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Carl Boileau : ウィキペディア英語版 | Carl Boileau
Carl Boileau is a politician in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He was elected to the Montreal city council in 2005 as a co-listed candidate with Projet Montréal leader Richard Bergeron, but did not serve. Since 2009, he has been a member of the Plateau-Mont-Royal borough council. ==Early life and political career== Boileau was born and raised in the Plateau-Mont-Royal area 〔(Carl Boileau ), Vision Montreal biography, accessed 24 March 2013.〕 and was a Parti Québécois (PQ) youth representative in the early 2000s. In 2001, he sought the PQ nomination for a by-election in the Montreal division of Mercier. This nomination contest was marked by significant divisions in the party, after early frontrunner Yves Michaud was forced to resign following a series of controversial remarks involving Quebec nationalism, immigration, and Quebec's Jewish community. Michaud's supporters, including Boileau, argued that his comments had been unfairly distorted to present him in an unflattering light. In his nomination speech, Boileau accused the PQ leadership of "dictatorial electoral machinations" and received applause for saying, "Mr. Michaud, you were never a racist in our eyes." He was defeated by Claudel Toussaint, a candidate of the party establishment.〔Hubert Bauch, "Landry gets his way: Pick of PQ brass in Mercier wins on first ballot," ''Montreal Gazette'', 5 March 2001, A1.〕 In 2002, Boileau argued that right-wing members of Bernard Landry's government should leave the PQ and join the rival Action démocratique du Québec (ADQ).〔Rhéal Séguin, "PQ split shows as ministers urged to quit," ''Montreal Gazette'', 25 October 2002, A16.〕 He helped to form the municipal party Projet Montréal in 2004.〔"Projet Montreal's boileau crosses," ''Montreal Gazette'', 2 March 2013, A6.〕
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