Robert Perreault

Robert Perreault (born 13 May 1947) is a Canadian politician and administrator in the province of Quebec. He was a prominent city councillor in Montreal from 1982 to 1994, a Parti Québécois member of the National Assembly of Quebec from 1994 to 2000, and a cabinet minister in the government of Lucien Bouchard.

Early life and career
Perreault was born in Sainte-Anne-de-la-Pérade, Quebec. He earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from the Université de Montréal in 1968 and later studied economics at the same institution. From 1975 to 1983, he was an administrator for cultural, sports, and recreation organizations in Quebec.

City councillor
Perreault was a member of the progressive Montreal Citizens' Movement (MCM) in municipal politics. He was first elected to the Montreal city council in the 1982 municipal election, defeating incumbent councillor Roger Larivée from mayor Jean Drapeau's Civic Party in the east-end Laurier ward. The Civic Party won a majority government on council in this election, and Perreault served in opposition for the next four years, achieving prominence as the MCM's critic on economic issues. In 1985, he joined with party leader Jean Doré to propose an industry surtax to fund Montreal's public transit. He later suggested that an "enterprise zone" be created for economically depressed areas in Montreal's east end. Jean Doré was elected as mayor of Montreal in the 1986 municipal election and the MCM won a landslide victory on council. Perreault was easily re-elected in Laurier and, following the election, was named as vice-chair of the Montreal executive committee (i.e., the municipal cabinet) with responsibility for economic development and administrative reform.
 * 1982–1986
 * 1986–1990

Perreault introduced significant reforms to Montreal's civil service in early 1987 in a bid to decentralize the city's operations. Almost half of the city's department directorships were eliminated (with many directors taking early retirement), and twelve new municipal centers were opened in different neighbourhoods across the city. In the same year, Perreault introduced a ninety million dollar five-year investment plan for Montreal's east end; he indicated the plan would protect eleven thousand existing jobs, create four thousand more, and bring $350 million in investment from the private sector. In 1990, he introduced a similar plan valued at one hundred million dollars for economically depressed areas in southwest Montreal.

Perreault also served as a city representative on the regional Montreal Urban Community and was appointed as chair of the Montreal Urban Community Transit Corp. (MUCTC) in November 1986. Soon after his appointment, he announced a one-year fare freeze and a small tax increase for suburban Montreal homeowners that was targeted to transportation. In 1988, he wrote a public letter calling for municipalities in Laval and the South Shore to contribute more to Montreal's transit system, arguing that the service was used by many of residents of these communities.

The MCM won another landslide victory in the 1990 municipal election. Perreault was not re-appointed to the city's executive committee, but remained chair of the MUCTC.
 * 1990–1994

The Quebec government introduced significant cuts to Montreal municipal transit in 1991, amid a serious North American economic downturn. The MUCTC made up for these cuts by increasing municipal contributions, increasing fares, and laying off some employees. At the end of the year, it posted a surprising $13.3 million surplus, and some transit advocates complained that the fare increases approved by Perreault had been excessive.

Perreault announced in November 1993 that public transit ridership had increased after five years of decline, notwithstanding the continuing economic downturn. The MUCTC posted another $14 million surplus in early 1994.

Perreault was on the Quebec nationalist wing of the MCM. In the 1980s, he dissented against the party's call to reform Quebec's Charter of the French Language. He announced his support for the newly formed Bloc Québécois in 1990 and called for a referendum on Quebec sovereignty the following year.
 * MCM divisions and national politics

In December 1990, Perreault announced that the MUCTC would remove the government of Canada's English/French bilingual advertisements from bus and subway lines to ensure compliance with Quebec's French-only sign laws. Critics noted that this would result in about $800,000 in lost revenue over the next year. Perreault dropped the plan after being advised that the advertisements were legal under Canada's Official Languages Act.

Perreault wrote an editorial for the newspaper La Presse in August 1992, accusing the MCM of having lost credibility with the electorate. This was regarded as a serious indicator of dissent within Doré's party.

Provincial legislator
Perreault sought the Parti Québécois nomination for the east-end Montreal division of Mercier in the buildup to the 1994 provincial election. He initially lost to lawyer Giuseppe Sciortino, but this result was later annulled due to voting irregularities, and Perreault defeated Sciortino in a follow-up contest. Party leader Jacques Parizeau had supported Sciortino's candidacy as a means of building the PQs support in Montreal's Italian community, and several senior party officials unsuccessfully pressured Perreault to drop out. (There were also ideological differences between the candidates; Perreault was considered a centrist, and Sciortino was closer to the PQ's left wing.) The first round of balloting at the first nomination meeting saw Perreault receive 245 votes, compared with 114 for Sciortino, 89 for retired civil servant Claude Bernard, and 71 for Jean-Louis Hérivault. Perreault's opponents then joined forces, and Sciortino was elected by fourteen votes on the second ballot. The results were annulled when it was discovered that at least fifteen voters from Claude Bernard's group had given improper addresses. See Philip Authier, "Liberals' monopoly on minorities over, new Italian-origin PQ candidate says," Montreal Gazette, 22 June 1994, A7; Lysiane Gagnon, "Pauline Julien versus Camille Laurin: a spectacular match," Globe and Mail, 25 June 1994, D3; Irwin Block, "Transit chief flatly refuses to drop bid for Mercier nod," Montreal Gazette, 27 July 1994, A8; Gord Sinclair, "Language won't get in way of Quebec election," Financial Post, 27 July 1994, p. 9; Andre Picard, "Media Watch: Trail Notes," Globe and Mail, 2 August 1994, A4; Hubert Bauch, "Parizeau angers members by making pick in Mercier," Montreal Gazette, 3 August 1994, p. 1; Anne McIlroy, "Star candidates carry price, PQ finds," Toronto Star, 4 August 1994, A11; Andre Picard, "Media Watch," Globe and Mail, 6 August 1994, A6; Andre Picard, "Parizeau-backed star loses nomination bid ," Globe and Mail, 9 August 1994, A6. The nomination controversy was covered in the New York Times; see Clyde H. Farnsworth, "Montreal Journal; A 'Free' Quebec? In Many Tongues, a Firm 'No!'", The New York Times, 25 August 1994, p. 4. During the second nomination meeting, Perreault brought outgoing Mercier representative Gérald Godin on the stage as one of his supporters. This was very controversial; Godin was suffering from the advanced stages of brain cancer, and many party supporters believed the decision to bring him on stage wearing a Perreault scarf was exploitative. See Don Macpherson, "A sickening stunt; Perreault must have wanted Mercier very badly," Montreal Gazette, 9 August 1994, B3; Andre Picard, "Media watch," Globe and Mail, 10 August 1994, A5. Despite the nomination controversy, Perreault was elected without difficulty in the 1994 election. The PQ won a majority government under Parizeau's leadership, and Perreault entered the legislature as a governmental backbencher. Lucien Bouchard succeeded Jacques Parizeau as premier on 29 January 1996, and appointed Perreault to cabinet as minister of public security. Perreault's department announced a series of prison reforms shortly thereafter, including plans to close as many as six prisons and incarcerate fewer non-violent criminals.
 * Minister of public security

In late April 1996, Perreault worked with security officials in the Kahnawake Mohawk reserve to prevent a mixed martial arts event from taking place in the community; the government's position was that these events were too brutal to sanction. Later in the same year, Perreault's department took part in a jurisdictional controversy over a small casino in Kahnawake that was not sanctioned by the provincial government. In late 1996, Perreault reached an interim agreement with representatives of the government of Canada and the Mohawk Council of Kanesatake concerning policing services in the divided community.

Perreault announced an independent inquiry into the state of the Sûreté du Québec (SQ) in June 1996, following widespread allegations of corruption and misconduct in the force. This followed an embarrassing situation in which a high-profile drug case was dismissed due to evidence tampering. The inquiry, initially led by chief justice Jean-Pierre Bonin of the Court of Quebec's criminal division, was closed to the public. Bonin stood down in October 1996, citing acrimonious working conditions, and Perreault subsequently launched a revised, wide-ranging public inquiry led by retired justice Lawrence Poitras. In the same period, Perreault appointed senior public servant Guy Coulombe as the SQ's first civilian leader. When it was released three years later, Poitras's report accused the SQ of abusing its powers of arrest, being more concerned with protecting its image than investigating misconduct, and having an "unhealthy air of solidarity, expressed through the law of silence and retaliations" against dissident officers.

Perreault was public security minister at the time of a high-profile rivalry between two biker gangs in Quebec, the Hells Angels and the Rock Machine. In early 1997, he announced that the Bouchard government was planning a new series of measures to target gang violence, including stricter rules for liquor-permit renewals and increased expropriation powers for municipalities. He also sought legislative assistance from the federal government of Canada. Bouchard announced a cabinet shuffle on 25 August 1997, and named Perreault as the minister responsible for the Montreal region. Perreault announced a few weeks later that the Quebec government would contribute $160 million to double the size of the Palais des congrès de Montréal, and a modified version of this plan was approved in September 1998.
 * Minister responsible for Montreal

In early 1998, Perreault helped negotiate an agreement for the provincial government to reduce Montreal's deficit by taking part ownership of some municipal buildings. He later announced significant funding initiatives for tourism, new bicycle lanes, and a new economic initiative for the city's east end.

Perreault proposed a transit corporation merger between the Montreal Urban Community, Laval, and the South Shore in 1998, arguing that it would save fifty million dollars per year. The initiative was set aside after complaints by Montreal-area mayors. Perreault also proposed a gasoline surtax and an increased vehicle registration fee to support public transit.

During the buildup to the 1998 election, Perreault was challenged by well-known journalist Josée Legault for the Parti Québécois nomination in Mercier. Legault accused the PQ of abandoning its commitment to social democracy and Quebec independence. Perreault won the challenge with about sixty per cent support.

In June 1999, after he was shuffled out of ministerial responsibility for Montreal, Perreault accused Mayor Pierre Bourque of governing the city in an undemocratic fashion. Perreault was re-elected in the 1998 provincial election, as the Parti Québécois won a second consecutive majority government under Lucien Bouchard's leadership. On 15 December, Bouchard reassigned Perreault as Quebec's minister of citizenship and immigration.
 * Minister of immigration and citizenship

In March 1999, Perreault said that Quebec would not provide individual compensation to the Duplessis Orphans who had been abused several decades earlier at the Mount Cashel Orphanage. This decision was criticized by the provincial ombudsman. The government had previously made three million dollars available through an assistance fund, which Perreault said was meant for social services such as counselling. In 2000, he was quoted as saying on the matter, "There will not be compensation. We prefer to help those who most need the help now."

Perreault and treasury board president Jacques Léonard announced a new hiring campaign for the civil service in early 1999, indicating that they would seek more recruits from Quebec's minority communities. Perreault was later able to announce that Quebec had fulfilled its targets for minority representation in summer positions, but critics charged that the numbers for full-time civil service jobs remained unacceptably low. The government later strengthened its employment equity policies to ensure that more women, indigenous persons, and members of visible minority communities would be hired.

Perreault argued in June 1999 that Quebec would require independence to have proper oversight of its immigration policy, noting that the Canadian federal government was responsible for half of all immigration to the province. In the same year, he said that Quebec wanted to increase its francophone immigration from 44 per cent to about 60 per cent. Perreault helped oversee a high-profile resettlement of refugees from Kosovo in this period.

In May 2000, Perreault introduced legislation to create a "national identity card" for Quebec. He noted that the card was not mandatory and would include no information beyond the citizen's name and picture. Critics accused the Bouchard government of using the card to promote sovereignty and charged that it was the first step toward creating mandatory voting cards.

Perreault resigned from cabinet and the legislature on 6 October 2000, saying that his decision was personal and that he wanted to reorient his career. He added that he had entered provincial politics to achieve Quebec independence and would not have resigned if the Bouchard government had set a clear timeline for a new referendum on sovereignty. Perreault supported Gilles Duceppe's successful bid to lead the Bloc Québécois (BQ) in 1997.
 * Canadian federal politics

Administrator
Perreault became director general of the Conseil regional de l'environnement de Montreal in May 2001 and held the position until 2007. In this capacity, he continued to speak in favour of public transit. He also opposed an extension of the Quebec Autoroute 25 north of Montreal, citing pollution concerns. He criticized Quebec's transport department in 2006, calling it "incompetent" and saying that it was unduly focused on car use.

Perreault supported an increase to Montreal's parking meter rates in 2007, arguing that it was a necessary step to discourage automobile use. He also spoke in support of toll roads.

In the 2008 provincial election, Perreault supported Québec solidaire candidate Amir Khadir against PQ incumbent Daniel Turp in Mercier. Khadir was elected as Québec solidaire's first member of the provincial legislature.