Roger Larivée

Roger Larivée is a former politician in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He served on the Montreal city council from 1978 to 1982 as a member of the Civic Party of Montreal.

Larivée worked at his family's roofing firm in private life.[1] He first ran for a seat on city council in the 1974 municipal election and was defeated in the second Saint-Jacques ward. He was elected in the 1978 municipal election, in which the Civic Party won a landslide majority, and served for the next four years as a backbench supporter of mayor Jean Drapeau's administration. He was defeated by Robert Perreault of the Montreal Citizens' Movement in the 1982 election.

Larivée intended to run as a Civic Party candidate again in the 1986 municipal election but was denied the nomination.[2] He later briefly affiliated with the Montreal Municipal Democratic Alliance party,[3] but ultimately chose to run as an independent. He finished a distant third.

Electoral record

1986 Montreal municipal election results: Councillor, Laurier
1982 Montreal municipal election results: Councillor, Laurier
1978 Montreal municipal election results: Councillor, Laurier
1974 Montreal municipal election results: Councillor, Saint-Jacques, Ward Two
gollark: ~ is bitwise NOT and not logical NOT, so it might not be valid to use it for this, and by not valid I mean "æÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆææææææææÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆÆ undefined behaviour" (not really sure, but it might not like having a bool contain 255, and if you were to do ~true that would probably give 254, which is also bad).
gollark: Why ~ instead of ! for NOTing?
gollark: Weird. Although that isn't how you spell result, and I question your choice to make gates objects when they're just functions.
gollark: More context required probably.
gollark: It's not Lua, it's floating point numbers.

References

  1. Ann Laughlin, "MCM has firm grip in most 'Dore country' districts," Montreal Gazette, 6 November 1988, A4.
  2. Larivée discovered he was being replaced as a candidate due to a chance meeting with Gilles Lupien, who unknowingly told him that he (Lupien) was being drafted as a Civic Party candidate as the party "want[ed] to unload the guy they had" in the area. See Ingrid Peritz, "For Civic Party, picking candidates is a real shot in the dark," Montreal Gazette, 25 October 1986, A4.
  3. "New party wants casinos in Old Montreal," Montreal Gazette, 30 August 1986, A3.
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