Municipal politics The city's longtime mayor,
Gilles Vaillancourt, resigned on 9 November 2012, following allegations of corruption made against him in hearings of the provincial
Charbonneau Commission. City councillor Basile Angelopoulos served as acting mayor until
Alexandre Duplessis was selected in a council vote on 23 November. Duplessis, in turn, stepped down after just seven months in office after facing allegations of being implicated in a prostitution investigation; he was succeeded by city councillor
Martine Beaugrand until the city's new mayor,
Marc Demers, was elected in the 2013 municipal election. Past mayors have been: •
Jean-Noël Lavoie (founding mayor), 1965 •
Jacques Tétreault, 1965–1973 •
Lucien Paiement, 1973–1981 •
Claude Lefebvre, 1981–1989 •
Gilles Vaillancourt, 1989–2012 •
Alexandre Duplessis, 2012–2013 •
Martine Beaugrand, 2013 •
Marc Demers, 2013–2021 •
Stéphane Boyer, 2021–present On 3 June 2013, the provincial government of
Pauline Marois placed the city under
trusteeship due to the ongoing corruption scandal affecting the city. Florent Gagné, a former head of the
Sûreté du Québec, will serve as the city's head trustee, with responsibility for reviewing and approving or rejecting all decisions made by city council. Duplessis, in turn, resigned as mayor on 28 June 2013, after being implicated in a separate prostitution allegation.
Federal and provincial politics Federally, prior to 1984 Laval had been a bastion of
Liberal support. From 1984 to 1993 the Conservative dominated Laval but have not won a seat since.Since the 90's Laval has been a battleground area between the Quebec separatist parties (the
Bloc Québécois federally and the
Parti Québécois provincially) and the federalist parties (various parties federally and the
Quebec Liberal Party provincially). In 2011, amid an NDP surge in the province they swept all 4 seats in Laval for the first and only time. Since the
2015 election the Liberals have held all seats. Provincially the other parts of Laval have drifted to the provincial Liberals in recent years. While the PQ held every Laval riding except
Chomedey (which voted overwhelmingly to not separate in the
1995 Quebec referendum) during their second stint in government between 1994 and 2003. The Liberals won every Laval riding in 2003, 2007, and 2008. During the
2012 election, the PQ saw some gains in Laval when they captured 2 seats, but both returned to the Liberal fold during the
2014 election. During the
2018 election amid a rise of the CAQ, the Liberals held their own in the Laval losing only 1 seat to the CAQ. In the
2022 election the CAQ captured 3 more seats in Laval netting them 4 out of 6 seats and ending the dominance of the Liberals in Laval since the 2003 election. The Conservative Party of Quebec saw its vote share jump from just under 2% in 2018 to third place with just under 13%. ==Infrastructure==