George Savoidakis

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George Savoidakis (1938 – October 6, 1995) was a politician in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He served on the Montreal city council from 1978 to 1986, representing the Parc-Extension ward as a member of mayor Jean Drapeau's Civic Party of Montreal.

Early life and career[]

Savoidakis was born on the Greek island of Crete and spent his formative years in the community of Agioi Deka.[1] He moved to Canada in 1955, studied business at Concordia University, and later became a broker with Whalen Beliveau and Associates. He also served as vice-president of the Caisse Populaire de St. Roch and the Hellenic Community of the Island of Montreal.[2]

Savoidakis ran as a Union Nationale candidate in the 1976 provincial election.[3]

Councillor[]

Savoidakis was elected to the Montreal city council in the 1978 municipal election, as the Civic Party won almost all seats on council. He was re-elected in 1982. Throughout his time on council, he was a backbench supporter of Drapeau's administration. He also served on the Montreal Urban Community and was a member of its committee on minorities.[4]

The Civic Party in this period was strongly centered around Drapeau's personality, and Savoidakis was known as one of the few party mavericks on council. In October 1985, he was quoted as saying, "Being a councillor in the Civic Party is a lonely place to be. Decisions are reached beyond our power. There are some of us, like myself, who feel we should have more input."[5] Savoidakis tried, without success, to convince Drapeau's administration to hold night court sessions for the convenience of working Montrealers.[6]

Savoidakis also sought to increase representation from Montreal's cultural communities on the city's police force, despite reluctance from within his own party.[7] In 1985, he proposed that a local complaints committee be established at every police station in the Montreal Urban Community to ensure a more transparent complaints review process.[8]

He welcomed a Quebec Superior Court ruling in 1985 that determined the province's Charter of the French Language could not prevent businesses from using English on signs and advertisements.[9]

Rumours circulated in the mid-1980s that the Civic Party could drop Savoidakis as a candidate. Savoidakis said that he was not concerned with this threat; describing himself as a "small-c conservative," he also said that he would not defect to the progressive Montreal Citizens' Movement (MCM), which was then in opposition.[10]

When Jean Drapeau announced that he would seek not re-election in 1986, Savoidakis supported Yvon Lamarre's unsuccessful bid to become the party's new mayoral candidate.[11]

The Gazette supported Savoidakis's bid for re-election in 1986, even though it gave a general endorsement to the MCM.[12] He was defeated by MCM candidate Pierre Goyer amid a landslide MCM victory across the city.[13]

On one occasion, the Montreal Gazette described Savoidakis as "one of the few high-profile politicians in the city who is respected by almost everyone, no matter what their political orientation."[14]

Later political career[]

Savoidakis was chosen as one of the Civic Party's vice-presidents in August 1988.[15] He resigned from the party executive in March 1989, however, saying that, he was "tired of the perpetual infighting" that was affecting the party.[16] He later joined the Montreal Municipal Party and ran for council under its banner in the 1990 election. In the 1994 election, he ran for the Montrealers Party.[17] He was defeated both times.

He died of prostate cancer in 1995.[18]

Electoral record[]

1994 Montreal municipal election results: Councillor, Parc-Extension division
1990 Montreal municipal election results: Councillor, Loyola
1986 Montreal municipal election results: Councillor, Jean-Talon
1982 Montreal municipal election results: Councillor, Jean-Talon
1978 Montreal municipal election results: Councillor, Jean-Talon
1976 Quebec general election: Laurier
Party Candidate Votes %
Liberal André Marchand 11,858 41.68
Parti Québécois John Kambites 9,583 33.69
Union Nationale Georges Savoidakis 4,962 17.44
Democratic Alliance Christos Syros 921 3.24
Ralliement créditiste Denise Chartrand Marion 678 2.38
Communist Madame Joseph Mallaroni 240 0.84
  coalition: NPDQ - RMS Pierre Bastien 206 0.72
Total valid votes 28,448 100.00
Rejected and declined votes 840
Turnout 29,288 82.79
Electors on the lists 35,377
Source: Official Results, Le Directeur général des élections du Québec.

References[]

  1. ^ Susan Semenak, "Greeks' dreams come true; Success made while keeping culture," Montreal Gazette, 22 January 1988, A1.
  2. ^ Helena Katz, "George Savoidakis, 57, was councillor, broker," Montreal Gazette, 8 October 1995, A3.
  3. ^ "Political Parties | Canadian Elections Database". canadianelectionsdatabase.ca. Retrieved 2018-10-01.
  4. ^ Ingrid Peritz, "Ethnic panel job no joke to Janiszewski," Montreal Gazette, 15 February 1986, A3.
  5. ^ Ingrid Peritz, "Drapeau's the boss, and no argument; Civic Party celebrates 25 years of power," Montreal Gazette, 19 October 1985, B1.
  6. ^ "Hold court at night: councillor," Montreal Gazette, 8 February 1985, A5; Helena Katz, "George Savoidakis, 57, was councillor, broker," Montreal Gazette, 8 October 1995, A3.
  7. ^ "The immigration challenge," Montreal Gazette, 10 January 1985, B2; Marian Scott, "Police promise blitz to attract minority recruits," Montreal Gazette, 22 October 1986, A3.
  8. ^ Ingrid Peritz, "80 per cent of complaints against police rejected in '84," Montreal Gazette, 16 March 1985, A3.
  9. ^ Daniel Drolet, Jennifer Robinson, and Peggy Curran, "Quebec will appeal sign-law defeat, Landry says," Montreal Gazette, 4 January 1985, A1.
  10. ^ Montreal Gazette, 14 November 1984, A3.
  11. ^ Ingrid Peritz, "The man who might be mayor; To understand Yvon Lamarre visit his fiefdom in southwest," Montreal Gazette, 3 May 1986, B6.
  12. ^ "Time for a change," Montreal Gazette, 6 November 1986, B2.
  13. ^ Susan Semenak, "Wave swamps Savoidakis," Montreal Gazette, 10 November 1986, A3.
  14. ^ Jack Todd, "Boring but vital," Montreal Gazette, 1 November 1990, A3.
  15. ^ "Execs replaced by Civic Party," Montreal Gazette, 18 August 1988, A3.
  16. ^ "Voyageur bus workers start march to Ottawa," Montreal Gazette, 30 March 1989, A3.
  17. ^ Ingrid Peritz, "Choquette plans `draconian' spending cuts," Montreal Gazette, 28 September 1994, A3.
  18. ^ Helena Katz, "George Savoidakis, 57, was councillor, broker," Montreal Gazette, 8 October 1995, A3.
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