Émilie Thuillier

Émilie Thuillier
Vice-Chair of the Montreal Executive Committee (with Benoit Dorais)
Assumed office
2012
Preceded by Alan DeSousa and Richard Deschamps
Member of the Montreal Executive Committee responsible for social and community development, family, seniors, youth and the status of women
Assumed office
2012
Preceded by Jocelyn Ann Campbell (Social and Community Development, Family, and Seniors); Mary Deros (Youth); Helen Fotopulos (Status of Women)
Montreal City Councillor for Ahuntsic
Assumed office
2009
Preceded by Hasmig Belleli
Personal details
Political party Projet Montréal

Émilie Thuillier is a politician in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. She has served on the Montreal city council since 2009, representing Ahuntsic as a member of Projet Montréal, and has been a member of the Montreal executive committee since November 2012.

Early political career

Thuillier holds a bachelor's degree in Geography from the Université de Montréal and a master's degree in sciences and the environment from the Université du Québec à Montréal.[1] She became a founding member of Projet Montréal in 2004 while writing her master's thesis on urban sustainable development. Not long thereafter, she was chosen as the party's vice-president.[2]

She first sought election to the Plateau-Mont-Royal borough council in the 2005 Montreal municipal election, running in the De Lorimier division. The returns office initially declared her elected by twelve votes, but the final scrutiny showed that she was defeated by nine.[3] Had she won, she would have been only the second representative of her party elected anywhere in the city. After the campaign, she became a leading Projet Montréal spokesperson and press attaché to its leader, Richard Bergeron.[4]

Thuillier later ran for Montreal city council in a 2008 by-election in Ahuntsic. She finished third against Vision Montreal's Hasmig Belleli.[5]

City councillor

Thuillier ran in Ahuntsic again in the 2009 municipal election and was elected in a close three-way contest; one of her opponents was former provincial cabinet minister Diane Lemieux. Gérald Tremblay's Union Montreal won a majority on council and served as the governing party for the next three years, initially with Vision Montreal and Projet Montréal as junior coalition partners and later on its own.

Tremblay resigned as mayor in November 2012 amid the backdrop of a serious corruption scandal. He was replaced by Michael Applebaum, who formed a coalition government with representation from all parties on council and some independents. Applebaum announced his executive committee on November 22, 2012, appointing Thuillier to one of two vice-chair positions, with responsibility for social and community development, family, seniors, youth and the status of women.[6] In June 2013, she helped organize a safety campaign for the benefit of seniors living in social housing.[7]

Applebaum, in turn, resigned as mayor in June 2013. His successor, Laurent Blanchard, re-appointed Thuillier to the same executive positions.[8]

By virtue of her position on city council, Thuillier is also a member of the Ahuntsic-Cartierville borough council.

Electoral record

2009 Montreal municipal election results: Councillor, Ahuntsic
Montreal city council by-election, 21 September 2008: Councillor, Ahuntsic
2005 Montreal municipal election results: Plateau-Mont-Royal borough Councillor, De Lorimier

References

  1. Madame Émilie Thuillier (municipal biography), City of Montreal, accessed 3 April 2012.
  2. Linda Gyulai, "Taking on city hall," Montreal Gazette, 3 June 2006, B1.
  3. Jeff Heinrich, "Fotopulos holds on in 3-way battle," Montreal Gazette, 7 November 2005, A7; Andy Riga, "Bourque seeks judicial recount," Montreal Gazette, 9 November 2005, A1.
  4. James Mennie, "A good day for politicians to watch backs," Montreal Gazette, 16 March 2006, A6; Linda Gyulai, "Taking on city hall," Montreal Gazette, 3 June 2006, B1.
  5. Jason Magder, "St. Léonard welcomes Bissonnet back with open arms; City by-elections. Ahuntsic/Cartierville vote sees tighter result," Montreal Gazette, 22 September 2008, A8.
  6. René Bruemmer, "Applebaum delivers promised mix; Executive committee introduced; Vision gets three seats, Union three, Projet two, plus three independents," Montreal Gazette, 23 November 2012, A4.
  7. "Safety Campaign Targets Over 10,000 Social Housing Seniors," Canada NewsWire, 14 June 2013.
  8. See "Small Steps against Hunger - Children at the heart of mutual help and solidarity actions for needy Montreal families," Canada NewsWire, 4 July 2013.

External links

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