As Quebec’s Legault expands his majority, Montrealers choose opposition parties
MONTREAL — After Monday night’s provincial election results, Montreal shows up on Quebec’s election map as a small red-and-orange island in a sea of light blue.
The blue represents François Legault’s Coalition Avenir Québec, which surged to a 90-seat majority in the 125-seat legislature. But as ridings around the province fell to Legault’s centre-right party, Montreal voters largely stuck to the Opposition Quebec Liberals and to left-wing Québec solidaire — the red and orange on the map.
And with the size of the provincial opposition reduced, one political expert suggests it could be Quebec’s new generation of progressive mayors who will be Legault’s true ideological “counterweight.”
As it did four years ago, Legault’s party won with only two ridings on the Island of Montreal. The CAQ picked up one new riding on the island’s east end but lost another to Paul St-Pierre Plamondon, leader of the Parti Québécois.