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Richard Nadeau

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Richard Nadeau
Member of the Canadian Parliament
for Gatineau
In office
January 23, 2006 – May 2, 2011
Preceded byFrançoise Boivin
Succeeded byFrançoise Boivin
Personal details
Born (1959-04-05) April 5, 1959 (age 66)
Hawkesbury, Ontario
Political partyBloc Québécois (federal)
Action Gatineau (municipal)
SpouseEdith Gendron
Residence(s)Gatineau, Quebec, Canada
Alma materUniversity of Ottawa (BA, BEd)
ProfessionTeacher

Richard Nadeau (born April 5, 1959) is a Canadian teacher and politician who is the former Member of Parliament for the riding of Gatineau.

Early life and career

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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.

Political career

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Federal politics

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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.

In the 2008 Canadian federal election 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.

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

Municipal politics

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On May 26, 2025, less than a month after losing the 2025 federal election, Nadeau announced that he would be seeking the Action Gatineau nomination in Lac-Beauchamp District for the 2025 municipal election.[1]

Personal life

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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. Nadeau's daughter, Myriam, was the Action Gatineau city councillor for Pointe-Gatineau District from 2013 to 2021.[1]

Electoral record

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2025 Canadian federal election: Gatineau
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
Liberal Steven MacKinnon 34,751 60.54 +10.49
Conservative Kethlande Pierre 10,982 19.13 +8.02
Bloc Québécois Richard Nadeau 9,373 16.33 -7.09
New Democratic Daniel Simoncic 1,615 2.81 -5.81
People's Mathieu Saint-Jean 505 0.88 -3.17
Marxist–Leninist Pierre Soublière 173 0.30 +0.20
Total valid votes/expense limit 57,399 98.91
Total rejected ballots 633 1.09
Turnout 58,032 68.20
Eligible voters 85,086
Liberal notional hold Swing +1.24
Source: Elections Canada[2][3]
Note: number of eligible voters does not include voting day registrations.
2011 Canadian federal election: Gatineau
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
New Democratic Françoise Boivin 35,262 61.83 +35.71
Bloc Québécois Richard Nadeau 8,619 15.11 -14.04
Liberal Steve MacKinnon 7,975 13.98 -11.34
Conservative Jennifer Gearey 4,532 7.95 -8.86
Green Jonathan Meijer 639 1.12 -1.45
Total valid votes/Expense limit 57,027 100.00
Total rejected ballots 365 0.64
Turnout 57,392 64.10
Eligible voters 89,537
2008 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
Bloc Québécois Richard Nadeau 15,189 29.15 -10.11 $78,498
New Democratic Françoise Boivin 13,612 26.12 +16.11 $87,035
Liberal Michel Simard 13,193 25.32 -5.92 $40,288
Conservative Denis Tassé 8,762 16.81 +0.07 $52,464
Green David Inglis 1,342 2.57 -0.12
Total valid votes/Expense limit 52,098 100.00 $88,989
Bloc Québécois hold Swing -13.11
2006 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
Bloc Québécois Richard Nadeau 21,093 39.25 -1.02 $72,093
Liberal Françoise Boivin 16,826 31.31 -10.78 $70,768
Conservative Patrick Robert 9,014 16.77 +9.19 $62,953
New Democratic Anne Levesque 5,354 9.96 +4.24 $5,811
Green Gail Walker 1,456 2.71 -0.36 $5
Total valid votes/Expense limit 53,743 100.00 $82,260
Bloc Québécois gain Swing
2004 Canadian federal election
Party Candidate Votes % ±% Expenditures
Liberal Françoise Boivin 19,198 42.09 -9.37 $46,494
Bloc Québécois Richard Nadeau 18,368 40.27 14.87 $20,574
Conservative Gérald Nicolas 3,461 7.59 -9.65[a]
New Democratic Dominique Vaillancourt 2,610 5.72 +2.24
Green Brian Gibb 1,402 3.07 $144
Marijuana Stéphane Salko 453 0.99
Marxist–Leninist Gabriel Girard-Bernier 125 0.27 0.00
Total valid votes/Expense limit 45,617 100.00 $80,437

Works

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  • Nevitte, Neil; Blais, André; Gidengil, Elisabeth; Nadeau, Richard (2000). Unsteady State: The 1997 Canadian Federal Election. Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-541466-0.

Notes

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  1. ^ Conservative vote is compared to the total of the Canadian Alliance vote and Progressive Conservative vote in the 2000 election.

References

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  1. ^ a b Bélanger, Mathieu (May 26, 2025). "L'ex-député Richard Nadeau brigue l'investiture d'Action Gatineau dans Lac-Beauchamp" (in Canadian French). Le Droit. Retrieved May 26, 2025.
  2. ^ "Voter information service". Elections Canada. Retrieved May 3, 2025.
  3. ^ "Election Night Results - Electoral Districts". Elections Canada. Retrieved May 3, 2025.
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