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Montreal

Bloc gains momentum after snatching Montreal riding from Liberals

LaSallemardVerdun has been held by the Liberals for most of the last century. It fell toBloc Qubcois candidateLouis-Philippe Sauvin Monday's federal byelection.

Once safe Liberal seat in LaSallemardVerdun riding falls to Bloc's Louis-Philippe Sauv

What the Bloc Qubcois' byelection win means for voters in LaSalle-mard-Verdun

4 days ago
Duration 2:24
Louis-Phillipe Sauv beat Liberal Laura Palestini by just 248 votes. The incoming Bloc MP and voters in LaSalle-mard-Verdun say it was time for change.

Despite results trickling in until almost 3 a.m., Louis-Philippe Sauvwas awake to watchhimself narrowly squeak into first place to win the race for a hotly contested riding in the southwestern section of Montreal.

LaSallemardVerdun,a riding that's been held by the Liberals for most of the last century, fell tothe Bloc Qubcoiscandidatein Monday's federalbyelection after a three-way nail-biter.

"It was a rollercoaster night. I hadmany emotions," saidSauvat a news conference Tuesday morning, alongsideBloc LeaderYves-Franois Blanchet.

"I'm a bitexhausted, I've only slept for threehours, but today I'mfeeling grateful towards the people in myneighbourhood of having chosen me as their MP andIwill do everything to work with dignity for them."

WATCH|Louis-Philippe Sauv outlines plan for riding:

Bloc Qubcois new MP grateful for win in Montreal byelection

4 days ago
Duration 1:30
Louis-Philippe Sauv, the new Bloc Qubcois MP for the Montreal riding of LaSallemardVerdun, says he plans to focus on housing, homelessness, pensions for seniors, French integration and independence.

Blanchet said he was "extremely pleased" and honoured by the confidence the constituents of the riding placed in his candidateand his party. But now, the real work begins.

[Sauv] will demonstrate to the people that they've made the right choice. And he will be a present, engaged and very determined MP."

Sauv,a former Parliament Hill staffer, beat Liberal Laura Palestini by just248 votes,andNDP candidate and locally known city councillor Craig Sauv finished third.

The Bloc's byelection victorygives the partysignificant momentum heading into a federal election that could be called at any moment and deals another crushing blow to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's Liberals.

The leading candidatestraded places throughout the count, with a finalresult coming inafter 2:45 a.m. Tuesday.Voter turnout was just over 39 per centabout 10 percentage points higher than in the federal byelection inNotre-Dame-de-GrceWestmount last year.

WATCH|Bloc supporters celebrate ahead of win:

Bloc supporters belt out Quebec's unofficial anthem before byelection win

4 days ago
Duration 0:35
Constituents started celebrating before the final votes were tallied, with members serenading Louis-Phillipe Sauv with a rendition of Gens du pays.

Ahead of his official win,Sauvaddressed his supporters gathered at an Irish pub in the Verdun neighbourhood.

"Tonight, no matter what happens, we lose, we win together!" he said, setting off a burst of boisterous applause.

The party began celebrating before the final votes were tallied, with members serenading Sauvwith a rendition of Gens du pays Quebec'sde facto anthem.

Asked at Tuesday's news conferencehow he plans to represent all residents in the riding despite his narrow victory, Sauvanswered simply.

"I'll be a member of Parliament for every citizen of this riding. And I'm going to work for those who voted for me and those who voted against me alike. That's what representing people is all about," he said.

He said his first task will be to staff his office so he can begin responding to the needs of residents,including issues related to housing, homelessness, pensions for seniors, French integration and sovereignty.

The Montreal seat opened up whenformer justice minister David Lametti left politics in January.The outgoing Liberal MPbeat his Bloc opponent by some 20 points in this riding in 2021. Palestini lost by less than one percentage point.

'Extra wind in its sails'

Blanchet said hebelieves his party won because voters wanted to support the Bloc and are fed up with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

He believes the Liberal government's days are numbered butsays that doesn't mean his party will strive to bring the government down.

"We want to advance important issues for Quebec, we have a golden opportunity right now," he said.

Blanchet says it would be irresponsible for him to not try to get the Liberals to adhere to some of the Bloc's demands before the next election.

Responding to a question in English, Blanchet said picking up this seat helps "create a bridge" between the Bloc, Montrealers and the rest of Quebec putting the party in a good position to steal more votes away from the Liberals on the island of Montreal if an election is called.

"If what we say and what we think is more precisely carried to the English community, this city will feel better, will fare better," he said.

More than half (about 58 per cent) of the riding's residents are francophones, according to census data, while abouta quarter of the residents roughly 23 per cent list English as their mother tongue. The LaSalle portion of the seat has a sizeable Italian-Canadian community.

Dnal Gill, a professor of political science at Concordia University, sayshe cannot overstate what a major disaster this loss is for Trudeau's government and what a boost itgives the Bloc.

"If you can't win in the deep red heartlandsof Montreal, all those marginal possible Liberal seats in the rest of the country it's real dreamland stuff rather than real targets to be acquired," he said.

WATCH| A breakdown of the byelection:

What you need to know about the byelection results in Manitoba and Quebec

4 days ago
Duration 7:08
CBC's Janyce McGregor breaks down the results from Monday night's byelections, which saw the NDP hold onto a seat in Winnipeg and the Bloc Qubcois win a Montreal seat a major blow to Justin Trudeaus Liberals.

Gill said the Bloc has been led "incredibly competently" under Blanchet since the party made its big electoral comeback in 2019.

He expects the Bloc, with "extra wind in its sails,"to extractmaximum concessions out of the government on behalf of Quebec's interests over the next few months.

"They're going to be able to say that, 'The people of Quebechave have been clear they want us to deliver,'" he said.

"'You're in a position to do that. You want to stay in government? No problem, you know the price.'"

The Liberal defeat in Montreal comes less than two monthsafter Conservative candidate Don Stewartbested his Liberal opponentin Toronto-St. Paul's.

Before that June loss, the riding had been held by the Liberals for more than 30 years.

'It represents what people want'

CBC News spoke with residents in theVille-mard neighbourhood outside Monk Metro station early Tuesday morning most of whom were unaware they had a new local representative.

Amlie Ct said she's very surprised by the result, saying she didn't vote for the party, "but it represents what people want in the area."

She said the area needs someone who will listen to residents'needs and do more to solve the housing crisis.

Coralie Odell, a young, first-time voter, said she voted Bloc because of the party'scommitment to protecting the French language.

"Too many people here speak English only and Ifeel like that'sjust a problem because we're a French province and I feel like that shouldbe represented more," she said, speaking English with ease.

"The Bloc Qubcois has our interest in mind."

With files from Kwabena Oduro and Lauren McCallum