Denis Coderre, Valrie Plante make final pitches before Sunday's election - Action News
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Montreal

Denis Coderre, Valrie Plante make final pitches before Sunday's election

Montreal's two candidates for mayor wrapped up their six-week-long campaigns Saturday as Quebec's municipal elections draw closer.

Coderre highlights record, defends personality and Plante says she's proud of her energetic campaign

Montreal incumbent mayor summarized his wins in the past four years as he made his final pitch Saturday for another mandate. (CBC)

Montreal's two candidates for mayor wrapped up their six-week-long campaigns Saturday as Quebec'smunicipal elections draw closer.

The race in Montreal is tighter thanexpected with incumbent mayor Denis Coderre and relative newcomerValrie Planteneck and neckin the latest CROP poll commissioned by Radio-Canada.

The results, released Monday, showed Plantehad a slight lead at 39 per cent of the poll's votes and Coderre at 37 per cent.

The results pressed Coderreto defend his record and even his personality.

Saturday, flanked by a gaggle of quipeDenis Coderre candidates outside City Hall, and reading his speech from sheets of paper, he highlighted his experience and laid out what he sees as his wins over the past four years.

'We need to show more humility, maybe'

He poked fun at himself, saying he'd lost count of the caricatures of him with an orange cone. He joked that'she should get another four years "for the cartoonists."

When a motorist driving by honked a dozen times during Coderre's speech, he paused and said, "honking is support, right," laughing.

Coderre spoke alongside several of his team's candidates in front of Montreal's City Hall. (CBC)

"It's not a contest of personality or popularity, it's a matter of efficiency," Coderre said later.

The majority ofCROP poll respondents qualified Coderreas arrogant and some critics say he has an authoritarian style.

"I have a lot of ambition," Coderre said Saturday with a shrug. "I've got my style, but I think what people have told me is, 'We don't like everything that you're doing, but at least we know what to expect.'"

He added that, "sometimes, you know, we need to show more humility, maybe," but that his authenticity made up for it.

Coderreplayed offense, too. Without naming her, he took aim at Plante, saying, "You don't make yourself become a mayor overnight."

He said his opponent and her team were "improvising."

Plante tours Montreal's public markets

Plantewent for a more informal setting Saturday. She toured Montreal's public markets, making stops at Jean-Talon and the Maisonneuve market on Ontario Street.

Valrie Plante stopped at the Maisonneuve Market Saturday as she wrapped up her campaign for mayor. She even made a pitch to children there to vote for her. (CBC)

She said she believes her campaign injected energy into Montreal politics and made people care about the election.

"The campaign we run tried to talk about subjects that speak to Montrealers in their everyday to garner interest and make them want to vote," Plantesaid in a short interview with reporters.

"For people to go vote, they have to see how it's beneficial to them, how it's interesting, so I'm very proud of the campaign that we ran that touched on very specific subjects."

Those subjects, she said, included housing, safety, mobility and traffic.

"I'm very hopeful that tomorrow [Montrealers] will turn out in large numbers at the booths."


Make a date with CBC for election night this Sunday, Nov. 5:

Online:Get breaking news and live results at cbc.ca/montreal after polls close at 8 p.m.

On Facebook:Join host Debra Arbec for a 90-minute Facebook Live starting at 10 p.m. with results, analysis and reports from across Quebec.

On TV:Watch our live results show from 11 to 11:30 p.m. on CBC Television.

On radio:Listen to CBCRadio One starting at 8 p.m. for a province-wide show hosted by Mike Finnerty in Montreal and Susan Campbell in Quebec City.

with files from Jaela Bernstien