Michèle Audette facts for kids
Quick facts for kids
Michèle Audette
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Audette in 2021
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Canadian Senator from De Salaberry |
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Assumed office July 29, 2021 |
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Nominated by | Justin Trudeau |
Appointed by | Mary Simon |
Government Liaison in the Senate | |
Assumed office August 9, 2023 |
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Leader | Marc Gold |
Preceded by | Patti LaBoucane-Benson |
Personal details | |
Born |
Michèle Taïna Audette
July 20, 1971 Wabush, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada |
Political party | Non-affiliated (2021; since 2023) |
Other political affiliations |
Independent Senators Group (2021-2022) Progressive Senate Group (2022-2023) |
Occupation |
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Known for | President of the Native Women's Association of Canada |
Michèle Taïna Audette (born July 20, 1971) is a Canadian politician and activist. She served as president of Femmes autochtones du Québec (Quebec Native Women) from 1998 to 2004 and again from 2010 to 2012. She was also the president of Native Women's Association of Canada from 2012 to 2014. From 2004 through 2008, she served as Associate Deputy Minister at the Ministry of Relations with Citizens and Immigration of the Quebec government, where she was in charge of the Secretariat for Women.
In 2017, she was appointed as one of the five commissioners of the government's national inquiry into missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls. In 2021, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau nominated her to the Canadian Senate, as a Senator for Quebec.
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Life
In 1971, Audette's mother was returning to Schefferville from Sept-Îles by train when she unexpectedly went into labour. The train stopped and her mother was airlifted by helicopter to the nearest hospital, in Wabush, Labrador, where Audette was born. She grew up in Schefferville, Maliotenam, and Montreal. Audette is from the Innu community of Uashat mak Mani-Utenam in Quebec. Her mother, Evelyne St-Onge, is Innu and her father, Gilles Audette, is French-Canadian from Montreal. The family was denied a house on her mother's reserve under federal law because her mother married a non-Native man. St-Onge co-founded the Quebec Native Women Association in 1974, which fought against the clause in the federal Indian Act that stated that a Native woman who marries a non-Native man did not have the right to live in her reserve community. Native men who marry non-Native women do not suffer such restrictions.
As Audette grew up, she too became an activist in Indigenous affairs. She served as president of Femmes autochtones du Québec (FAQ) from 1998 to 2004, and from 2010 to 2012, then led the Native Women's Association of Canada (NWAC) from 2012 to 2014, the youngest women to be elected. She also acted in one of the short film vignettes on Canadian history known as Heritage Minutes as a member of an Attikamek family teaching early French settlers how to make maple syrup.
Audette was appointed as Associate Deputy Minister at the Ministry of Relations with Citizens and Immigration Quebec government, in charge of the Secretariat for Women, serving from 2004 through 2008. She has conducted public relations for and acted as coordinator of many festivals. She has also worked as a researcher for Aboriginal Nations, a news magazine broadcast on Télé-Québec.
In 2017, Audette was appointed as one of five commissioners to the national inquiry: Missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls to raise awareness and gain government action on the issue of missing and murdered Indigenous women in Canada. The inquiry, which had an estimated cost of $53.8 million, examined the factors and institutions that contribute to a high rate of violence against Indigenous women and girls. Their final report, delivered to the federal government in 2019, included 231 calls for justice.
In May 2021 she appeared on Ici Radio-Canada's literary debate show Le Combat des livres, advocating for Michel Jean's novel Kukum. The novel won the competition.
Politics
Some years after her first government service, Audette decided to enter electoral politics. In the 2015 Canadian federal election, she ran as the Liberal candidate for the Quebec riding of Terrebonne and was defeated to Bloc Québécois candidate Michel Boudrias.
In July 2021, she was appointed a senator for Quebec. Initially non-affiliated, she joined the Independent Senators Group on September 27, 2021. On June 27, 2022, she joined the Progressive Senate Group.
On August 9, 2023, she was appointed Government Liaison by Representative of the Government in the Senate Marc Gold. The role entails acting as a whip to secure votes for government legislation in the Senate. She subsequently left the Progressive Senate Group and became once again non-affiliated.
Personal life
Audette, a mother of five, lives in both Wendake near Quebec City and the Innu reserve of Maliotenam near Sept-Îles, Quebec, with her domestic partner Serge Ashini Goupil. She is a consultant with the indigenous rights group Nation Innue.
Awards
- Woman of Distinction Award in the Inspiration category from the Women’s Y Foundation of Montréal (2018)
- Woman of the Year in by the Montreal Council of Women (2014)
- Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal (2012)
Electoral record
Canadian federal election, 2015: Terrebonne | ||||||||
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Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | Expenditures | |||
Bloc Québécois | Michel Boudrias | 19,238 | 33.01 | +2.23 | $17,316.45 | |||
Liberal | Michèle Audette | 16,316 | 27.99 | +21.07 | $28,471.60 | |||
New Democratic | Charmaine Borg | 14,928 | 25.61 | -25.93 | $66,226.31 | |||
Conservative | Michel Surprenant | 6,615 | 11.35 | +3.28 | $4,734.68 | |||
Green | Susan Moen | 1,016 | 1.74 | -0.95 | – | |||
Strength in Democracy | Louis Clément Sénat | 171 | 0.29 | – | $1,208.41 | |||
Total valid votes/expense limit | 58,284 | 97.89 | $222,232.39 | |||||
Total rejected ballots | 1,256 | 2.11 | – | |||||
Turnout | 59,540 | 70.46 | – | |||||
Eligible voters | 84,502 | |||||||
Bloc Québécois gain from New Democratic | Swing | +14.08 | ||||||
Source: Elections Canada |
See also
- Missing and murdered Indigenous women