Unité de Saint-Léonard

Unité de Saint-Léonard was a municipal political party that operated from 1986 to 1987 in the suburban community of Saint-Leonard in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It was led by millionaire Montreal entrepreneur Tony Iammatteo, who was also its mayoral candidate in the 1986 municipal election.

The Unité party was introduced at a press conference held on September 24, 1986, at a shoe factory owned by Iammatteo. Incumbent opposition councillors Domenico Moschella, Tommaso Nanci, and Remi Boyer were present for the announcement, and all three officially joined the party shortly thereafter.[1] Moschella was formerly the leader of Action civique de Saint-Léonard, while Nanci and Boyer had served with the Union Municipale de Saint-Léonard party.[2]

The party ran a full slate of candidates in the 1986 municipal election. Iammatteo finished second against incumbent mayor Raymond Renaud, whose Ralliement de Saint-Léonard party took ten of twelve council seats.[3] Giuseppe Fargnoli, who ran in the city's first ward, was the only Unité candidate elected; Moschella, Nanci, and Boyer were all defeated by relatively narrow margins.[4]

Unité played a prominent role in a high-profile Saint-Leonard tax protest in early 1987,[5] though it seems to have disappeared as an active force after this time.

References

  1. Debbie Parkes, "New party enters St. Leonard race," Montreal Gazette, 25 September 1986, X14.
  2. Debbie Parkes, "St. Leonard party unites defectors and former rivals," Montreal Gazette, 9 October 1986, X8; Debbie Parkes, "Montreal North, St. Leonard show different election styles," Montreal Gazette, 20 October 1986, A4.
  3. "St. Laurent voters give mayor his ninth term," Montreal Gazette, 3 November 1986, A1; "Results of council elections in 18 Montreal-area municipalities," Montreal Gazette, 3 November 1986, A8.
  4. Debbie Parkes, "St. Leonard gears for recounts as mayor's party scores near-sweep," Montreal Gazette, 6 November 1986, H1.
  5. "1,200 protest new tax bills," Montreal Gazette, 20 February 1987, A3.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, September 17, 2013. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.