Jean Dor, former Montreal mayor, dead at 70 - Action News
Home WebMail Monday, November 11, 2024, 04:15 AM | Calgary | -1.3°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

Jean Dor, former Montreal mayor, dead at 70

The 39th mayor of Montreal has lost his fight with pancreatic cancer.

Dor served as Montreal's mayor from 1986 to 1994

Dor left politics after his 1998 defeat and eventually became the senior director of business development for the central Caisse Desjardins. (Radio-Canada)

The 39th mayor of Montreal has lost his fight with pancreatic cancer.

Jean Dor was 70 years old.

The born and bred Montrealer served two terms as the city's mayor.

"He changed completely the way Montreal was managed," the former leader of the Bloc Qubcois, Gilles Duceppe, said at a tribute to Dor held last winter.

Dor studied law at the University of Montreal. He was elected president of the university's general students' association in 1967 and passed the bar not long after.

In 1974, he became one of the founding members of the Montreal Citizens' Movement (MCM) municipal party and was elected party president in 1982.

In the 1980s, Dor and the MCM symbolized a renewal in municipal politics, eventually ending the 26-year, controversial reign of Jean Drapeau's Civic Party.

Jean Dor honoured by Montreal Citizens' Movement

10 years ago
Duration 2:06
Montreal's most well-known former mayor was honoured Sunday night by his old party members.

While Dor's first mayoral bid was unsuccessful, he became opposition leader following a 1984 byelection.

After Drapeau's resignation in 1986, the MCM won a landslide victory, taking 55 of the 58 council seats. Dor was elected mayor with 68 per cent of the vote.

City Councillor Marvin Rotrand said the Dor years were best known for the creation of a more openly democratic style of governing.

"We went from the 1950s to the 1980s overnight in Montreal," said Rotrand earlier this year.

Under Dor'sadministration, 150 kilometres of bike paths were built in the city, as were numerous parks and public beaches including the one on le-Notre-Dame that now bears Dor's name.

Jean Dor wipes away a tear at a news conference the day after the Polytechnique massacre in Montreal in 1989. The mayor's babysitter was one of the victims of the mass slaying at the University of Montreal. (Shaney Komulainen /Canadian Press)

He was at the city's helm when a gunman opened fire at thecole Polytechnique on Dec. 6, 1989, killing 14 women.

Dor, who knew one of the victims personally, called the event one of the "blackest days" in the city's history.

In 1990, Dor was re-elected mayor. That same year, he welcomed to Montreal Nelson Mandela, who had just been released from a South African prison.

"It was one of the greatest moments in my political life," Dor said of the Mandela visit.

Dor was defeated by Pierre Bourque in 1994. He attempted one more return to municipal politics in 1998, running under the quipe Montral banner, only to lose once again to Bourque's Vision Montreal.

He then moved into the banking sector, working as the senior director of business development for theCaisse Desjardins.

In 2014, Dor announced he was suffering from incurable pancreatic cancer.

At an event last winter marking the MCM's 40th anniversary, at which he was the guest of honour,Dor said one of the party's greatest achievements was uniting anglophone and francophone Montrealers under common goals.

Doris survived by his wife and two daughters.

Mayor Denis Coderresaid a public visitation for Dorwill be held Saturday and Sunday at MontrealCity Hall. He said there will also be a civic funeral, though no date has been announced.