by The Canadian Press - Castanet Nov 5, 2012 / 7:12 pm
Montreal's mayor has resigned in the midst of a corruption scandal,
becoming the highest-profile political casualty of the controversies
currently rocking Quebec. A defensive Gerald Tremblay said he had done nothing wrong but was
stepping aside for the greater good of a city that has been politically
paralyzed. He made the announcement late Monday at a city hall where large
construction contracts have been frozen; current municipal employees
have been suspended; past employees face criminal charges; and an
unpopular budget has had to be abandoned. Now the mayor's gone. "Under these circumstances, I cannot help any more," Tremblay said in a
solemn speech. "The success of our city is much more important than my
personal interest." The 70-year-old mayor held onto office just long enough to delay an
election to replace him, which would have been triggered had he resigned
only a few days earlier. Tremblay had avoided the public eye last week, taking two days off
work. Because he has quit after Nov. 3, less than a year until the next
scheduled election, provincial law says he can now be replaced with an
interim mayor chosen by the city council that his scandal-plagued party
controls. Tremblay insisted he was unaware of corruption in his administration
and only learned about it after the fact, saying Monday that he felt
betrayed by the people who had abused his trust.
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