Note. «Gentrification and Reform Politics in Montréal, 1982» David Ley et Caroline Mills

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Note «Gentrification and Reform Politics in Montréal, 1982» David Ley et Caroline Mills Cahiers de géographie du Québec, vol. 30, n 81, 1986, p. 419-427. Pour citer cette note, utiliser l'information suivante : URI: http://id.erudit.org/iderudit/021816ar DOI: 10.7202/021816ar Note : les règles d'écriture des références bibliographiques peuvent varier selon les différents domaines du savoir. Ce document est protégé par la loi sur le droit d'auteur. L'utilisation des services d'érudit (y compris la reproduction) est assujettie à sa politique d'utilisation que vous pouvez consulter à l'uri https://apropos.erudit.org/fr/usagers/politique-dutilisation/ Érudit est un consortium interuniversitaire sans but lucratif composé de l'université de Montréal, l'université Laval et l'université du Québec à Montréal. Il a pour mission la promotion et la valorisation de la recherche. Érudit offre des services d'édition numérique de documents scientifiques depuis 1998. Pour communiquer avec les responsables d'érudit : info@erudit.org Document téléchargé le 10 février 2017 07:36

CAHIERS DE GÉOGRAPHIE DU QUÉBEC Vol. 30, no 81, décembre 1986, 419-427 NOTES GENTRIFICATION AND REFORM POLITICS IN MONTRÉAL, 1982 by David LEY and Caroline MILLS Department of Geography University of British Columbia, Vancouver, B.C. V6T 1W5 In a récent issue of this journal, Beauregard (1984) presented a wide-ranging cartographie analysis and discussion of several dimensions of the 1982 civic élection in Montréal. His paper included an examination of the démocratie adequacy of the électoral map, the geography of campaign strategy, and, third, an overview of électoral support for each of the three parties. This short paper is concerned with the third thème, and offers an interprétation of the spatial distribution of the vote for the two opposition parties, the centrist Municipal Action Group (MAG), and more particularly, the leftist Montréal Citizens Movement (MCM). The analysis draws upon both local data and a broader theoretical review of urban reform movements active in Canadian and other cities since 1968, and of a new middle class which is frequently their sponsor. REFORM POLITICS AND THE NEW MIDDLE CLASS In seeking to explain Montréal's électoral geography in 1982, Beauregard noted some success for MAG in ethnie districts, while support for MCM was concentrated in certain poor francophone districts, notably Plateau-Mont-Royal, but also in linguistically mixed middle class areas in the west of the city. No consistent associations seem to occur between support for those opposition parties and four variables introduced in the paper : mother tongue, âge structure, degree of owner occupancy, and household size. We shall suggest hère that a common structure may well underlie électoral behaviour in thèse apparently diverse districts. The threefold party grouping in Montréal is reminiscent of similar political configurations in Toronto and Vancouver over much of the past 15 years. In Toronto the reform caucus eventually assumed the formai status of a municipal New Démocratie Party with a second group of centrist aldermen ; in the 1985 municipal élection each group returned six candidates to provide the potential for a bare reform majority on council. In Vancouver a similar municipal reaction against conventional conservative politics emerged in 1968, and various permutations of centre (libéral) and social démocratie aldermen hâve held a majority on council since 1972. Indeed this tripartite

420 CAHIERS DE GÉOGRAPHIE DU QUÉBEC, Vol. 30, no 81, décembre 1986 grouping is gênerai enough that Higgins (1981) describes municipal politics in many Canadian cities as including "the old guard, the progressives and the soft middle", a pattern which fits closely the positions of Jean Drapeau's Civic party, the MCM, and MAG in Montréal in 1982. MAG represented the municipal face of the Fédéral Libéral party and MCM splinter groups ; the MCM itself was a sometimes uneasy coalition of reform and leftist groups including NDP supporters (Melamed, 1983; Raboy, 1982). There are two récurrent features which characterize the reform parties in thèse cities. First, there is much greater gender equality among candidates than was true of the male-dominated conservatives, and, second, there has been a notable émergence of professionals in their thirties and forties in the reform parties, in contrast to an aging génération of small businessmen in the "old guard". Half of the libéral and social démocratie group elected in Toronto in 1985 were women, and the councillors disproportionately claimed a professional occupation. The same is true in Vancouver where new aldermen since 1968 hâve been dominantly professionals and hâve included significant numbers of women; over a quarter of members of the Libéral Reform party in the 1970s came from just four professions, while half of their eight aldermen in the 1972 council were university professors (Ley, 1980). Similar profiles émerge in Montréal where the MCM elected the first women councillors to City Hall in 1974 (Melamed, 1983) and in 1982 almost a quarter of MAG aldermanic candidates were also women ; a listing of the occupations of the 57 aldermanic candidates in 1982 showed that more than a half of those running for MCM were professionals, while none were businessmen (Beauregard, 1984). The profile of the young urban professional, both men and women, evokes a broader literature concerning the appearance of a new middle class in western societies, coinciding with the restructuring of the economy toward service employment, and the rapid growth of an educated élite of managerial and professional jobs in the public and private sectors. But to what extent is this new class an attitudinal as well as a statistical unit? Daniel Bell (1980) finds the notion of the new class to be a "muddled concept". The criss-crossing cleavages of economy, politics, and culture do not converge toward a unitary class définition, but instead define a plurality of interests. In contrast, Gouldner (1979) while recognizing the potential fragmentation and political ambivalence of the new class, nonetheless cautiously identifies its bases for unity, and its status as socially and politically progressive. Partitioning the new class certainly makes it simpler to trace the politically progressive éléments. Brint (1984) has analysed the libéral tendencies of professionals, while Martin (1981) has observed the diffusion of certain libéral social values of the 1960s counter culture into réceptive segments of the middle class, primarily a cultural new class focussed in the arts and such "soft" professions as teaching, the média, welfare services and health care, largely, that is, in public sector employment. Certainly this grouping has been conspicuous in such critical social movements as human rights, the environmental movement, nuclear disarmament, and cultural nationalism in the period since 1965. There is, moreover, a social geography to the cultural new class. Over the past twenty years it has been concentrating in certain inner districts of large cities, and is often the first wave of a cycle of gentrification in thèse neighbourhoods, attracted by social and cultural diversity, affordable housing, héritage architecture and environmental amenity, proximity to the place of work, cultural, educational, and other public institutions, and the adult lifestyle of centre city living for households which are small (and often childless) and may well consist of both maie and female wage earners (Ley, 1985). A number of studies hâve conveyed the impression that inner city gentrifiers are political libérais or radicals critical of a conservative status quo. In the United

GENTRIFICATION AND REFORM POLITICS IN MONTRÉAL, 1982 421 States gentrifying neighbourhoods such as Society Hill or Fairmount in Philadelphia, the Mission district in San Francisco (Castells, 1983), and inner city precincts of young urban professionals in New Orléans and Atlanta (O'Loughlin, 1980) are more likely to support démocratie, libéral, or minority candidates. In London, middle class neweomers hâve invigorated and sometimes transformed local Labour party politics in inner city boroughs such as Islington. A similar process has been observed in inner areas of Sydney and Melbourne, where the same group has penetrated leadership positions in the Australian Labor party (Mullins, 1982). In Canada, the period since 1968 has seen the émergence of reform movements and candidates in most of the largest cities. It also coïncides with middle class resettlement in the inner city; an index of social status change indicates that more than four times as much middle class movement occurred into inner city areas of the 22 largest metropolitan areas in 1971-81 as during the 1961-71 décade (Ley, 1985). Reform politicians are often professionals who hâve emerged following an apprenticeship in neighbourhood activism in the inner city ; John Sewell in Toronto and Michael Harcourt in Vancouver are two examples, amongst others. A range of social and environmental movements hâve also corne to prominence in gentrifying inner city areas. Vancouver's Kitsilano neighbourhood has been the source both of Greenpeace and Canada's first Green party, while in Toronto, Holdsworth (1983) has matched maps of récent héritage désignation, indicative of gentrification, with électoral support for reform politicians. To what extent is the residential geography of the new middle class a principle in organizing the électoral geography of the urban reform movement in Montréal? The profile of a typical supporter suggested by an MCM councillor is informative : "well-educated, 25-45 years old, a professional, probably in the public sector, but not necessarily career-oriented... has other goals instead" (Personal communication, June 1984). This supporter, the councillor emphasised, could equally be maie or female, anglophone or francophone. A NOTE ON METHODOLOGY There is more than one way of examining the relationship between the new middle class and reform politics but the method of simple statistical analysis employed hère requires a number of operational définitions to cover gentrification and reform candidates. The easier of the two is a définition of reform politics. Two measures were employed: for each of Montréal's 57 électoral districts in 1982 (see Beauregard, 1984, figure 1) the percentage vote was computed for, first, MCM plus MAG candidates for council and, second, MCM candidates alone. Thèse were labelled REFORM 1 (MCM plus MAG) and REFORM 2 (MCM only). A more elaborate procédure was employed to measure gentrification. Neighbourhood social change may be assessed either from adjustments in the local housing market or from shifts in the socio-economic profile of households. Both indicators hâve been employed in the literature, but housing indicators such as price changes or turnover rates can offer ambiguity in interprétation, and présent severe problems of data availability in other than small areas. Consequently a more common strategy, and the one employed hère, is to use census-based household data. A social status index was computed for each of the 297 census tracts in the city of Montréal in 1971 and 1981 ; adjustments were made for variations in tract boundaries over the décade. The différence between the social status score for a tract in 1971 and its level in 1981 was taken as a measure of the extent of gentrification which had occurred in that tract over

422 CAHIERS DE GÉOGRAPHIE DU QUÉBEC, Vol. 30, no 81, décembre 1986 the décade. Thus gentrification is defined as an upward change of social status in a census tract between 1971 and 1981. To assess social status itself, both ecological methods like social area analysis or factorial ecology, and social prestige scales typically employ some linear combination of occupational status, income status, and/or educational status. On theoretical grounds, occupational and educational variables were selected and combined. Specifically, a social status score for each census tract is defined as the mean value of the percentage of the work force employed in the quaternary sector (professional, managerial, technical and administrative jobs), plus the percentage of the population with university éducation. The index performed well when tested for validity against several other variables measuring social status, such as rent and income. The final task was to condense the 297 tracts to the 57 political districts. In a few instances a poor fit necessitated the grouping of the districts themselves to make them compatible with the tracts. As a resuit the analysis made use of 54 spatial units for which there was data for both the reform votes (REFORM 1, REFORM 2) and the three social status indices, SS71, SS81 and SS81-SS71 (a gentrification index). GENTRIFICATION AND REFORM POLITICS: SOME INTERRELATIONSHIPS Corrélation analysis between the reform votes and the social status indices shows an informative pattern of interrelationships (table 1). Turning first to the combined vote for both MCM and MAG (REFORM 1), we see that électoral support is closely associated with the social status of political districts, with higher status districts consistently showing higher levels of endorsement. This support is highest (over 70 percent) around the linguistically mixed districts of Notre-Dame-de-Grâce and Côtedes-Neiges, and reaches over 60 percent in most of the remaining middie class areas west of downtown, and a clutch of districts around the downtown itself. By and large thèse areas were already of higher status in 1971 (r = 0,64 REFORM 1 vs SS71), though they continued to increase in status through the 1970s (r = 0,56 REFORM 1 vs gentrification index), so that by 1981 the relationship had strengthened (r = 0,71 REFORM 1 vs SS81). In part this pattern is accountable by the normal tendency for gentrification to proceed in consécutive waves outwards from established high status Table 1 Corrélations of the Reform Vote against Social Status Indices, Montréal, 1982 (n = 54) SS71 SS81 SS81-SS71 REFORM 1 REFORM2 0,64 0,28 0,71 0,48 0,56 0,68 where, REFORM 1 = 1982 MAG + MCM vote REFORM 1 =1982 MCM vote SS71 = 1971 social status index SS81 = 1981 social status index SS81-SS71 = index of gentrification

GENTRIFICATION AND REFORM POLITICS IN MONTRÉAL, 1982 423 cores. In Canadian cities more generally, the best predictor of gentrifying tracts in the 1970s was the degree of proximity to 1971 élite areas ; for the 216 tracts in Montréal's inner city the corrélation was as high as -0,59 (Ley, 1985). The infill and expansion of thèse élite districts (part of the process we call gentrification) has been accompanied by a similar diffusion of votes for reform candidates. It is worth stressing the counterintuitive nature of this relationship ; as social status increases, so does the probability that electors will endorse a reform candidate with libéral or social démocratie policies. The inverse of this finding is that support for Jean Drapeau's right wing Civic party is highest in poorer areas. It exceeded 60 percent in several districts in the francophone east end of Montréal, and even higher levels in Saint-Henri (74 percent) and two other adjacent French speaking, working class areas in the south-west of the city. Some interesting variations are introduced by examining the correlates of REFORM 2, the vote for the social démocratie policies of the MCM (table 1). The relationship against the 1971 social status of districts weakens appreciably (r = 0,28), indicating that while remaining positive, support for MCM candidates is less closely tied to the pre-existing map of social status. However, the corrélation strengthens against 1981 social status scores (r = 0,48), anticipating a quite robust association between MCM support and the gentrification index (r = 0,68). A clear relationship exists, then, between those districts which rose appreciably in social status over the décade and the distribution of électoral support for a social démocratie party. Indeed, the corrélation is stronger between gentrification and REFORM 2 than it is against REFORM 1 (0,68 vs 0,56). The electorate in gentrifying areas were more likely to endorse MCM than MAG, choosing to throw their support to social démocratie rather than to libéral candidates. In short gentrifying areas and the distribution of support for progressive municipal politics were clearly correlated in Montréal's civic élection of 1982. The scatter of observations and a linear régression line describing the relationship appear in figure 1. The diagram hints that a curvilinear function could possibly fit the relationship more closely, but in the absence of a theoretical rationale this exercise was not undertaken. A constellation of points with a low gentrification index of under 5,0 highlight contiguous districts in the east, the north, and the south-west of Montréal where MCM candidates for council did poorly, receiving in gênerai from 15-40 percent of the vote (figure 1). Major négative residuals (25,41) from the régression are électoral districts where MAG candidates performed strongly; in district 41 (Peter McGill) MAG's most eminent candidate, Nick Auf der Maur, took 46 percent of the vote. In contrast are twelve points representing thirteen districts with gentrification scores of 10,0 or over. Seven of thèse districts are in a compact cluster in Plateau- Mont-Royal and its downtown margins, a région which (with one exception) had low social status scores in 1970, and in 1982 consisted overwhelmingly of tenants who retained a 70 percent francophone plurality. New résidents hâve been moving into this région to take advantage of proximity to downtown, sound, affordable housing, and the character of an old neighbourhood with interesting architecture (Saint-Pierre et al, 1985). A conséquence has been a rapid inflation of house priées in the past fewyears. To the west of downtown is a second cluster of six districts including Confédération, Notre-Dame-De-Grâce and Snowdon. Both thèse régions generated support of 40-60 percent for MCM candidates despite their différences : the western cluster has a considérable anglophone présence (a 30 percent average), a homeownership rate close to the mean, and in 1971 already the highest social status scores in the city of Montréal. But the underlying structure

424 CAHIERS DE GÉOGRAPHIE DU QUÉBEC, Vol. 30, no 81, décembre 1986 Figure 1 QENTRIFICATION AND REFORM POLITICS IN MONTRÉAL 1982 60 SCATTER DIAGRAM AND LIIMEAR REGRESSION LIME i i l 1 I I 49 '39 48 47» - * 29 41 * 35 # - 3 28 18 Ato»&#! 15»T 50 23 13 37 «27 51 «32 # H m.î\ 20 16* 8 n', 53 2 19 24* 2' 44 41 52-43 loh 25-2.5 i L i t i, 2.5 5.0 7.5 10.0 12.5 15.0 17.5 Gentrification Index (Social status change) ADJUSTED ELECTORAL DISTRICTS IN MONTREAL, 1982 1 Louis-Riel 15 Gabriel-Sagard 29 Jarry 43 Saint-Henri 2 Marie-Victorin 16 Jean-Rivard 30 Saint-Edouard 44 Saint-Paul 3 Longue-Pointe 17 Saint-Michel 31 Père-Marquette 45 Émard 4 Tétreaultvilie 18 Sault-au-Récollet 32 Mile-End 46 Décarie 5 Honoré-Beaugrand 19 Rivière-des-Prairies 33 Laurier 47 Loyola and Confédération 6 Langelier 20 Fleury 34 Jeanne-Mance 48 Notre-Dame-de-Grâce 7 Préfontaine 21 Ahuntsic 35 Plateau Mont-Royal 49 Snowdon 8 Maisonneuve 22 Acadie 36 De Lorimier 50 Côte-des-Neiges 9 Hochelaga 23 Cartierville 37 Sainte-Marie 51 Darlington 10 Bourbonnière 24 Saint-Sulpice 38 Saint-Jacques 52 Mont-Royal 11 Rosemont 25 Parc-Extension 39 Saint-Jean-Baptiste 53 Victoria 12 Ëtienne-Desmarteau 26 Jean-Talon 40 Ville-Marie 54 Pointe-aux-Trembles, 13 Louis-Hébert 27 Octave-Crémazie 41 Peter-McGill De La Rousselière 14 François-Perrault 28 Villeray 42 Pointe-Saint-Charles and Bout-de-l'Ile

GENTRIFICATION AND REFORM POLITICS IN MONTRÉAL, 1982 425 LOCALISATION OF THE ADJUSTED ELECTORAL DISTRICTS

426 CAHIERS DE GÉOGRAPHIE DU QUÉBEC, Vol. 30, no 81, décembre 1986 which binds thèse dissimilar régions together is rising social status, the in-migration of a new middie class, in the west a process of infill and contiguous expansion from an established élite core, in the central région a process in part of contiguous expansion from high status Outremont, but also of colonisation by the middie class in a traditional working-class area. CONCLUSION Developments in the economy and society of the western nations in the twentieth century hâve led to the considérable expansion of a cadre of well educated white collar workers in the professions and managerial positions. The theoretical status of this "new middie class" is controversial but a number of authors hâve identified them (or at least significant sub-groups) with libéral and even social démocratie politics. At the municipal level, middie class professionals (in particular) hâve been closely associated with the gentrification of certain inner city neighbourhoods over the past two décades. To what extent, then, does a theoretical literature on the new middie class suggest an endorsement for municipal reform politics from gentrifying inner city districts? A statistical examination of support for reform parties in Montréal's civic élection of 1982 indicates a close relationship. The core area of support for the social démocratie party, the Montréal Citizens Movement, coincided with the districts where gentrification, or an upward movement in social status, had been most pronounced in the 1971-81 period. To some degree, it could be argued, Montréal has a unique political culture among Canadian cities (Sancton, 1983), and it is a matter for further research to détermine to what extent thèse results may be generalisable elsewhere. REFERENCES BEAUREGARD, L. (1984) Les élections municipales à Montréal en 1982 : une étude de géographie politique. Cahiers de Géographie du Québec 28 (75) : 395-433. BELL, D. (1980) The New Class: A Muddled Concept, in Bell, D. The Winding Passage. New York, Basic Books, p. 144-164. BRINT, S. (1984) New Class and Cumulative Trend Explanations of the Libéral Political Attitudes of Professionals. American Journal of Sociology, 90 : 30-71. CASTELLS, M. (1983) The City and the Grassroots. London, Arnold. GOULDNER, A. (1979) The Future of Intellectuals and the Rise of the New Class. New York, Seabury Press. HIGGINS, D. (1981) Progressive City Politics and the Citizen Movement: A Status Report, in Lorimer, J. and MacGregor, C, Afterthe Developers. Toronto, James Lorimer, p. 84-95. HOLDSWORTH, D. (1983) Appropriating the Past: Héritage Désignation and Innner City Revitalization. Paper presented to the Canadian Association of Geographers, Winnipeg. LEY, D. (1980) Libéral Ideology and the Post-lndustrial City. Annals, Association of American Geographers, 70: 238-258. LEY, D. (1985) Gentrification in Canadian Inner Cities: Patterns, Analysis, Impacts and Policy. Ottawa, Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation. MARTIN, B. (1981) A Sociology of Contemporary Cultural Change. Oxford, Blackwell. MELAMED, A. (1983) Montréal: MCM Cornes of Age. City Magazine, 6: 21-26. MULLINS, P. (1982) The "Middie Class" and the Inner City. Journal of Australian Political Economy, 11 : 44-58. O'LOUGHLIN, J. (1980) The Election of Black Mayors, 1977. Annals, Association of American Geographers, 70:353-70. RABOY, M. (1982) The Future of Montréal and the MCM, in Roussopoulos, D., éd. The City and Radical Social Change. Montréal, Black Star Books, p. 235-259.

GENTRIFICATION AND REFORM POLITICS IN MONTRÉAL, 1982 427 SAINT-PIERRE, J., CHAU, T. and CHOKO, M. (1985) Impact de la restauration dans les quartiers centraux de Montréal. Montréal, UQAM, Laboratoire de recherche en sciences immobilières. SANCTON, A. (1983) Montréal, in Magnusson, W. and Sancton, A., éd. City Politics in Canada. Toronto, University of Toronto Press, p. 58-93. (acceptation définitive en septembre 1986) CARTOGRAPHIE Conception: Isabelle DIAZ, Louise MARCOTTE Réalisation : Isabelle DIAZ Photographie: Serge DUCHESNEAU