Éric Caire

Éric Caire (born May 21, 1965) is a Canadian politician from Quebec, Canada, and the CAQ Member of the National Assembly for the electoral district of La Peltrie.


Éric Caire

Member of the National Assembly of Quebec for La Peltrie
Assumed office
March 26, 2007
Preceded byFrance Hamel
Personal details
Born (1965-05-21) May 21, 1965
Sorel-Tracy, Quebec, Canada
Political partyADQ (2007–2009)
Independent (2009–2011)
CAQ (2011–)
Spouse(s)Marie-Ève Lemay
ResidenceQuebec City

Early career

Caire was born in Sorel-Tracy, Quebec. He was the owner of a local business for one year and taught computer sciences at Collège François-Xavier-Garneau in Quebec City. Before his election, he was a computer-analyst for eight years including two with Cognicase. In 2004, he was also the host of a local community radio show at CIMI-FM.

Political career

Caire first attempted to enter politics in 2001 with a failed independent candidacy at the Quebec municipal elections in 2001. Caire first ran for a provincial seat at the National Assembly for the Action démocratique du Québec (ADQ) in the 2003 election but finished second with 34% of the vote. Liberal candidate France Hamel won with 41% of the vote.

In the 2007 election, Caire was easily elected with 51% of the vote. Hamel, who was running for re-election, finished second with 27% of the vote. Caire took office on April 12, 2007.[1] On April 19, 2007, he was selected to be the Official Opposition's Shadow Minister of Health.[2]

Caire was among the first ADQ supporters to back the abolition of public school boards,[3] an idea inspired by the OECD reforms on school choice (notably charter schools and school vouchers education models) as they exist notably in England, Sweden, Netherlands, Australia and some Canadian provinces (notably Alberta), that is now part of the party's platform as of 2007.[4]

In the 2008 election, Caire won re-election with 39% of the vote, even though his party's support sharply declined.

He was a candidate for the 2009 Action démocratique du Québec leadership election and lost by two votes to Gilles Taillon. He subsequently left the party, alleging that the party organization lacked transparency and that Taillon had a dictatorial style of leadership.[5]

On December 19, 2011, he joined the CAQ.[6]

Cabinet posts

Quebec Provincial Government of François Legault
Cabinet post (1)
Predecessor Office Successor
Position Created Deputy Minister for Government Digital Transformation
October 18, 2018present
Incumbent

Footnotes

gollark: But surely if the users think you're nice they'll try and get specifically you more often.
gollark: Why would you LIKE interacting with users? Have you SEEN users?
gollark: > System administrator is the best tech job hands down. I love getting paid to install things.Does it involve dealing with users?
gollark: Isn't that *also* kind of bad? I mean, you're subject to departmental politics stuff probably, have "publish or perish" going on, etc.
gollark: "It's only real work if you do manual labour, because that was around longer and is thus evidently the only valid kind, and it looks more difficult to me."
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