Anne Lagacé Dowson
Anne Lagacé Dowson (born in Toronto, Ontario, January 1, 1953) is a Canadian radio journalist.
Radio career[]
A longtime host of CBC Radio's Radio Noon, a daily current affairs and phone-in program in Quebec, she left to run for political office in 2008.[1] She also hosted Home Run in Montreal, and was producer of C'est la Vie. She was a news reporter, arts reporter, press reviewer, and has guest hosted Cross Country Checkup and As It Happens, where she was also a producer. Anne has been a frequent guest in the francophone media, she was a juror on the Radio Canada version of Canada Reads, entitled Le Combat des livres, and she championed Mordecai Richler's Barney's Version.
She was a daily presence on the Radio-Canada radio program Sans Preliminaires with Franco Nuovo. She has been a member of a weekly politics panel on Radio-Canada's flagship television newscast Le Téléjournal with Jean-François Lisée, Liza Frulla and Tasha Kheiriddin, hosted by Céline Galipeau.
Anne was the first ever Anglophone spokesperson for the Festival International du Film sur l'Art in Montreal, the biggest festival of films on art in the world.
From September 2009 to August 2011, she hosted a Saturday afternoon show on CJAD-AM in Montreal. She now participates in the Tommy Schnurmacher Show as a member of the Gang of Four, and does a weekly column on politics on the drive show with Aaron Rand.
In 2015, she has been the guest host for the noontime Barry Morgan Show when Barry is on vacation on Montreal's CJAD 800 AM radio.
Her column about Anglo Quebec is entitled "Bloke Nation" and appears in the entertainment weekly Hour Community.
Political career[]
She was the New Democratic Party candidate in the 2008 Canadian federal election for Westmount—Ville-Marie, coming second to Liberal Marc Garneau. She had originally been the party's candidate in a by-election for Westmount—Ville Marie, which was superseded by the general election call.
She was endorsed by Cory Doctorow of Boing Boing,[2] McGill University academics Charles Taylor and Desmond Morton, human rights lawyer Julius Grey and the former mayor of Westmount, May Cutler.
She ran for office in the 2015 election in the riding of Papineau, losing against Liberal leader Justin Trudeau.[3]
Education[]
Dowson holds a B.A. in sociology and women's studies at the University of Ottawa, where she was a member of the student senate, and holds a M.A. (1989) in Canadian studies at Carleton University. At Carleton, Dowson served as vice president of the teaching assistant's union. She moderated at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts to writers ranging from Salman Rushdie to John Ralston Saul. Invited by the governor general, she hosted events at Rideau Hall, most recently three national panel debates on the arts.
Fluently bilingual, she is the daughter of trade unionist Hugh Dowson of Toronto and Québec City's Claire Lagacé. Claire Lagacé studied with the Ursulines alongside leading Québec author Anne Hébert, from whom Anne derives her name.
Her great uncle Pierre Édouard Blondin was a Conservative Minister in Prime Minister Robert Borden's government, and went on to become Speaker of the Senate. Her uncle Ross Dowson ran for Mayor of Toronto after the war on a Trotskyist platform.
Her aunts Lois and Joyce Dowson co-founded the Ontario chapter of the Canadian Hemophilia Society in the 1950s after Joyce, married to sculptor Joe Rosenthal, discovered that their son, Ronald Rosenthal, had hemophilia. Lois and Joyce were also leading pro choice activists, and supporters of Henry Morgentaler.
Electoral history[]
2015 Canadian federal election: Papineau | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | Expenditures | |||
Liberal | Justin Trudeau | 26,391 | 51.98 | +14.05 | $129,821.55 | |||
New Democratic | Anne Lagacé Dowson | 13,132 | 25.87 | −3.6 | $111,652.95 | |||
Bloc Québécois | Maxime Claveau | 6,182 | 12.18 | −12.71 | $19,007.27 | |||
Conservative | Yvon Vadnais | 2,390 | 4.71 | −0.33 | $5,649.91 | |||
Green | Danny Polifroni | 1,443 | 2.84 | +0.95 | $82.71 | |||
Independent | Chris Lloyd | 505 | 0.99 | – | $5,759.41 | |||
Rhinoceros | Tommy Gaudet | 323 | 0.64 | – | – | |||
Independent | Kim Waldron | 159 | 0.31 | – | $2,101.20 | |||
Marxist–Leninist | Peter Macrisopoulos | 142 | 0.28 | −0.25 | – | |||
No affiliation | Beverly Bernardo | 103 | 0.2 | – | – | |||
Total valid votes/expense limit | 50,770 | 98.64 | $213,091.50 | |||||
Total rejected ballots | 698 | 1.36 | – | |||||
Turnout | 51,468 | 65.44 | – | |||||
Eligible voters | 78,649 | |||||||
Liberal notional hold | Swing | +8.83 | ||||||
Source: Elections Canada[4][5] |
2008 Canadian federal election: Westmount—Ville-Marie | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | Expenditures | |||
Liberal | Marc Garneau | 18,041 | 46.47 | +0.79 | $78,009 | |||
New Democratic | Anne Lagacé Dowson | 8,904 | 22.93 | +7.56 | $79,186 | |||
Conservative | Guy Dufort | 6,139 | 15.81 | −1.84 | $34,968 | |||
Bloc Québécois | Charles Larivée | 2,818 | 7.26 | −5.30 | $8,281 | |||
Green | Claude William Genest | 2,733 | 7.04 | −1.31 | – | |||
Rhinoceros | Judith Vienneau | 62 | 0.16 | – | – | |||
Marxist–Leninist | Linda Sullivan | 49 | 0.13 | −0.10 | – | |||
Independent | David Rovins | 47 | 0.12 | – | $30 | |||
Communist | Bill Sloan | 34 | 0.09 | −0.08 | $2,433 | |||
Total valid votes/expense limit | 38,827 | 100.00 | $83,153 | |||||
Total rejected ballots | 224 | 0.57 | ||||||
Turnout | 39,051 | 50.64 | ||||||
Eligible voters | 77,112 | |||||||
Liberal hold | Swing | +1.34 |
References[]
- ^ "NDP prepares star candidate for Westmount" Archived November 4, 2012, at the Wayback Machine. The Gazette, July 4, 2008.
- ^ Cory Doctorow, "Personal endorsement for Anne Lagacé Dowson, candidate in Westmount-Ville-Marie, Quebec". BoingBoing.net.
- ^ "Anne Lagacé Dowson takes on Justin Trudeau for NDP in Papineau". CBC News, August 23, 2015.
- ^ Elections Canada – Confirmed candidates for Papineau, 30 September 2015
- ^ Elections Canada – Final Candidates Election Expenses Limits
- Living people
- Canadian radio journalists
- Canadian talk radio hosts
- University of Ottawa alumni
- Journalists from Montreal
- Journalists from Toronto
- Politicians from Montreal
- Politicians from Toronto
- New Democratic Party candidates for the Canadian House of Commons
- Franco-Ontarian people
- Anglophone Quebec people
- Quebec candidates for Member of Parliament
- Women in Quebec politics
- CBC Radio hosts
- Canadian women radio journalists
- 21st-century Canadian women politicians
- Canadian women radio hosts
- 1953 births