2025 Quebec City municipal election

2025 Quebec City municipal election

November 2, 2025

21 seats in the Quebec City Council
11 seats needed for a majority
  First party Second party
 
Leader Bruno Marchand Stéphane Lachance
Party Québec forte et fière Respect citoyens
Leader's seat Vanier-Duberger Val-Bélair
Last election 7 New Party
Seats before 11 1
Seats won 18 3
Seat change 7 2
Popular vote 104,646 48,844
Percentage 49.40% 23.06%

  Third party Fourth party
 
Leader Sam Hamad Claude Villeneuve
Party Leadership Québec Québec d'abord
Leader's seat Mayor Maizerets-Lairet
Last election New Party 10
Seats before 3 5
Seats won 0 0
Seat change 3 5
Popular vote 29,125 15,842
Percentage 13.75% 7.48%

Council results

Mayor before election

Bruno Marchand

Elected mayor

Bruno Marchand

Municipal elections were held in Quebec City on November 2, 2025, the same day as elections in Montreal and other municipalities in the province.

Background

Political changes in the city council seats between the beginning (above) and end (below) of the current council term

In the 2021 elections, mayoral candidates Bruno Marchand and Marie-Josée Savard were neck-and-neck, separated by only 739 votes.[1] Although Marchand was elected mayor, his party Québec forte et fière only had a minority of seats on the city council. Four of the ten members of Marchand's first executive committee came from other parties.[2]

During the 2021-2025 city council term, several changes took place with the city council seats. Nine members of the 21 seat council changed parties during the term. More specifically, Marchand's Québec forte et fière went from 6 to 11 councillors and became the majority party in the council following the additions of David Weiser,[3] Steve Verret,[4] and Claude Lavoie[5] in 2022, with Bianca Dussault and Jean-François Gosselin joining the next year.[6][7] These seat gains were at the expense of Québec d'abord (formerly Équipe Marie-Josée Savard[8]), who went from 10 to 5 councillors, and Équipe Priorité Québec (formerly Québec 21) who went from 4 to 2 councillors,[9] before completely disappearing in August 2025.[10]

A new party, Leadership Québec was founded in April 2025.[11] It entered the council only a few months before the elections thanks to the addition of two councillors originally elected under Québec d'abord.[12] Leadership Québec absorbed what remained of Équipe Priorité Québec on August 13.[10]

Councillors who changed parties

Between the 2021 and 2025 elections, several councillors changed parties:

  Québec d'abord   Québec forte et fière

  • Claude Lavoie (Saint-Rodrigue)
  • Steeve Verret (Lac-Saint-Charles–Saint-Émile)
  • David Weiser (Le Plateau)

  Québec d'abord   Leadership Québec

  • Louis Martin (Cap-Rouge–Laurentien)
  • Isabelle Roy (Robert-Giffard)

  Québec 21   Indépendant   Québec forte et fière

  Québec 21 → Indépendant → Équipe priorité Québec   Leadership Québec

  • Stevens Mélançon (Chute-Montmorency–Seigneurial)

  Québec 21 → Équipe priorité Québec   Indépendant

Mayoral candidates

On January 12, 2024, incumbent mayor Bruno Marchand (Québec forte et fière) announced he would seek a second term in office.[14] Council opposition leader Claude Villeneuve (Québec d'abord) announced his candidacy for mayor on January 22, 2025.[15] On March 10, Stéphane Lachance, former provincial candidate for the Parti conservateur du Québec, became leader of Respect Citoyens, a party founded in 2023.[16] After several months of speculation, Sam Hamad, former Member of the National Assembly for Louis-Hébert from 2003 to 2017, officially announced his candidacy on April 6 under the banner of Leadership Québec.[11] Incumbent councillor for Limoilou and leader of Transition Québec Jackie Smith followed with her own announcement on May 10.[17] Finally on June 11, former councillor Anne Guérette announced she would also be running for mayor.[18] Two independent candidates with low media visibility also announced their candidacy: Claudine Martineau and Yves Laberge, the latter a sociologist opposed to the tramway project and the third link between Quebec and Levis.[19]

Campaign

In June 2025, a poll revealed that 78% of the population was either very or somewhat interested in the election campaign.[20] Six political parties would be participating in this election, half of which were new.[21] All the parties presented candidates in all council districts, with the exception of Parti du monde which was only running in the mayoral seat.[22] In addition to the independent candidates, the election campaign began with 8 candidates for mayor and 115 candidates for city council. Of that, 50 were women and 73 were men.[23] One candidate in Montcalm—Saint-Sacrement withdrew from the race on October 7, denouncing a "toxic climate" on the campaign trail.[24]

The first debate came on October 2 between Bruno Marchand and Sam Hamad on BLVD 102.1.[25] This formula of "duels" between candidates was repeated by different media in the following days.[26][27] A debate between the six party-affiliated candidadteas was organized by the Quebec City Chamber of Commerce at La salle Jean-Paul-Tardif on 7 October.[28][29] A debate between five candidates was broadcast on Noovo on October 14.[30]

Mayoral election

2025 Quebec City municipal election
Party Candidate Votes %
Québec forte et fière Bruno Marchand 104,989 49.42
Respect citoyens Stéphane Lachance 48,949 23.04
Leadership Québec Sam Hamad 29,224 13.76
Québec d'abord Claude Villeneuve 15,885 7.48
Transition Québec Jackie Smith 8,759 4.12
Parti du monde Anne Guérette 3,570 1.68
Independent Claudine Martineau 545 0.26
Independent Yves Laberge 512 0.24

City council elections

District Candidates Incumbent
Québec forte et fière Québec d'abord Leadership Québec Transition Québec Respect citoyens Independent
Cap-aux-Diamants   Mélissa Coulombe-Leduc
4,561 (57.91%)
Guy Boivin
381 (4.84%)
Vicky Lépine
626 (7.95%)
Micha Horswill
1,744 (22.14%)
Arnaud Larue
564 (7.16%)
  Mélissa Coulombe-Leduc
Montcalm–Saint-Sacrement   Catherine Vallières-Roland
7,005 (71.95%)
Félix Bouffard
707 (7.26%)
Sandrine Hélie
911 (9.36%)
Gabriel Richard-Brunet
897 (9.21%)
Jean-François Arcand
216 (2.22%)
  Catherine Vallières-Roland
Saint-Roch–Saint-Sauveur   Elainie Lepage
3,688 (43.74%)
Quentin Maridat
530 (6.29%)
Pascale Houle
572 (6.78%)
Marjorie Champagne
2,173 (25.77%)
Mélanie Leroux
1,109 (13.15%)
Patrick Kerr
105 (1.25%)
  Pierre-Luc Lachance
Napoleon Woo
254 (3.01%)
Limoilou   Raymond Poirier
3,107 (43.15%)
Sébastien Morier
409 (5.68%)
Véronique Thiboutot
506 (7.03%)
Esperance Mfisimana
Co-candidate for Jackie Smith
2,068 (28.72%)
Hippolyte Doua
754 (10.47%)
Julien Cardinal
356 (4.94%)
  Jackie Smith
Maizerets–Lairet   Marylou Boulianne
2,472 (40.06%)
Hélène Guillemette
Co-candidate for Claude Villeneuve
1,062 (17.21%)
Eric Duguay
584 (9.47%)
Martial Van Neste
925 (14.99%)
Kevin Caron
1,044 (16.92%)
Simon Tardif
83 (1.35%)
  Claude Villeneuve
District Candidates Incumbent
Québec forte et fière Québec d'abord Leadership Québec Transition Québec Respect citoyens
Vanier–Duberger   Clément Bourdeau
Co-candidate for Bruno Marchand
4,064 (41.72%)
Rosie-Anne Roussel Vallières
1,065 (10.93%)
Hugo Langlois
2,144 (22.01%)
Francis Fontaine
351 (3.60%)
Eric Thiboutot
2,116 (21.72%)
  Alicia Despins
Neufchâtel–Lebourgneuf   Maxime Elmaleh
5,106 (44.94%)
Alexandre Laforge
1,326 (11.67%)
Emilie Robitaille
1,962 (17.27%)
Lény Painchaud
217 (1.91%)
Anik Lalancette
2,750 (24.21%)
  Patricia Boudreault-Bruyère
Les Saules–Les Méandres   Catherine Deschamps
4,371 (43.52%)
Véronique Dallaire
1,445 (14.39%)
Patrick Paquet
1,567 (15.60%)
Pierre-Luc Faucher
285 (2.84%)
Isabelle Dufour
2,375 (23.65%)
  Véronique Dallaire
District Candidates Incumbent
Québec forte et fière Québec d'abord Leadership Québec Transition Québec Respect citoyens Parti du monde
Saint-Louis–Sillery   Marianne White
8,208 (68.12%)
André-Pier Bérubé
723 (6.00%)
Jean-Stéphane Bernard
1,539 (12.77%)
Raffaël Gilbert
514 (4.27%)
François Labrecque
1,066 (8.85%)
  Maude Mercier Larouche
Le Plateau   Gabriel Dusablon
4,990 (61.17%)
Moustapha Faye
470 (5.76%)
Catherine Gagné
1,208 (14.81%)
Félix L'Heureux-Bilodeau
549 (6.73%)
Eugénie Tossea Epse Labonté
940 (11.52%)
  David Weiser
La Pointe-de-Sainte-Foy   Jean-Luc Lavoie
6,767 (66.61%)
Fabio Tétu
433 (4.26%)
Robert Fournier
1,114 (10.97%)
Marie-Ève Martel
524 (5.16%)
Éric Guay
1,321 (13.00%)
  Anne Corriveau
Cap-Rouge–Laurentien   Yannick Fauteux
6,635 (52.81%)
Ana-Rose Paradis
635 (5.05%)
Louis Martin
2,418 (19.25%)
Andrée-Anne Tremblay
372 (2.96%)
Philippe Moussette
2,100 (16.72%)
Frédéric Imbeault
Co-candidate for Anne Guérette
403 (3.21%)
  Louis Martin
District Candidates Incumbent
Québec forte et fière Québec d'abord Leadership Québec Transition Québec Respect citoyens
Saint-Rodrigue   Claude Lavoie
3,862 (43.18%)
David Audet
1,009 (11.28%)
François Beaulé
1,474 (16.48%)
Olivia Lavoie
456 (5.10%)
Manès Webster
2,143 (23.96%)
  Claude Lavoie
Louis-XIV   Marie-Pierre Boucher
5,965 (47.58%)
Pier-Luc St-Pierre Fortin
1,116 (8.90%)
Donald Gagnon
1,837 (14.65%)
Charles Lamont
374 (2.98%)
Marie-Jo Bégin-Létourneau
3,245 (25.88%)
  Marie-Pierre Boucher
Les Monts   Raphaël Lebailly
4,270 (35.45%)
Vincent Tremblay
1,192 (9.90%)
Valérie Savard
1,992 (16.54%)
Samuel Moisan-Domm
488 (4.05%)
Éric Ralph Mercier
4,102 (34.06%)
  Éric Ralph Mercier
District Candidates Incumbent
Québec forte et fière Québec d'abord Leadership Québec Transition Québec Respect citoyens Independent
Sainte-Thérèse-de-Lisieux Manouchka Blanchet
3,441 (32.70%)
Doni Berberi
781 (7.42%)
Justine Savard
1,827 (17.36%)
Pier-Yves Champagne
287 (2.73%)
  Mélanie Sauvé
4,079 (38.76%)
Patrice Fortin
108 (1.03%)
  Jean-François Gosselin
La Chute-Montmorency–Seigneurial   Elisa Verreault
3,665 (33.37%)
Marie-Eve Leblond
991 (9.02%)
Stevens Mélançon
3,488 (31.76%)
Pedro-Natanaël Bordon-Richard
262 (2.39%)
Joey Aubé
2,427 (22.10%)
Mario Desjardins Pelchat
83 (0.76%)
  Stevens Mélançon
Dominic Tremblay
67 (0.61%)
Robert-Giffard   Éric Courtemanche Baril
3,975 (39.30%)
Sébastien Bouchard-Théberge
899 (8.89%)
Isabelle Roy
2,210 (21.85%)
Camille Lambert-Deubelbeiss
501 (4.95%)
Benoit Bourdeau
2,530 (25.01%)
  Isabelle Roy
District Candidates Incumbent
Québec forte et fière Québec d'abord Leadership Québec Transition Québec Respect citoyens Independent
Lac-Saint-Charles–Saint-Émile Konan Emma Amehoum
2,621 (23.39%)
Sophie Gosselin
1,532 (13.67%)
Jean Gagnon
1,996 (17.82%)
Carl Gignac
256 (2.28%)
  Marc Roussin
4,376 (39.06%)
Sophie Verret
423 (3.78%)
  Steeve Verret
Loretteville–Les Châtels   Marie-Josée Asselin
5,280 (47.56%)
Sylvie Lefrançois
729 (6.57%)
Jean Côté
1,778 (16.02%)
Catherine Proulx
332 (2.99%)
Anne-Laurence Harvey
2,982 (26.86%)
  Marie-Josée Asselin
Val-Bélair Bianca Dussault
3,04 (31.04%)
Kim Boyd
576 (5.85%)
Mégy Gagné
1,566 (15.91%)
Sarah Lesage
217 (2.21%)
  Pascal Morneau
Co-candidate for Stéphane Lachance
4,427 (44.99%)
  Bianca Dussault

See also

References

  1. ^ Boisvert, Louise (November 2, 2024). "L'ombre de Sam Hamad à un an des élections municipales". Radio-Canada.
  2. ^ Morrissette-Beaulieu, Félix (November 17, 2021). "Le nouveau maire Marchand dévoile son comité exécutif". Radio-Canada.
  3. ^ Pelletier, Émilie (February 21, 2022). "David Weiser s'explique sur son transfert à Québec forte et fière". Le Soleil.
  4. ^ Rochefort, Alain (April 4, 2022). "Le conseiller Steeve Verret se joint à l'équipe de Bruno Marchand". Radio-Canada.
  5. ^ Moalla, Taïeb; Lavallée, Jean-Luc (April 29, 2022). "Comité exécutif: l'arrivée de Lavoie pourrait coûter un poste à l'opposition". Le Journal de Québec.
  6. ^ Villeneuve, Flavie (August 31, 2023). "Le maire Marchand désormais majoritaire au conseil municipal". Radio-Canada.
  7. ^ Chouinard, Érik (September 1, 2023). "Jean-François Gosselin ne parlera du tramway qu'en privé". Radio-Canada.
  8. ^ Lavoie, Jonathan (February 21, 2022). "L'opposition officielle devient Québec d'abord". Radio-Canada.
  9. ^ Martin, Stéphanie (March 10, 2025). "Un nouveau chef pour Respect Citoyens Monsieur Stéphane Lachance". Journal de Québec.
  10. ^ a b Bergeron-Courteau, Mariane (August 13, 2025). "Équipe priorité Québec fusionne avec le parti de Sam Hamad". Radio-Canada.
  11. ^ a b Gagnon, Marie-Christine (April 6, 2025). "Sam Hamad lance sa campagne pour ravir la mairie de Québec". Radio-Canada.
  12. ^ Bergeron-Courteau, Mariane (June 11, 2025). "Le parti de Sam Hamad fait son entrée à l'hôtel de ville". Radio-Canada.
  13. ^ Gosselin, Vincent (September 16, 2025). "Éric Ralph Mercier rejoint Respect Citoyens". Radio-Canada. Retrieved September 27, 2025.
  14. ^ Béland, Gabriel (January 12, 2024). "Bruno Marchand va solliciter un deuxième mandat". La Presse.
  15. ^ Villeneuve, Claude (January 22, 2025). "Lettre de Claude Villeneuve, candidat à la mairie de Québec: pour une ville facile à vivre". Le Journal de Québec.
  16. ^ Bergeron-Courteau, Mariane (March 10, 2025). "Un ex-candidat conservateur à la tête du parti Respect Citoyens". Radio-Canada.
  17. ^ "Soirée de lancement: Jackie Smith candidate à la mairie de Québec!". Transition Québec. Retrieved May 9, 2025.
  18. ^ Pelletier, Émilie (June 12, 2025). "Anne Guérette veut faire son retour en politique". Le Soleil.
  19. ^ "Élections municipales - Yves Laberge". Ville de Québec. Retrieved October 14, 2025.
  20. ^ Pelletier, Émilie (June 18, 2025). "La politique municipale, «presque un sport national» à Québec". Le Soleil.
  21. ^ Tanguay, Sébastien (September 19, 2025). "À Québec, six partis croient en leurs chances de conquérir la mairie". Le Devoir.
  22. ^ Sauvageau, Flavie (June 13, 2025). "«C'est ce que j'ai à faire»: Anne Guérette revient à la conquête de la mairie de Québec". Radio-Canasa.
  23. ^ "Élections municipales: 123 personnes candidates à Québec en 2025". Ville de Québec. October 3, 2025.
  24. ^ Pelletier, Émilie (October 7, 2025). "Sam Hamad perd un autre candidat". Le Soleil.
  25. ^ Lavoie, Jonathan (October 2, 2025). "Un premier débat tendu entre Bruno Marchand et Sam Hamad". Radio-Canada.
  26. ^ "Quelle vision pour la ville de Québec? Débat entre Bruno Marchand et Sam Hamad". Radio-Canada. October 8, 2025.
  27. ^ Moalla, Taïeb (October 9, 2025). "Débat électoral sur LCN: Marchand et Hamad s'accusent de dire des faussetés". TVA Nouvelles.
  28. ^ "Débat des chefs - Élections municipales 2025". Chambre de commerce et d’industrie de Québec. Retrieved October 3, 2025.
  29. ^ Pelletier, Émilie (October 7, 2025). "Combat de coqs à six pour la mairie de Québec". Le Soleil.
  30. ^ Lavoie, Jonathan (October 14, 2025). "Débat: le passé de Sam Hamad devant le Commissaire à l'éthique refait surface". Radio-Canada.