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The Quebec Liberal Party has faced various opposing parties in its history. Its main opposition from the time of the Confederation (1867) to the 1930s was the Parti conservateur du Québec. That party's successor, the Union Nationale, was the main opposition to the Liberals until the 1970s.
The 2025 Quebec Liberal Party leadership election will be held from June 9 to 14, 2025, [1] to elect a new leader to replace Dominique Anglade, who announced her resignation on November 7, 2022 amid mounting criticism within the party for her performance in the 2022 Quebec general election and for her subsequent decision to remove Liberal MNA Marie-Claude Nichols from caucus. [2]
Couillard resigned as Liberal leader on October 4, 2018, following his government's defeat in the 2018 provincial election and was initially supposed to take place on May 31, 2020. Following the COVID-19 pandemic, the leadership election was initially postponed indefinitely.
Parti communiste du Québec 2006–2012; Parti république du Québec 2007–2009; Parti unité nationale (formerly Parti démocratie chrétienne du Québec) 2002–2018; Parti indépendantiste 2007–2017; Citoyens au pouvoir du Québec 2011–2021; Changement Intégrité pour notre Québec 2016–2020; Parti travailliste du Québec (founded 2015)
Pages for logged out editors learn more. Contributions; Talk; Parti libéral du Québec
For the 2007 campaign, he stood with Premier Jean Charest to present the Liberal Party's agriculture platform. [5] He received 6,770 votes (25.72%), finishing third against Action démocratique du Québec candidate Éric Dorion. On 13 February 2008, he was named as a member of the Commission de protection du territoire agricole du Québec. [6]
Philippe Couillard, who won the 2013 leadership election and led the party to victory in the 2014 Quebec election resigned on October 4, 2018, after the party's second-place finish in the 2018 Quebec general election. The Liberal Party fell from 68 seats to 32 seats and only captured 25% of the popular vote, the party's lowest since ...
Libéral Hull Claire IsaBelle: CAQ Huntingdon Claire Samson: CAQ Iberville Conservative Joël Arseneau: Parti Québécois Îles-de-la-Madeleine Greg Kelley: Liberal Jacques-Cartier Sol Zanetti: Québec solidaire Jean-Lesage Filomena Rotiroti: Liberal Jeanne-Mance–Viger Sébastien Proulx (until August 30, 2019) Liberal Jean-Talon