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Ottawa

Gatineau elects France Blisle, city's 1st female mayor

Residents of Gatineau, Que., have elected France Blisle, who is the first woman to hold that position in the citys history.

Municipal political party Action Gatineau has lost its control of the mayor's office

France Blisle has said a vote for her an independent candidate is a vote for change from the party Action Gatineau which has been in power for eight years in the city. (Hugo Belanger/Radio-Canada)

Residents of Gatineau, Que.,have electedFrance Blisleas the new mayor, and the first woman to hold theposition in the city's history.

As of 9:15 p.m.,Blisle had 45 per cent of the vote, a lead over second place candidate Maude Marquis-Bissonnette who had 37 per cent.

"I've worked so hard in the last few months with a lot of people that helpedme. I'm so grateful," she said in an interview with CBC Sunday night.

Blisle will replace MayorMaxime Pedneaud-Jobin.in January, he announced he would not seek re-election for the job he's held since 2013.

"I think people wanted a change, achange with the tone, with the attitude, with the dynamic. They wanted someone closer to them, someone that cares about them, that speaks to them," she said.

"[Someone] that tells them what's happening and tells them the truth, not necessarily what they want to hear, but just the truth and be grounded to the citizens. And this is what I've done all in the last few months, and I think it made the difference."

Blisle said one of her top priorities during the campaign was to focus on speaking with people for long periods of time while door knocking.

Six candidates stepped forward to replace Pedneaud-Jobin. Aside from Marquis-Bissonette, who replaced Pedneaud-Jobin as leader of the party Action Gatineau political parties are permitted at the municipal level in Quebec all candidates ran as independents.

As of early Monday morning, 16 of 19 councillorswere officially elected, including 11 for first-time councillors.

Maude Marquis-Bissonnette was the only candidate for mayor of Gatineau, Que., who ran with a political party Action Gatineau. (Hugo Belanger/Radio-Canada)

Blisle is the former president of Tourisme Outaouaisand campaigned as the vote for change after eight years of having the Action Gatineau party in power.

Her campaign promises included increasing transparency in the city, such aslimiting the use of closed meetings. Shealso promised to ensure better governance than her predecessor, sound management of public finances and reducing administrative obstacles for citizens and businesses.

She said she wants to see a post-pandemic revival of the city's downtown with, in particular, its world-class convention centre project a project first pitched by Tourisme Outaouais.

And she wants to work togetherwith Ottawa.

"I worked at Tourisme Outaouais before, and we worked really, really closely with Ottawa, with Ottawa Tourism, and this is something that is important for me,"Blislesaid.

"We need to work closely with Ottawa, so I look forward to speak with Mr. Watson and meet him and just see what are the different projects that we are sharing and what are the new ones that we can develop together."

Municipal party ousted from mayor's office

The role of political parties at the municipal level came up repeatedly during the election campaign.

Jean-Franois Leblanc who came third in the race, released a Facebook video at the end of October in which he accused the Action Gatineau party of lacking transparency, calling it "a political party and not a movement."He said because members must follow the party line, it impedes their work at city hall.

Leblanc left his seat as a city councillor to run in the mayoral race.

Outgoing Mayor Maxime Pedneaud-Jobin endorsed his successor in the party for the job, based on her experience she was first elected as a city councillor in 2017 and her plans for the citys economic recovery and environmental action. (Alexander Behne/CBC)

A CROP poll carried out on behalf of Radio-Canada during the electoral campaign put Maude Marquis-Bissonnette ahead. The poll also showed that the number of undecided voters were numerous, when they were asked, in October.

With his departure, and the creation of a new electoral district of Mitigomijokan in Aylmer, the majority of Gatineau city council's 19 seats will now have new faces.

The other candidates for mayor were former Gatineau fire captain Jacques Lemay, Rmi Bergeron and Abdelhak Lekbabi.

With files from Radio-Canada