Municipal leaders across Quebec are looking for ways to get young people, especially women, to run for local office in next year’s elections, but that is a tall order given the well-documented incidents of harassment and intimidation faced by elected officials in the province.
As many as 800 municipal councillors — 10 per cent of the roughly 8,000 people elected to local office in 2021 — have quit before the end of their term, says Quebec’s elections agency. They’ve left for a wide range of reasons, but some departures were influenced by the toxic behaviour of citizens.
“Harassment has been more and more frequent in the municipal world, whether it’s in Quebec or when I speak to colleagues across Canada,” Antoine Tardif, mayor of Victoriaville, Que., a town of 45,000 people about 140 kilometres northeast of Montreal, said in a recent interview. “I think social media is a part of …