LaSalle–Émard–Verdun | Municipal councilor Craig Sauvé will be the NDP candidate

LaSalle–Émard–Verdun | Municipal councilor Craig Sauvé will be the NDP candidate
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(Ottawa) Municipal councilor Craig Sauvé will wear the colors of the New Democratic Party (NDP) in the riding of LaSalle–Émard–Verdun, in Montreal, during the next federal election.


Published at 1:30 p.m.

Michel Saba

The Canadian Press

He will be elected by acclamation during an investiture meeting scheduled for this Sunday afternoon since no other candidacy was received before the deadline, the political party confirmed to The Canadian Press.

In a video that will be shown to activists, NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says the 43-year-old politician who has been a councilor in the South West district since 2013 represents “a golden opportunity” for their party.

“Craig is already a really well-known councilor in the county and can present himself as a real option for the working classes, for workers, and we can win,” he said. Together, we can build a better country. Together, we can build a better society. »

In an interview Friday evening, Craig Sauvé said that he “loves” his current job, but that he also realizes that “more structuring” changes require the support of higher levels of government.

Mr. Sauvé said he noticed “enthusiasm” for the NDP when he went door to door, and dissatisfaction with Justin Trudeau’s Liberals, so much so that he believes that his fellow citizens, whom he describes like “progressives”, could well cause surprise and “turn orange this time”.

However, this is not an easy task. Liberal David Lametti has won three consecutive elections since 2015, the year the riding was created. In the last election, in 2021, Mr. Lametti was re-elected with 42.9% of the votes. The Bloc Québécois candidate followed far behind (22.1%) and the NDP candidate came third (19.4%).

Mr. Sauvé believes that all hopes are justified given his record as an advisor who “delivered the goods” and the fact that the previous NDP candidate ran “a very small campaign” with a virtual absence in the public square. “Despite that, he got 20%. So that’s the base, base, base. We are going to do a big campaign, we are going to pull out all the stops,” he said.

Craig Sauvé does not intend to give up his duties on the municipal council, but plans to take a sabbatical leave during the election period “like the other councilors before [lui] ”, and donate his salary to neighborhood charities at that time.

In 2021, a few days before the municipal elections, he withdrew from the Projet Montréal caucus – the party of Mayor Valérie Plante – following allegations of sexual assault. He has always denied the charges against him and has since served as an independent advisor.

“For me, the file is closed,” reiterated Craig Sauvé in an interview after affirming that he had made it his “duty to treat this with the greatest respect, listening and transparency” and having taken part in a mediation process. He noted that a police investigation was conducted and did not result in any charges. The victim also did not take legal action.

The riding of LaSalle–Émard–Verdun was left vacant by the resignation of David Lametti on January 31, a few months after the former Minister of Justice was excluded from Cabinet during last summer’s ministerial shuffle.

The government has a maximum of six months after the resignation of an MP to call a by-election.

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