Former CSN President Marc Laviolette is no more

Trade unionist and former president of the Confederation of National Trade Unions (CSN), Marc Laviolette, died this morning, the trade union center announced in a press release.


Published yesterday at 8:57 p.m.



Marie-Ève ​​Martel

The Canadian Press

“It is a great mourning today for the entire union movement,” wrote the president of the CSN, Caroline Senneville.

“Marc Laviolette’s commitment to the working class, and more particularly to health and safety issues in the workplace, must be highlighted,” she continues. His outspokenness and his proximity to workers throughout Quebec have made him an exemplary union activist, always ready to defend the rights of the most vulnerable people. The flag of our head office in Montreal will also be flown at half-mast to honor his memory and his time among us.”

Mr. Laviolette began his union career in the 1970s, notably by chairing the local union of the CLSC de la Seigneurie de Beauharnois, in his native region of Suroît. He subsequently became president of the National Chemical Products Union of Salaberry-de-Valleyfield (SNPCV-CSN) from 1986 to 1994 and, during the same period, vice-president of the CSN Metallurgy Federation.

Between 1994 and 1999, he became third vice-president of the CSN, then succeeded Gérald Larose as president from 1999 to 2002.

Political involvement

In addition to his union career, Marc Laviolette was a fervent supporter of Quebec sovereignty. He was particularly involved with the Parti Québécois and was one of the founders of its branch Syndicalists and Progressives for a Free Quebec (SPQ Libre). He was also a PQ candidate in Soulanges in the 2007 election.

In 1980, he was an independent candidate in the federal elections in Beauharnois-Salaberry. The following year, he ran under the banner of the Communist Workers’ Party in the provincial elections, again in Beauharnois.

Mr. Laviolette’s son, Alexandre Boileau-Laviolette, is the current president of the Fédération du commerce (FC-CSN).

On the social network Indeed a great loss for the entire trade union movement. »

The cause of his death has not been specified.

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