Parti Unité Nationale

Parti unité nationale
Leader Paul Biron
Founded 2000 (2000)
Headquarters Lévis, Quebec
Ideology Christian democracy, Social conservatism, Quebec nationalism
Colours Blue
Website
www.partiun.ca

The Parti unité nationale (National Unity Party), formerly the Parti démocratie chrétienne du Québec (Christian Democracy Party of Quebec), is a social conservative political party in Quebec, Canada. It was founded in 2000 by Roman Catholics associated with the Centre d’Information nationale Robert Rumilly. The founding leader of the party was Gilles Noël.[1] The party's leader since 2010 has been Paul Biron, a retired engineer, whose brother, Rodrigue Biron, was leader of the conservative Union Nationale party from 1976 to 1980.[2]

Its program is a combination of Christian orthodoxy and Quebec nationalism.[3] The party is concerned about the declining birth rate in Quebec, opposed to same-sex marriage and abortion, wants more support for families, and wider availability of Quebec-made consumer products.

The Parti démocratie chrétienne du Québec's 24 candidates won 3,575 votes in the April 2003 general election, or about 0.1% of the popular vote. It proposed to fight the aging of Quebec's population by favouring the family through the creation of a family benefit of $430 per month per child under the age of 18. The party also proposed eliminating the $5/day universal child care program offered by the Government of Quebec at the time.[4]

The party won 1,620 votes in the March 2007 general election, or about 0.04% of the popular vote.

Logo of the former Parti démocratie chrétienne du Québec

On 29 June 2012 the Chief Electoral Officer of Quebec approved the name of the party to be changed to "Parti Unité Nationale".[5]

Party leaders

  1. Gilles Noël (2000-2005)
  2. Michel Bélanger (2005-2006) interim
  3. Gilles Noël (2006-2007)
  4. Albert Malcom Tremblay (2007-unknown)
  5. Michel Bélanger (2010)
  6. Paul Biron (since 21 December 2010)[5]

Election results

General election Candidates Elected candidates Popular vote
2003 24 0 0.09%
2007 12 0 0.04%
2012 12 0 0.03%
2014 3 0 0.00%

See also

References

External links

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