- Denis Lebel
-
The Honourable
Denis Lebel
PC, MPMember of the Canadian Parliament
for Roberval—Lac-Saint-JeanIncumbent Assumed office
September 17, 2007Preceded by Michel Gauthier Personal details Born May 26, 1954
Roberval, QuebecPolitical party Conservative (2007-present), Bloc Québécois (1993-2001) Spouse(s) Danielle Girard Residence Roberval, Quebec Profession hotel manager, restaurateur Cabinet Minister of Transport Denis Lebel, PC, MP (born May 26, 1954, in Roberval, Quebec) is a Canadian federal politician and former mayor of Roberval, Quebec.
Lebel was elected to the Canadian House of Commons on September 17, 2007, in the Roberval—Lac-Saint-Jean by-election, 2007. He is a member of the Conservative Party.
On October 30, 2008, he was appointed to Stephen Harper's cabinet as Minister of State (Economic Development Agency of Canada for the Regions of Quebec).[1] After the May 2011 General election, Lebel was promoted to Minister of Transport
Lebel was a member of the sovereigntist Bloc Québécois, between July 23, 1993, and April 28, 2001.[2]
References
- ^ "Quebec gets lost in the shuffle", The Globe and Mail, October 30, 2008.
- ^ "Tory Minister Lebel reveals past sovereigntist ties". CBC.ca. August 9, 2011. http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/story/2011/08/09/pol-lebel-bloc.html. Retrieved 2011-08-09.
External links
- Denis Lebel official site
- Profile at Parliament of Canada
- Parliamentarian profile at ParlInfo
- Speeches, votes and activity at OpenParliament.ca
- Voting history at How'd They Vote?
28th Ministry – Cabinet of Stephen Harper Cabinet Posts (1) Predecessor Office Successor Jean-Pierre Blackburn Minister of the Economic Development Agency of Canada for the Regions of Quebec
2008-present
styled as Minister of State (Economic Development Agency of Canada for the Regions of Quebec)incumbent Members of the current Canadian Cabinet Ablonczy · Aglukkaq · Ashfield · Ambrose · Baird · Bernier · Blaney · Clement · Duncan · Fantino · Fast · Finley · Flaherty · Fletcher · Goodyear · Gosal · Harper · Kenney · Kent · Lebel · LeBreton · MacKay · Menzies · Moore · Nicholson · O'Connor · Oda · Oliver · Paradis · Penashue · Raitt · Ritz · Shea · Toews · Uppal · Valcourt · Van Loan · Wong · YelichMinisters of Railways and Canals (1879-1936) Ministers of Transport (1936-2006) Howe · Cardin · Howe (acting) · Michaud · Chevrier · Marler · Hees · Balcer · McIlraith · Pickersgill · Hellyer · Richardson (acting) · Jamieson · Marchand · Lang · Mazankowski · Pépin · Axworthy · Mazankowski · Crosbie · Bouchard · Lewis · Corbeil · Young · Anderson · Collenette · Valeri · LapierreMinisters of Transport, Infrastructure and Communities (2006-) Current Members of the House of Commons of Canada Government Conservative Party Harper • Ablonczy • Adams • Adler • Aglukkaq • Albas • Albrecht • Alexander • Allen • Allison • Ambler • Ambrose • Anders • Anderson • Armstrong • Ashfield • Aspin • Baird • Bateman • Benoit • Bernier • Bezan • Blaney • Block • Boughen • Braid • Breitkreuz • G. Brown • L. Brown • P. Brown • Bruinooge • Butt • Calandra • Calkins • Cannan • Carmichael • Carrie • Chisu • Chong • Clarke • Clement • Daniel • Davidson • Dechert • Del Mastro • Devolin • Dreeshen • Duncan • Dykstra • Fantino • Fast • Findlay • Finley • Flaherty • Fletcher • Galipeau • Gallant • Gill • Glover • Goguen • Goldring • Goodyear • Gosal • Gourde • Grewal • Harris • Hawn • Hayes • Hiebert • Hillyer • Hoback • Hoeppner • Holder • James • Jean • Kamp • Keddy • Kenney • Kent • Kerr • Komarnicki • Kramp • Lake • Lauzon • Lebel • Leef • Leitch • Lemieux • Leung • Lizon • Lobb • Lukiwski • Lunney • McColeman • MacKay • MacKenzie • McLeod • Mayes • Merrifield • Menegakis • Menzies • Miller • J. Moore • R. Moore • Nicholson • Norlock • Obhrai • O'Connor • Oda • Oliver • O'Neill-Gordon • Opitz • Paradis • Payne • Penashue • Poilievre • Preston • Raitt • Rajotte • Rathgeber • Reid • Rempel • Richards • Richardson • Rickford • Ritz • Saxton • Scheer • Schellenberger • Seeback • Shea • Shipley • Shory • Smith • Sopuck • Sorenson • Stanton • Storseth • Strahl • Sweet • Tilson • Toet • Toews • Trost • Trottier • Truppe • Tweed • Uppal • Valcourt • Van Kesteren • Van Loan • Vellacott • Wallace • Warawa • Warkentin • Watson • J. Weston • R. Weston • Wilks • Williamson • Wong • Woodworth • Yelich • T. Young • W. Young • ZimmerOfficial Opposition Turmel • Allen • Angus • Ashton • Atamanenko • Ayala • Aubin • Benskin • Bevington • Blanchette • Blanchette-Lamothe • Boivin • Borg • Boulerice • Boutin-Sweet • Brahmi • Brosseau • Caron • Cash • Charlton • Chicoine • Chisholm • Choquette • Chow • Christopherson • Cleary • Comartin • Côté • Crowder • Cullen • D. Davies • L. Davies • Day • Dewar • Dionne Labelle • Donnelly • Doré Lefebvre • Dubé • Duncan • Dusseault • Freeman • Garrison • Genest • Genest-Jourdain • Giguère • Godin • Gravelle • Groguhé • D. Harris • J. Harris • Hassainia • Hughes • Hyer • Jacob • Julian • Kellway • Larose • Lapointe • Latendresse • Laverdière • LeBlanc • Leslie • Liu • Mai • Marston • Martin • Masse • Mathyssen • Michaud • Moore • D. Morin • I. Morin • M-A. Morin • M-C. Morin • Mulcair • Nantel • Nash • Nicholls • Nunez-Melo • Papillon • Patry • Péclet • Perreault • Pilon • Quach • Rafferty • Ravignat • Raynault • Rousseau • Saganash • Sandhu • Savoie • Sellah • Sims • Sitsabaiesan • St-Denis • Stewart • Stoffer • Sullivan • Thibeault • Toone • TremblayThird Party Liberal Party Rae • Andrews • Bélanger • Bennett • Brison • Byrne • Casey • Coderre • Cotler • Cuzner • Dion • Duncan • Easter • Eyking • Foote • Fry • Garneau • Goodale • Hsu • Karygiannis • Lamoureux • LeBlanc • MacAulay • McCallum • McGuinty • McKay • Murray • Pacetti • Regan • Scarpaleggia • Sgro • Simms • Trudeau • ValerioteIndependents 41st Canadian Parliament This article about a mayor in Quebec is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.