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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Julie Lemieux
Born
Drummondville, Quebec
NationalityCanadian
Occupation(s)Mayor, Politician
Years active2013–present

Julie Lemieux is a Canadian politician, who was elected mayor of Très-Saint-Rédempteur, Quebec in the 2017 Quebec municipal elections. [1] She is the village's first female mayor, and the first transgender person elected to the mayoralty of any municipality in Canada. [2]

Formerly from Drummondville, Lemieux previously worked as a cabinetmaker, and first moved to Très-Saint-Rédempteur in 2009. [2] She was first drawn into politics as part of a successful campaign to preserve the village's closed Roman Catholic church, which was formerly slated for demolition, as a community and cultural centre, [2] and was first elected to the municipal council in the 2013 municipal election. [3] Her mayoral campaign planks included improving communications between elected officials and residents in the village, [3] and permitting village residents to keep backyard chickens. [2] She received 48 per cent of the vote on election day, to just 23 per cent for incumbent mayor Jean Lalonde. [3]

References

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Julie Lemieux
Born
Drummondville, Quebec
NationalityCanadian
Occupation(s)Mayor, Politician
Years active2013–present

Julie Lemieux is a Canadian politician, who was elected mayor of Très-Saint-Rédempteur, Quebec in the 2017 Quebec municipal elections. [1] She is the village's first female mayor, and the first transgender person elected to the mayoralty of any municipality in Canada. [2]

Formerly from Drummondville, Lemieux previously worked as a cabinetmaker, and first moved to Très-Saint-Rédempteur in 2009. [2] She was first drawn into politics as part of a successful campaign to preserve the village's closed Roman Catholic church, which was formerly slated for demolition, as a community and cultural centre, [2] and was first elected to the municipal council in the 2013 municipal election. [3] Her mayoral campaign planks included improving communications between elected officials and residents in the village, [3] and permitting village residents to keep backyard chickens. [2] She received 48 per cent of the vote on election day, to just 23 per cent for incumbent mayor Jean Lalonde. [3]

References


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