Scott McKay

Scott McKay
MNA for L'Assomption
Incumbent
Assumed office
2008
Preceded by Éric Laporte
Personal details
Born 1961 (age 50–51)
Montréal-Est, Quebec
Political party GreenParti Québécois

Scott McKay (born c. 1961) is a Canadian politician, a member of the Quebec National Assembly for the riding of l'Assomption, a former leader of the Green Party of Quebec, and a former Montreal council member.[1]

Contents

Background

McKay was born to a francophone mother and an irish-anglophone father in the town of Montréal-Est.[2] He has completed a M.Sc. in Environmental sciences at the Université du Québec à Montréal and is currently working in the field of water treatment. He also obtained a bachelor's degree in sciences at the UQAM in 1987.

Municipal politics

In 1986, he was elected to Montreal's City Council as candidate of Jean Doré's Rassemblement des citoyens et citoyennes de Montréal (RCM) for the district of Honoré-Beaugrand. He was re-elected in 1990, but lost to Ivon Le Duc in 1994 as Pierre Bourque became mayor.

Provincial politics

McKay became leader of the Green Party of Quebec on May 28, 2006.[3] The party ran candidates in 108 out of Quebec's 125 districts in 2007. None of them were elected. McKay himself finished fourth in the district of Bourget with 2,632 ballots and about 8.09% of the vote. The winner was Diane Lemieux of the Parti Québécois.

McKay lost the party leadership at a convention held in Trois-Rivières on March 29, 2008. Guy Rainville had won a mail-in vote with 268 ballots (54%) against McKay's 225. Nonetheless, McKay was the Green candidate in the by-election that was called as a result of Lemieux's resignation in the district of Bourget.[4]

Switch to the Parti Québécois

McKay switched parties to run for the Parti Québécois in the 2008 Quebec election, in the riding of L'Assomption.[5]

On December 8, 2008, he was elected as an MNA for the PQ in the riding of L'Assomption.

On December 15, 2011, it was announced that he will probably have to face François Legault, leader of the Coalition for the Future of Quebec (Coalition pour l'avenir du Québec), a newly-formed party, at the next general election.[6]

See also

Electoral record (partial)

References

External links

Political offices
Preceded by
Jacques Martineau
City Councillor, District of Honoré-Beaugrand
1986-1994
Succeeded by
Ivon Le Duc (Vision Montreal)
Party political offices
Preceded by
Richard Savignac
Leaders of the Green Party of Quebec
2006-2008
Succeeded by
Guy Rainville