Close X
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
ADVT 
National

Jean-Francois Lisee to withdraw from Parti Quebecois leadership race

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Jan, 2015 10:40 AM

    QUEBEC — A candidate for the vacant Parti Quebecois leadership post is taking himself out of the running for the top job.

    Jean-Francois Lisee will formally announce on Friday afternoon that he's withdrawing from the race, a source told The Canadian Press.

    Lisee made a decision after meeting with his campaign team on Thursday evening, the source added.

    First elected in 2012, Lisee was a senior cabinet minister in Pauline Marois' minority government, responsible for international relations and the Montreal region.

    He was re-elected in 2014, when the PQ managed to win only 30 of the province's 125 ridings.

    He'd entered the leadership race in early November.

    Lisee returned recently from France and participated in a PQ caucus meeting earlier this week near Montreal.

    Several other caucus colleagues have announced they're running to replace Marois, who stepped down after last year's defeat at the polls.

    Media mogul Pierre Karl Peladeau is the perceived front-runner in a race that also includes current PQ members Bernard Drainville, Alexandre Cloutier and Martine Ouellet.

    Another candidate is Pierre Cere, a spokesman for a group that defends the unemployed.

    The PQ will chose a new leader in May and the next provincial election is scheduled to be held in September 2018.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Crown defends issuing arrest warrant for hockey great Guy Lafleur in 2008

    Crown defends issuing arrest warrant for hockey great Guy Lafleur in 2008
    MONTREAL — The Crown maintains the warrant issued for the arrest of former hockey great Guy Lafleur in 2008 was justified considering the seriousness of the crime.

    Crown defends issuing arrest warrant for hockey great Guy Lafleur in 2008

    Nova Scotia court hears explicit testimony in 'Mile High Club' case

    Nova Scotia court hears explicit testimony in 'Mile High Club' case
    HALIFAX — A flight attendant told the trial of a woman accused of committing an indecent act on a Toronto-to-Halifax flight that she and a man used a coat to cover their laps to fondle each other.

    Nova Scotia court hears explicit testimony in 'Mile High Club' case

    Saskatchewan RCMP officer faces drug charges, internal police investigation

    Saskatchewan RCMP officer faces drug charges, internal police investigation
    SWIFT CURRENT, Sask. — A Mountie based in southwestern Saskatchewan is facing drug-related charges.

    Saskatchewan RCMP officer faces drug charges, internal police investigation

    Defamation case involving diet doctors 'more about ego than injury' judge finds

    Defamation case involving diet doctors 'more about ego than injury' judge finds
    TORONTO — An Ontario judge pulled no punches as he ruled that "ego" and "turf warfare" were at the heart of a lengthy defamation case that pitted a high-profile doctor with weight-loss clinics across Canada against a little-known Toronto physician.

    Defamation case involving diet doctors 'more about ego than injury' judge finds

    Federal messaging on unpaid interns changed with NDP's private member's bill

    Federal messaging on unpaid interns changed with NDP's private member's bill
    OTTAWA — Internal documents show the federal government's messaging on unpaid interns mysteriously changed last June.

    Federal messaging on unpaid interns changed with NDP's private member's bill

    Rashida Samji, Former B.C. Notary Public, Fined $33 Million For Running $100 Million Ponzi Scheme

    Rashida Samji, Former B.C. Notary Public, Fined $33 Million For Running $100 Million Ponzi Scheme
    VANCOUVER — Securities regulators in British Columbia have fined a former notary public $33 million and banned her permanently from the province's capital markets for what they say was a multimillion-dollar fraud scheme.

    Rashida Samji, Former B.C. Notary Public, Fined $33 Million For Running $100 Million Ponzi Scheme