Mayor Valérie Plante

CSL Mayor blames Plante for SPVM inaction on anti-Israel mobs

By Joel Goldenberg
The Suburban

Côte St. Luc Mayor Mitchell Brownstein recorded a video message last week in the aftermath of numerous verbally and physically violent anti-Israel protests, calling on Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante to support the police in restoring order.

The SPVM has been criticized for the fact the McGill encampment remained up for months, and for not intervening when mobs rampaged at Concordia University during an anti-Israel student strike.

“We are at an inflection point in the history of Montreal,” he said. “The world is watching the streets of Montreal and is horrified by what they see. Is violence and intimidation the new normal, or can Mayor Valérie Plante turn this around and give the police her full support so that they restore order?”

The situation of antisemitism in Montreal has become so bad, writes professor Gad Saad in a recent New York Post opinion article, that he took an unpaid leave from Concordia University to teach at Northwood in Michigan. His article, “How Montreal became the antisemitism capital of North America,” shone a spotlight for the world on what is taking place in the city.

In his video, which includes footage of verbally and physically violent incidents, Brownstein said the protests are a test for the police.

“When the Jacques-Cartier Bridge was shut down, the SQ came in to clear the bridge. When Via Rail trains were delayed by pro-Palestinian protesters, the Longueuil police used their emergency intervention unit to clear the tracks. In Montreal, the tone at the top is wrong! Mayor Plante must start sending a message to change the policing strategy of enforcement.”

Brownstein said the police strategy is to avoid conflict “in the face of demonstrations.This police strategy is a choice — it has failed and it must change. The strategy tolerates certain illegal behaviours such as blocking the street or graffiti on cars and buildings, or occupying university areas. It even tolerates protesters who violate a court injunction requiring them to keep a distance away from Jewish institutions. The Montreal police are allowing for the normalization of antisemitism.” n

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Mayor Plante will not seek re-election

By Dan Laxer and Chelsey St-Pierre
The Suburban

Reaction from Montrealers was mixed, but perhaps with more weight on the celebratory side, when news broke last week that Mayor Valérie Plante would not seek reelection. “Despite all the love that I have for my work and for our city,” Plante said at a news conference announcing her decision, “I won’t be asking Montrealers for a third term as mayor.”

Plante is in the final stretch of her second of two terms, first taking office in 2017. She had previously said that she would seek a third term. So what changed her mind?

“Recently I came to realize that I couldn’t commit to another four years and guarantee Montrealers the same level of energy I’ve always given.” Last December Plante suddenly fell ill during a news conference, nearly passing out, an incident she chalked up to stress and exhaustion. But she said, last week, “I’m fine. I’m all good, and I will fully assume my duties as mayor until the end of my mandate.”

Earlier this year Plante received criticism for blocking comments on her X (formerly Twitter) account, as well as on the Projet Montréal account. She defended the decision by calling out the abuse she had been subjected to. “Some may think there’s a fundamental right to call a person an ‘idiot’ or a ‘bitch’,” she posted, “and to normalize violence online. I don’t think so.”

Her platform included improvements to public transit, including the creation of a “Pink Line” in the Métro system linking Montreal-North with Lachine. That never came to fruition. Those who say they’re happy to see her go rail against the city’s bicycle paths and construction woes amid near-constant construction, and profligate spending related to environmentalism. Those are ideals she says she carried into office, and that she remains committed to. She also said she will continue to work “for the adoption of one of the major legacies of my administration, the Montreal Urban Planning and Mobility Plan.”

Official Opposition leader Aref Salem wished the mayor well, saying “I would like to thank Valérie Plante for her commitment to the metropolis since her election, despite our many disagreements on construction site management, homelessness, public safety and the state of citizen services.” As for Ensemble Montréal, Salem said “on the eve of the November 2025 municipal elections, Ensemble Montréal is mobilized and ready to overcome the many challenges facing the metropolis.”

Hampstead Mayor Jeremy Levi, a longtime critic of Plante including on her response to anti-Israel protests that took place after Oct. 7, humorously reacted by sending The Suburban a digitally created video of Plante on a large screen announcing her decision and a large audience cheering wildly.

Côte St. Luc Mayor Mitchell Brownstein recently said at a CSL council meeting during a discussion on the long-awaited Cavendish extension that Montreal needs a new Mayor. He told The Suburban, “I wish Mayor Plante good health and happiness in her future endeavours. I hope that her successor will move the Cavendish extension forward and will ensure that our city is a safer place for all Montrealers setting a tone of respect and zero tolerance for hate speech.”

DDO Mayor Alex Bottausci said, “Plante being there for as long as she has may have been good for specific boroughs. But I don’t see anything she has done that has been beneficial to anyone in the West Island or Montreal except people on bicycles. I don’t see any economic movement in Montreal.”

Beaconsfield’s Mayor Georges Bourelle told The Suburban, ”I am not very happy with how the agglomeration operates. It was not her that created the agglomeration. However we have had many discussions on the agglomeration to change regulations and share of expenses that went nowhere. During her tenure, we have not seen very positive things with demerged municipalities. She did not create the situation with demerged cities but she certainly did nothing to improve it.” n

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Jewish community demands Plante act against antisemitism

By Joel Goldenberg
The Suburban

The Montreal Jewish community is calling on Montreal Mayor Valérie Plante to react more strongly to antisemitism and recent pro-Hamas demonstrations outside Jewish institutions, including the March 4 blockade outside Federation CJA and the March 5 protest of a real estate event at the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue.

As well, the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs (CIJA) revealed that a poster at the Montreal Holocaust Museum was vandalized March 25 with stickers saying “Free Palestine” and “Boycott Genocide Israel.”

“Anti-Israel protesters like to pretend they’re not antisemitic,” CIJA posted on X. “So why did they vandalize a poster at the Montreal Holocaust Museum? These demonstrations of hate must stop.”

CIJA and Federation CJA also revealed that lawyers for Federation served Plante with copies of the recently granted and extended injunction prohibiting pro-Hamas protests from within 50 metres of the Federation CJA building, the Spanish and Portuguese Synagogue, the Cummings Centre, the Sylvan Adams YM-YWHA, Herzliah High School and United Talmud Torah of Montreal.

“Following months of antisemitic protest allowed to promulgate on the streets of Montreal, and as protesters continue to test limits, the Mayor must step up and must impose tougher measures to protect community centres, schools and places of worship,” the two organizations stated. “We expect the Mayor to make sure law enforcement upholds the court’s order and do everything within their powers to ensure that the terms are adhered to.”

Federation CJA and CIJA added that they have conveyed their messages through direct communications and public statements to Montreal officials, including Plante, regarding “the grave safety concerns of the Jewish community and the urgent need for concrete measures to deal with the escalating nature of the public protests and potential violence targeting the Jewish community, as well as the dramatic rise in antisemitism.

“A clear message must be sent to those who seek to promote hate in our streets that this will not be tolerated, and this starts by making sure the injunction is being respected.”

Federation CJA CEO Yair Szlak also says Plante never said anything about the March 4 blockade of the Federation CJA building, but Plante told reporters she did respond by retweeting a condemnation from CDN-NDG Mayor Gracia Kasoki Katahwa.

Plante and other Montreal officials have also responded to critics that people should feel safe in Montreal, and that the right to protest is protected by the Canadian and Quebec Charters. n

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Plante confronted at Agglo on failure to deal with antisemitism

By Joel Goldenberg
The Suburban

After agglomeration meetings in December and January in which 16 anti-Israel questioners were allowed to attack Hampstead Mayor Jeremy Levi for his support of Israel in its conflict with Hamas since its Oct. 7 terrorist attack, Montrealers confronted Mayor Valérie Plante at the Agglo meeting on the city’s allowance of hateful anti-Israel demonstrations. Attorney Neil Oberman, senior partner at Spiegel Sohmer, recently served Plante with a formal demand letter by bailiff that the City of Montreal immediately intervene and enforce all laws, by-laws and regulations governing unlawful assemblies.

Before the question period began, agglomeration council meeting chair Nancy Blanchet explained that a meeting took place between the City of Montreal and the Association of Suburban Municipalities following the January meeting regarding the rules of question period. At the December and January meetings, Blanchet allowed more than the three permitted questions on a specific subject, a subject of two complaints to the Quebec Municipal Commission by B’nai Brith Canada. At the February meeting, she employed the three-question limit. As it turned out, there was only one anti-Israel question.

(Hampstead Mayor Jeremy Levi posted on X that “the initial minutes from the January agglo meeting failed to mention the ASM’s preference for addressing only agglo-related questions. I contested this and successfully prompted a revision of the minutes. Additionally, I’m pleased to report that Valérie Plante has now implemented the longstanding three-question limit on similar queries.”)

This time, the three allowed questions regarded what is seen as lack of action by Montreal and Plante against antisemitism, particularly at anti-Israel demonstration that include placards with the genocidal slogan “from the river to the sea.” Some questioners wore clothing with the message “Bring Them Home,” referring to hostages held by Hamas since Oct. 7.

Juran Tel Aziza, speaking in English, asked Plante if she asked Montreal police to report to her “…the hateful words that incite violence and the total destruction of the entire Jewish people…That’s their solution, from the river to the sea. You, Madame Plante and the police, let them go week after week until words turn into action! Look at what’s happening in London, Toronto, Paris, Belgium and now Montreal! How come there haven’t been any arrests for the attacks on schools, institutions and incitement to hatred that is heard on our streets, week after week?!”

Plante declined to answer in English, instead doing so in French. She said it is important for the SPVM to provide security “and we’re working very hard to do that.” She also said demonstrations are allowed under the Canadian and Quebec Charter, and that the SPVM is on hand to maintain the peace.

Georgette Bensimon brought up the letter sent by leaders from numerous ethnic communities demanding the resignation of Bochra Manaï, the city’s Anti-Racism Commissioner who attended anti-Israel rallies where antisemitic chants were heard.

François Limoges, the new Projét Montréal majority leader replacing Alex Norris, repeated the message Plante said last November, when the controversy first arose, that Manaï will meet with all of the affected communities, and that there is “clearly a bond of trust to be strengthened.” Bensimon said, to her knowledge, Manaï has not yet met with the Jewish community, “at all.

“She should be neutral and open to all communities.”

Later, Côte St. Luc resident Sharon Freedman told Plante that demonstrations must be peaceful, respectful and obey the law, but that the ones that have taken place since Oct. 7 “spew out horrible, hateful language and they usually incite violence. Mayor Plante, our community has asked you often to protect our Jewish community against the violence, the gunshots [at Jewish schools], but you have not done much about that. What are you prepared to do to stop those kinds of demonstrations?”

Instead of Plante, Freedman received a response, this time in English, from Alain Vaillancourt, the Montreal executive committee member in charge of public security. He claimed that the anti-Israel demonstrations have been peaceful.”We understand it’s been difficult, we understand that people need to express themselves on both sides, and they choose to do so through demonstrations in different forms.” Vaillancourt repeated Plante’s point that the Canadian and Quebec Charters allow demonstrations.

“They need to do it peacefully and in the correct way. I frequently speak with police chief Fady Dagher about everything that’s going on, and the demonstrations have been relatively peaceful, have been well balanced as far as protection and safety. When there’s a criminal or hate incident, the police are there to intervene. We ask people, if you’re witness or are subjected to a [crime or hate], call 911. We’ve increased the resources for people to investigate the situations, and the police are serious about it. We’re serious about it. It’s zero tolerance….Both communities are [demonstrating] in the right way.”

Freedman, who wore clothing expressing her support for Mayor Levi, directly asked Plante “and nobody else” why she “continues to remains silent when questions of hatred, totally inappropriate for this wonderful chamber, are hurled at Mayor Levi. When are you going to take a stand, Mayor Plante?!”

Plante refused to answer. n

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CDN/NDG Mayor appointed to Montreal executive committee

By Joel Ceausu

Côte des Neiges—Notre Dame de Grâce Borough Mayor Gracia Kasoki Katahwa says her latest position at the city is a boon for the borough. “I want to tell you, the people of CDN-NDG, my appointment to the executive committee is excellent news for the borough” Katahwa told council this month. “Since I took office, I’ve always told you that you’re the first winners from good co-operation between the city centre and our borough. My appointment is a continuation of this vision,” she said, thanking Mayor Valérie Plante and executive committee chair and Plateau Mont-Royal Mayor Luc Rabouin for their trust.

  • Cited in the announcement of her inclusion to the city’s 19-member executive committee as a “rising figure” in the Plante administration, the new member responsible for systemic racism and discrimination, human resources and reconciliation with Indigenous peoples, Katawha began the February meeting by noting “January 7 (sic)was Holocaust Remembrance Day, a dark chapter in our global history. On January 29,” she continued, “we commemorated another dark moment that marked our society, the attack on Quebec City’s Grand Mosque, which occurred seven years ago. There is also Black History Month which began at the beginning of February.”

By highlighting “these three moments in history, it is crucial to recognize and fight one of the roots of the deepest and most destructive of tragedies experienced by Jewish, Muslim, and Black communities and so many others,” she said. “That is, toxic ideology that claims the existence of a hierarchy between humans and that continues to threaten our communities. This manifests itself in the form of hate speech, acts of violence and systemic structures of inequality.”

Katahwa, who also sits on the STM board of directors, joins her Projet Montréal borough colleagues, Côte des Neiges councillor Magda Popeanu (Organizational performance, Citizen Participation and Democracy) and Loyola councillor Despina Sourias (Housing, Cleanliness and Protection of Rental Housing) on the executive committee.

  • Editors Note: International Holocaust Remembrance Day is commemorated on January 27.

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Community leaders “disgusted” with Plante stance on antisemitism

By Joel Goldenberg

A group of leaders from various communities wrote an open letter this week demanding Mayor Valérie Plante do more to counter antisemitism in Montreal.

The letter was signed by the Honourable Marlene Jennings, Ramon Vincente of Filipino Family Services, former Snowdon councillor Marvin Rotrand; Juleen Barrington, president of the Antigua and Barbuda Association; Elie Israel, Commissioner Ward 1 on the English Montreal School Board; Norman Simon, President, Canadians for Coexistence; Norberto Mandin, Founder, CPRM Community Radio; Luzviminda Mazzone, President, the Federation of Filipino Canadian Associations of Quebec; Yvonne Sam, Chair of the Rights & Freedom Committee of the Black Community Resource Centre; Dr. David Zuroff, Emeritus Professor of Psychology at McGill University; Gemma Raeburn Baynes, President, Playmas Caribbean Cultural Association; Andrew Caddell of the Task Force on Linguistic Policy and Cynthia Waite, president of Barbados House.

“We are united in our condemnation of the horrific spate of antisemitism that Montreal has witnessed since the Oct. 7 attack by the Hamas terrorists on Israel,” the signatories wrote. “We were shocked when hateful anti-Israel demonstrators appeared at the Agglomeration Council meeting of December 21, 2023 to attack the Town of Hampstead for having adopted a bylaw fining those caught tearing down posters which call for the immediate and unconditional release of the hostages held by terrorists.”

The letter-writers added that they were disgusted to learn “that these demonstrators were urged at the Dec. 18 Montreal Council meeting by Montreal Mayor Valerie Plante and Alexander Norris, her party leader, to come to the Agglomeration Council to directly question the Mayor of Hampstead,” Jeremy Levi.

“That however fits a pattern. Mayor Plante has vigorously defended Bochra Manaï, the city’s Anti-Racism Commissioner, who unapologetically attended anti-Israel rallies where antisemitic chants were heard and at which a local Imam made remarks that were condemned by both Prime Minister Trudeau and Premier Legault as antisemitic and inciting hate against Jews.”

The signatories applauded the Jewish Community Council and the Centre for Israel and Jewish Affairs for demanding Manaï’s firing.

“While no city in North America has witnessed as many and as violent incidents targeting Jews over the last months as Montreal has, Mayor Plante has yet to give a full-throated and clear denunciation of antisemitism and call for Hamas to give up its arms and release the hostages. It is time for action.”

The letter-writers are asking Montrealers to support their demands that Manaï be immediately fired, as well as “a clear statement from Mayor Plante denouncing Hamas as a terrorist group and a call for the immediate unconditional release of the hostages; and the adoption by city council of the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance definition of antisemitism.”

The signatories concluded that they are not mollified by Alexander Norris’s recent loss of his role as Projét Montréal majority leader, which followed his defence of 16 anti-Israel questions, nothing to do with agglomeration affairs, at the December and January agglomeration meetings as freedom of speech.

“Unlike many of Canada’s big city Mayors, Mayor Plante has not vigorously condemned antisemitism. It is time she did. Am Israel Chai.” n

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