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| List
of candidates
In total, 343 candidates (104 women, 239 men) representing nine
authorized parties or filed as independents, will each be running
for one of the 105 offices open for election in the territory of
the City of Montreal, on Sunday, Nov. 6.
Overall, 4 candidates are running for the office city mayor, 59
for borough mayors, 166 for city councillors, and 114 for borough
councillors. |
Source: City
of Montreal
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Tremblay
re-elected as mayor of Montreal
Nov. 6, 2005
Boucher
snags victory with no-frills campaign
Nov. 6, 2005
Vaillancourt
wins fifth mandate
Nov. 6, 2005
Gladu new
mayor of Longueuil
Nov. 6, 2005
Perrault
wins Sherbrooke race
Nov. 6, 2005
Voting extended
in several polling stations
Nov. 6, 2005
Bourque cites his poor poll results as good news
Oct. 31, 2005
Tremblay,
Bourque slam each other in debate
Oct. 28, 2005
No
transit breaks for older students: candidates
Oct. 18, 2005 |


The two main mayoralty candidates debated on Oct. 30, 2005. This time
Gerald Tremblay and Pierre Bourque traded insults in English.
Civic
affairs reporter Shawn Apel has the story on this heated debate.
The Municipal Affairs Minister sided with Gérald Tremblay
on Tuesday, Oct. 25 when it comes to the agglomeration council.
The new council will spend money on island-wide services like policing and
transit.
Watch
Amanda Pfeffer's report.
Montreal will soon have different borough councils, they city council and
the agglomeration council.
This has some democracy watchers worried. Dimitri Roussopoulos is the president
of SODECM, a Montreal community development society.
Watch
his interview with Dennis Trudeau. |

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