Montreal mayoral candidate Ct unveils coalition - Action News
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Montreal

Montreal mayoral candidate Ct unveils coalition

Marcel Ct, a businessman who was also a senior official in the office of former prime minister Brian Mulroney, wants to become the fourth mayor of Montreal in less than a year.

Municipal election Nov. 3

The founder of Quebec's first think tank, Marcel Ct, wants to lead the city come next November. (CBC)

Economist Marcel Ct is the latest of four candidates for mayor of Montreal.

He launched his campaign to head a coalitionparty this morning with the support of some veteran local politicians, including Marvin Rotrand, formerly of Union Montreal.

"Montreal has to re-become a winning city," Ct exclaimed during the news conference to announce his candidacy and the forming of the Coalition Montreal.

Rotrand, the councillor for Cte-des-NeigesNotre-Dame-de-Grce, called the coalition a "great idea," saying that it would allow voters to choose councillors based onability and not ideology.

He added that the coalition approach is the new model of municipal politics.

"I dont want to go back to the old days," Rotrand said.

On Tuesday, Vision Montreal leader Louise Harel announced she had changed her mind and would not run for mayor, instead throwing her and her partys support behind Ct.

Ct said he plans to build a coalition of federalists and sovereigntists, anglophones and francophones and many other diverse groups in Montreal.

The relatively unknown mayoralhopeful said he has strengths that opponent and former Liberal MP Denis Coderre lacks.

"I dont come from politics. I come from management, basically, and I have work extensively on the Montreal issues," Cote said.

"But thats for the people to decide -- compare the two. Hes better known than me at this time. I hope by election time, Ill be as well-known as he is."

Coderre maintained heis the man for the job, drawing on his experience as a federal MP and a longtime Montrealer.

"Im from Montreal North, which is clearly a microcosm of what Montreal is all about," Coderre said.

His own team is, according to Coderre, a collection of qualified individuals working together outside of ideologies to make Montreal a better city, though he was reluctant to call it a coalition.

"Everyone will run under my banner but after that there will be no party line," he said.

Projet Montreal leader Richard Bergeron had strong words for those forming and joining coalitions.

He said it was up to the population to decide between political opportunists and people devoted to making Montreal a better place.

Ct is a respected and respectable businessman, Bergeron said, but he said he doubted that made him a qualified candidate for mayor.