The book cover for L’Heureuse Élue, recently published by former Gatineau mayor France Bélisle.Article content
France Bélisle was the first woman elected mayor of Gatineau, in 2021. She resigned abruptly just a little over a year ago, on Feb. 22, 2024. She cited toxicity in politics as one of the main factors for her sudden departure. Then we learned that nearly 800 municipal politicians in Quebec had also resigned since the 2021 elections. Now Bélisle has a brand new book about her experience, and I find it fascinating for the larger political moment we’re in.
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Her book, L’Heureuse élue, has been well received and not just because she dishes a little bit about various well-known figures in Quebec politics. I like gossip and intrigue as much as the next ink-stained wretch but that’s not why I read the book all the way to the end. I was very curious about her personal journey, which she describes quite well, but also her reflections a year later on the nastiness we too often find not just in politics but in public life more broadly.
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It’s not just the tariffs and the tiresome 51st-state nonsense. It’s also episodes like the public berating of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy in the Oval Office. If you didn’t know just how mean and nasty certain elements of the far right can be, now I trust you do.
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It’s too early to speculate about the long-term impacts of such an episode, but that never stopped me before so here goes: I do think Donald Trump in general and the Oval Office ambush against Zelenskyy will prove salutary in the sense that it will turn voters off aggressive politics, including here in Canada. Trump will do more to promote collegiality than anything else I can think of.
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Including measures Bélisle discusses in her book, such as Quebec’s Bill 57, which aims to protect elected people from violence by members of the public. During the occupation of Ottawa (which spilled over into Gatineau), she became the target of a sustained and vicious online campaign. She was called a “sow,” A “child killer” and a genocidal Nazi. Death threats were so serious police cars had to patrol her neighbourhood.
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There is also a great deal of toxicity between elected officials themselves, she writes. Among her recommendations is a call for an ombudsperson, like we have at the federal level, to whom municipal politicians could take their grievances.
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I wanted to talk about this with someone who has an Ottawa lens so I contacted Rideau-Vanier Coun. Stéphanie Plante, who is currently reading Bélisle’s book and whose husband is Ukrainian-Canadian. To say she has opinions on recent events and toxicity at all political levels would be an understatement.
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