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Nathalie Malépart

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Nathalie Malépart (born c. 1973) is a Canadian politician. She was a City Councillor in Montreal, Quebec.

Background

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She was born in Montreal about 1973 and was the daughter of politician Jean-Claude Malépart, who was Liberal Member of the House of Commons from 1979 to 1989.

City Councillor

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She was elected to the City Council as a Vision Montreal candidate in 1994 in the district of Maisonneuve. She crossed the floor to sit as an Independent in 1997 and did not run for re-election in 1998.

Provincial Politics

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Malépart ran as the Liberal candidate in a 2006 by-election in the riding of Sainte-Marie–Saint-Jacques, but was defeated by former colleague Martin Lemay.[1][2]

Electoral record (partial)

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Quebec provincial by-election, April 10, 2006: Sainte-Marie–Saint-Jacques
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Parti Québécois Martin Lemay 5,462 41.21 -8.63
Liberal Nathalie Malépart 3,700 27.91 -2.56
Québec solidaire Manon Massé 2,943 22.20 +15.72*
Green Jean-Christophe Mortreux 815 6.15 +3.52
Action démocratique Catherine Goyer 257 1.94 −6.39
Independent Jocelyne Leduc 50 0.38
Independent Régent Millette 28 0.21
Total valid votes 13,255 99.24
Total rejected ballots 101 0.76
Turnout 13,356 31.47 -30.04
Electors on the lists 42,437
Parti Québécois hold Swing -3.04
* Quebec solidaire vote is compared to the UFP vote in the 2003 election.

Footnotes

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See also

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Political offices
Preceded by City Councillor, District of Maisonneuve
1994-1998
Succeeded by