Logo
facts about alexandre boulerice.html

14 Facts About Alexandre Boulerice

facts about alexandre boulerice.html1.

Alexandre Boulerice is currently the NDP's Quebec lieutenant and ethics critic.

2.

Alexandre Boulerice started working at age 15 as a lifeguard for the municipality and then went on to become pool manager.

3.

Alexandre Boulerice has worked for a community group, l'Union des travailleurs et travailleuses accidentes de Montreal.

4.

Alexandre Boulerice has been active in the New Democratic Party since the late 1990s.

5.

Alexandre Boulerice first ran in the 2008 federal election and finished a distant third with 16.26 percent of the vote, well behind Bloc Quebecois incumbent Bernard Bigras.

6.

Alexandre Boulerice then became the vice president of communications for the Quebec section of the NDP, under the presidency of Francoise Boivin.

7.

One of those seats belonged to Alexandre Boulerice, who won a decisive victory with 50.8 per cent of the vote, finishing 9,700 votes ahead of Bigras.

8.

Alexandre Boulerice served as one of two New Democrats on the Special Committee on Electoral Reform.

9.

Alexandre Boulerice eventually supported Peter Julian's candidacy and did not back any of the remaining candidates after Julian withdrew from the race.

10.

In early 2017, Alexandre Boulerice was named Finance critic for the NDP.

11.

Alexandre Boulerice was re-elected in the 2019 and 2021 federal elections and was the only NDP MP returned from Quebec.

12.

In fall 2011, Alexandre Boulerice tabled Bill C-307, a private member's bill "For the reassignment of pregnant and lactating women", to protect the rights of pregnant and lactating women who must leave their jobs to protect their health or the health of their child.

13.

Alexandre Boulerice was one of the first to oppose the cuts by promptly launching a petition to inform citizens of the consequences of such a decision.

14.

Alexandre Boulerice ended his campaign by submitting a brief before the Commission sur le developpement social et la diversite of the City of Montreal, which studied the impacts of ending door-to-door mail delivery on the installation of community mailboxes in densely populated areas, and on the quality of life of seniors and disabled people.