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Richard Nadeau

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Preceded by
  
Francoise Boivin

Spouse
  
Edith Gendron

Succeeded by
  
Francoise Boivin

Name
  
Richard Nadeau

Residence
  
Gatineau, Canada

Profession
  
Teacher

Party
  
Bloc Quebecois

Political party
  
Bloc Quebecois

Education
  
University of Ottawa


Richard Nadeau wwwparlgccaParliamentariansImagesOfficialMPP

Born
  
April 5, 1959 (age 64) Hawkesbury, Ontario (
1959-04-05
)

Role
  
Member of the Canadian House of Commons

Office
  
Member of the Canadian House of Commons since 2006

Richard nadeau s oppose l accord de libre change canada colombie


Richard Nadeau (born April 5, 1959 in Hawkesbury, Ontario) is a teacher and Bloc Québécois politician in Quebec, Canada. He is the former Member of Parliament for the riding of Gatineau. Nadeau attended the University of Ottawa where he received degrees in history, political science and education. In addition to being a teacher, Nadeau has worked as an adviser and director of educational programs, and as a researcher and an archivist. He has also been a lobbyist for French education and has been involved in community theatre in Saskatchewan.

He taught at the Gisèle Lalonde High School in Orleans, near Ottawa, where he, amongst other things, supervised and acted as speaker for the student debate club.

In the 2000 federal election, Nadeau finished second in Gatineau behind Mark Assad of the Liberal Party of Canada by 13,197 votes. In the 2004 federal election, he finished second behind Françoise Boivin of the Liberals by 830 votes—a surprisingly close result, given that this had long been reckoned as one of the more federalist regions of Quebec.

He was elected in the 2006 federal election in a rematch against Boivin, becoming the first Bloc MP elected in the National Capital Region. He was also the third Bloc MP ever elected in the entire Outaouais region, after Maurice Dumas and Mario Laframboise.

Nadeau's wife, Edith Gendron, is the head of a Quebec separatist group called "Le Quebec, Un Pays". She was also the Parti Québécois candidate for the riding of Chapleau in Gatineau, in the 2007 provincial election.

In the Canadian federal election, 2008 Nadeau received the smallest percentage of votes for a winning candidate, at just 29.13%, meaning that less than 3 out of 10 voters chose him as their candidate, despite him winning a plurality of votes and carrying the district for the Bloc over Boivin, now running for the New Democratic Party.

Nadeau was heavily defeated by Boivin in the 2011 election by over 27,000 votes as part of the massive NDP surge across Quebec. He tallied barely half of his vote from 2008.

References

Richard Nadeau Wikipedia