Montréal Écologique (MÉ) (English: Ecology Montreal) was a municipal political party in Montreal, Quebec, Canada, that existed from 1990 to 1994.
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The party that became Montréal Écologique was started in 1989 through a series of public meetings organized by Dimitri Roussopoulos, a veteran political organizer and publisher in the city. Roussopoulos indicated that his group was intended to become Montreal's first municipal green party and would make environmental issues its top priority.[1] MÉ was formally registered with city hall in April 1990.[2]
The party was established at about the same time as the Coalition démocratique de Montréal (CDM), a left-wing breakaway group from the governing Montreal Citizens' Movement (MCM). Roussopoulos held talks with CDM leaders on inter-party co-operation in late 1989, although no agreement was reached at time time.[3] In October 1990, the parties signed a "non-aggression pact," pledging not to run against one another in most of the city's council wards. As a result of the pact, Montréal Écologique did not field a candidate for mayor.[4]
Montréal Écologique's platform for the 1990 municipal election included calls for reducing automobile use, increasing green space, a full recycling program, proportional representation, and a toll for cars entering the Island of Montreal with fewer than three people.[5] During the election, Roussopoulos said that Montreal should reduce its garbage output by seventy per cent.[6] Some party members also pledged to set up a food bank after the election, expressing surprise at the degree of poverty in the city.[7]
MÉ ran twenty-one candidates in the 1990 election, none of whom were elected. Roussopoulos finished second to an MCM candidate in the Jeanne-Mance ward.[8]
Roussopoulos remained as leader of Montréal Écologique until August 1994, when the party was formally merged with the Coalition democratique de Montreal.[9] Yolande Cohen became leader of the resulting Coalition democratique-Montréal Écologique (CD-MÉ) party for the 1994 election.[10]
The merged party won two seats on council, both of whom were former members of the Coalition democratique. These councillors used the CD-MÉ name until the 1998 election, at which time the party reverted to the Coalition democratique name.[11] Montréal Écologique did not re-surface as a separate organization after this time.