Sneha Girap (Editor)

André Pratte

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Occupation
  
Editor-in-chief

Name
  
Andre Pratte

Role
  
Journalist


Andre Pratte wwwlactualitecomwpcontentuploads2011062010

Born
  
1957 (age 57–58)
Quebec City, Quebec, Canada

Books
  
Extraordinary Canadians Wilfrid Laurier, Charest, Wilfrid Laurier

Profiles

Hommage andr pratte par laurent paquin


André Pratte (born May 12, 1957 in Quebec City, Quebec) is a Canadian journalist and politician. A longtime editor-in-chief of the large-circulation Montreal newspaper La Presse, Pratte was appointed to the Senate of Canada in March 2016. He is a notable voice of Canadian federalism in Quebec.

Contents

André Pratte Le journaliste Andr Pratte nomm au Snat ICIRadioCanadaca

Close the Loophole! event - André Pratte


Biography

André Pratte Oath ceremony delayed for new Senators because of 39paper work39 The

During the 1980s, Pratte worked at radio station CKAC in Montreal. He moved from radio to the written press in 1986. Succeeding Alain Dubuc, he became editor-in-chief of La Presse in 2001, defending the federalist and fiscally centre-right political stance of the paper. In 2005, Pratte was among the group who signed the manifesto "For a clear-eyed vision of Quebec", better known by the French title "Pour un Québec lucide" and critical of the social democratic 'Quebec Model'. Criticized by some sovereigntists, he has defended his neutrality and has claimed in the book Aux pays des merveilles to be a soft-nationalist and to have a soft-sovereigntist past (with claims of 'Yes' votes in both the 1980 and the 1995 Quebec referendums).

André Pratte Andre Pratte apratte Twitter

He published a number of books at VLB éditeur. The first, Le Syndrome de Pinocchio, discussed a lying "syndrome" in politicians and was the subject of a censure motion from the National Assembly of Quebec in 1997. He also published a biography of the future Premier of Quebec, Jean Charest, under the title L'Énigme Charest in 1997, drawing a paradoxical portrait of the man. He redirected his criticism upon his own journalistic profession in Les Oiseaux de malheur in 2000.

André Pratte httpsicbcca134971351458304887fileImageh

Pratte edited Reconquerir le Canada — un nouveau projet pour la nation québécoise (published in English as Reconquering Canada: Quebec Federalists Speak Up for Change), a book of essays by several prominent francophone Quebecers to better promote federalism in the province. The authors stated they want Quebec to have a greater role within the federation. Pratte said the province must be better linked with other provinces and that Quebecers must serve on bodies of the federal government. To make progress, Quebecers must change their view of federalism and Canada, and their perception of being a victim, which does not correspond with experience. The book counts 14 authors from various political affiliations: André Pratte, Daniel Fournier, Jean Leclair, Benoît Pelletier, Marie Bernard-Meunier, Patrice Ryan et Frédéric Bérard, François Pratte, Martin Cauchon, Pierre Gerlier-Forest, Hervé Rivet and Fabrice Rivault, Marc Garneau, Mathieu Laberge.

André Pratte Andre Pratte Future Senator Once Wrote That All Politicians Lie

References

André Pratte Wikipedia