Marianne de Lotbinière

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Marianne de Lotbinière
Anne Hidalgo, février 2014.jpg
37th Prime Minister of Ainin
Assumed office
17 June 2015
PresidentCao Nima
Preceded byJean de Finistère (acting)
Caroline Évaline
Secretary of State for Labour and Industrial Relations
In office
7 May 2011 – 1 April 2014
Prime MinisterClaude Arceneaux
Deputy for Doval's 1st district
Assumed office
2 July 2010
29th Premier of Linaque
In office
23 February 2005 – 16 May 2010
Preceded byAlexandir Raveatulu
Succeeded byClément Beaudoin
Linaque Minister of Labour
In office
13 August 1997 – 5 December 2001
PremierCharles Joguet
Member of the Linaque Assembly for Doval–Citadelle
In office
13 August 1993 – 16 May 2010
Personal details
Born (1963-04-25) 25 April 1963 (age 60)
Wéppy, Oelia
NationalityAininian
Political partySocial Democratic
SpouseHenri de Lotbinière
Alma materUniversity of Talon
ProfessionTrade union organiser

Marianne Jean Thériault de Lotbinière AOA MAN MCE (born 25 April 1961, née Marianne Jean Thériault) is an Aininian trade unionist, politician and the 37th and current Prime Minister of Ainin. A member of the Social Democratic Party, she has headed a grand coalition between the SDP and Citizens' Alliance since 17 June 2015 after winning a plurality of seats in the 2015 election. She is the first Aininian Prime Minister to be born overseas, having been born in Oelia.

With her father serving as Vice-President of the National Federation of Civil Servants (FNFP), Lotbinière was involved in trade union politics from a young age. After returning to Ainin, she lived in Marlane-la-Prairie, Montagnes and attended the prestigious Auxpuis Academy. She later studied industrial relations at the University of Talon and was elected in 1987 as secretary of the Doval section of the FNFP, where she was first acquainted with then-General Secretary Charles Joguet of the Linaque FNFP. Becoming Joguet's protégée, she was nominated and elected as a member of the Linaque Assembly for Doval in 1993, serving as Deputy Minister and then Minister of Labour in Joguet's government. After the SDP's defeat in 2001, she was elected as party leader by a popular leadership contest despite being opposed by the majority of the party's elected officials. In 2005, she defeated the one-term Alexandir Raveatulu Democratic government and led the SDP back to power.

During her premiership, Linaque implemented a landmark participatory management plan for labour relations and pushed for an expansion of vocational education. Her term was also marked by several controversies, including the hydroelectric development of the Linaque River, the creation of the Talon Outer Ring road system and the Presqu'vent Affair relating to corruption in the construction of the Electric Network's Presqu'vent Line. Less than a year after winning re-election in 2009 with a minority government, she resigned to run for the National Assembly in the 2010 election and was succeeded as premier and SDP leader by Clément Beaudoin. Under Prime Minister Claude Arceneaux, she was named Secretary of State for Labour and Industrial Relations in 2011 and served until the government's defeat in 2014.

Winning the SDP leadership on the fourth ballot, she became Leader of the Opposition and led efforts to withdraw confidence from Caroline Évaline's government during the West Aininian crisis, culminating in the 2015 snap election in which her party made modest gains to win a plurality. In subsequent negotiations, she entered a grand coalition with Maxime Bélanger's Citizens' Alliance to become Prime Minister. Her premiership, which began on 17 June 2015, has been marked by the ambitious Grand Project social program, greater integration with the Esquarian Community through a major reform to the Esquarian Common Market, and a controversial military intervention in Mazaristan.

Early life

Political career

Provincial politics

National politics

Premiership

Domestic policy

Grand Project

Immigration

National security

Foreign policy

Personal life

Honours

Electoral record

National

e • d  Aininian general election, 2015: Doval's 1st district
Party Candidate Votes % ∆%
Social Democratic Party Marianne de Lotbinière 44,935 41.25 Increase 5.68
Citizens' Alliance Colin Suchet 30,296 27.81 Increase 27.81
Communist Party Marc Boisselot 19,179 17.61 Decrease 6.00
Rally of the Democrats Fabien Blaise 7,825 7.18 Decrease 25.20
National Alliance Joël Astier 4,609 4.23 Increase 1.28
Green Party Joseph Chausson 1,053 0.97 Decrease 3.26
Esquarian Community Reform Grégoire Demers-Poitier 502 0.46 Decrease 0.62
M.D.R. Silvain Lecocq 195 0.18 Increase 0.18
Invalid/blank 335 0.31 N/A
Total 108,929 100 N/A
Social Democratic hold Majority Increase 13.44
e • d  Aininian general election, 2014: Doval's 1st district
Party Candidate Votes % ∆%
Social Democratic Party Marianne de Lotbinière 39,354 35.57 Decrease 4.94
Rally of the Democrats Xavier Rossignol 35,832 32.38 Increase 5.41
Communist Party Marc Boisselot 26,120 23.61 Decrease 0.59
Green Party Dominique Loupe 4,684 4.23 Decrease 1.71
National Alliance Joël Astier 3,269 2.95 Increase 1.47
Esquarian Community Reform Grégoire Demers-Poitier 1,199 1.08 Increase 0.37
Invalid/blank 186 0.17 N/A
Total 110,644 100 N/A
Social Democratic hold Majority Decrease 3.19
e • d  Aininian general election, 2010: Doval's 1st district
Party Candidate Votes % ∆%
Social Democratic Party Marianne de Lotbinière 47,318 40.51 Decrease 10.41
Rally of the Democrats Xavier Rossignol 31,504 26.97 Increase 3.64
Communist Party Coralie Vasseur 28,267 24.20 Increase 6.23
Green Party Anne-Marie Beaumont 6,936 5.94 Decrease 1.63
National Alliance Christine Martin 1,733 1.48 Increase 1.48
Esquarian Community Reform Grégoire Demers-Poitier 829 0.71 Increase 0.69
Invalid/blank 214 0.18 N/A
Total 116,801 100 N/A
Social Democratic hold Majority Decrease 13.54

Provincial

e • d  Linaque general election, 2009: Doval–Citadelle
Party Candidate Votes % ∆%
Social Democratic Party Marianne de Lotbinière 39,606 49.37 Decrease 13.12
Communist Party Luc Cartier 29,562 36.85 Increase 26.59
Rally of the Democrats Colin Suchet 7,210 8.99 Decrease 15.93
Green Party Maude Périer 3,522 4.39 Increase 2.06
Independent Grégoire Demers-Poitier 320 3.98 Increase 0.40
Invalid/blank 69 0.08 N/A
Total 80,220 100 N/A
Social Democratic hold Majority Decrease 12.52
e • d  Linaque general election, 2005: Doval–Citadelle
Party Candidate Votes % ∆%
Social Democratic Party Marianne de Lotbinière 56,439 62.49 Increase 7.49
Rally of the Democrats Colin Suchet 22,503 24.92 Increase 3.58
Communist Party Guy Beaufils 9,263 10.26 Decrease 10.40
Green Party Maude Périer 2,106 2.33 Decrease 0.57
Invalid/blank 109 0.10 N/A
Total 90,311 100 N/A
Social Democratic hold Majority Increase 37.57
e • d  Linaque general election, 2001: Doval–Citadelle
Party Candidate Votes % ∆%
Social Democratic Party Marianne de Lotbinière 47,920 55.00 Decrease 2.71
Rally of the Democrats Marine Dubost 18,592 21.34 Decrease 5.24
Communist Party Guy Beaufils 18,002 20.66 Increase 6.12
Green Party Benoit Auvray 2,527 2.90 Increase 2.90
Invalid/blank 90 0.10 N/A
Total 86,561 100 N/A
Social Democratic hold Majority Increase 33.66
e • d  Linaque general election, 1997: Doval–Citadelle
Party Candidate Votes % ∆%
Social Democratic Party Marianne de Lotbinière 51,370 57.71 Decrease 16.01
Rally of the Democrats Alexis Gérald 23,643 26.58 Increase 6.24
Communist Party Guy Beaufils 12,942 14.54 Increase 14.54
Liberal Party Stéphane Bourseiller 928 1.04 Decrease 5.98
Invalid/blank 143 0.16 N/A
Total 89,026 100 N/A
Social Democratic hold Majority Decrease 31.23
e • d  Linaque general election, 1993: Doval–Citadelle
Party Candidate Votes % ∆%
Social Democratic Party Marianne de Lotbinière 61,325 73.70 Increase 3.95
Rally of the Democrats Alexis Gérald 16,038 20.34 Increase 5.73
Liberal Party Lisette Dubost 5,848 7.02 Decrease 10.13
Invalid/blank 114 0.14 N/A
Total 83,211 100 N/A
Social Democratic hold Majority Increase 53.36