolande Cohen, who was also its candidate for mayor in the 1994 municipal election.
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As its name implies, the party was formed by a merger of two pre-existing political parties: the Coalition Démocratique de Montréal (CDM) and Montréal Écologique (MÉ). The parties had a history of co-operation prior to the merger. Both were formed as breakaway groups from the left wing of the governing Montreal Citizens' Movement (MCM) in late 1989 and had co-operated under a non-aggression pact in the 1990 municipal election, pledging not to run against one another in the mayoral contest and most of the city's council races.[1]
The CDM won three seats in the 1990 election and another seat in a 1991 by-election. Two of the CDM's councillors subsequently resigned from the party in 1992, arguing that it was not sufficiently receptive to the concerns of Montreal's francophone community. Montréal Écologique did not win any seats in the 1990 election and was largely inactive from 1990 to 1994.
The two parties announced plans for an official merger in June 1994, in part to overcome Coalition Démocratique's internal divisions and create a larger political movement on the municipal left.[2] The merger was made official by Quebec's chief electoral official on 23 August 1994.[3] The Coalition Démocratique and Montréal Écologique initially continued as autonomous movements within the merged party, which was overseen by a common six-member executive.[4]
The party's founding members included city councillors Marvin Rotrand and Sam Boskey, both of whom had been elected as Coalition Démocratique candidates in 1990 and chose to remain with the party afterwards.[5] Cohen had been a member of Montréal Écologique, whose former leader, Dimitri Roussopoulos, was also a supporter of the merged party.[6]
Coalition Démocratique–Montréal Écologique's 1994 campaign stressed the need for ordinary Montrealers to take a more active role in city governance and have greater oversight of municipal services. The party promised to create neighbourhood councils that would have real powers over local services and to replace the regional Montreal Urban Community's public security commission with a new body that would permit increased civilian oversight of the police.[7] The party also promised to extend curbside recycling services to the entire city, spend one per cent of the city's municipal budget on the arts, create 1,200 units of low-income housing, and restructure the Montreal Urban Community as a smaller, elected body in which the city would have more power relative to the Island of Montreal's suburban communities.[8]
Cohen finished fourth in the mayoral contest, a result that was consistent with polls taken throughout the campaign.[9] Rotrand and Boskey were re-elected, but Coalition Démocratique–Montréal Écologique did not win any further seats.[10]
Coalition Démocratique–Montréal Écologique continued to exist for four years after the election. Boskey and Rotrand remained prominent members of city council, actively opposing new mayor Pierre Bourque's plans to eliminate Montreal's district advisory committees in late 1994 and later urging an investigation into allegations of illegal contributions to the governing Vision Montreal party.[11]
Coalition Démocratique–Montréal Écologique reverted to the "Coalition Démocratique de Montréal" name for the 1998 municipal election, and Montréal Écologique did not re-emerge as a separate organization after this time.