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Michel Bellehumeur

Michel Bellehumeur
Member of the Canadian Parliament
for Berthier—Montcalm
In office
1993–2002
Preceded by Robert de Cotret
Succeeded by Roger Gaudet
Personal details
Born (1963-01-21) January 21, 1963 (age 54)
Louiseville, Quebec
Political party Bloc Québécois
Portfolio Deputy House Leader of the Official Opposition (1994-1996 & 1997)
Bloc Québécois Deputy House Leader (1994-1996 & 1997)

Michel Bellehumeur (born January 21, 1963) is a Quebec politician. He was the Bloc Québécois Member of Parliament for the riding of Berthier—Montcalm.

Born in Louiseville, Quebec, Bellehumeur had always been a Quebec nationalist, but was previously a member of the Liberal Party of Canada, serving as the official agent for the Liberal candidate in Berthier—Montcalm in the 1988 election. In an interview, he told the Toronto Star that "he saw Quebec's future within Canada until the 1992 referendum on the Charlottetown accord, rejected in both English Canada and Quebec".

He was first elected in 1993, in which the Bloc Québécois became the official opposition. During the 35th Canadian Parliament, Bellehumeur built the reputation of being a fighter. "At one point during parliamentary debate before the 1995 Quebec referendum," wrote Paul Wells in the Montreal Gazette "Liberal MP Patrick Gagnon invited Bellehumeur to step outside the House and settle an argument the two were having. Days after the referendum, Bellehumeur was kicked out of the House for accusing Deputy Prime Minister Sheila Copps of lying - an accusation that happened at that moment to be true, but was unparliamentary anyway". In 1996, Bellehumeur was promoted by the BQ's then-leader Michel Gauthier as shadow critic for Intergovernmental Affairs, a position that allowed Bellehumeur to represent the BQ's position for post-referendum Quebec.


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Wikipedia

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