Futur Montréal announces mayoral candidate
By Dan Laxer The Suburban, Aug 27, 2025
A day after Ensemble Montréal introduced its full team for the CDN-NDG borough, the city's newest municipal party, Futur Montréal, announced that Jean-François Kacou will be running in the November election as the party's leader and as candidate for mayor of Montreal.
Kacou is no stranger to municipal politics. The former Executive Director of the City of Percé had also been the Executive Director of Ensemble Montréal. In fact, he is one of the principal drafters of the party's constitution, and oversaw its adoption.
However last fall he was dismissed from the party “without justification or notice (notice).” Kacou was hired, he says, to get the party back on track, and to help create its constitution. “And after that they let me go.”
He was originally hired by them, he says, based on his track record in Percé, where he oversaw major initiatives in sustainability, development, and tourism.
“What we did in Percé was great,” Kacou says, “and this is what we want to do with Futur Montréal. We want to bring something fresh, something new into the mix in municipal politics in Montreal.”
“We make a great time,” he says, “and we think we can take City Hall.”
He chose Futur Montréal as “the most viable alternative in this municipal election.” Projet Montréal and Ensemble Montréal are “two sides of the same coin.” Which is why he did not gravitate toward Mayor Plante's party after being fired from Ensemble Montréal. “I'm not a Projet Montréal person,” he says. He wanted to be a part of a team “that listens, that are open to new ideas and to conversation with people.” Projet Montréal has been criticized about its unilateral decision making and lack of consultation.
That said, Futur Montréal's priorities are not very different from either Projet Montréal's or Ensemble Montréal's: mobility, affordable housing, fighting homelessness.
On bicycle paths, Kacou says the city is too divided. “We need to bring back the cohesion between cyclists, automobilists, pedestrians, and all users of the roads” and change “the ideology of Projet Montréal that we’ve been enduring for eight years.”
Kacou is the first Afro-Canadian in Montreal's history to run for city mayor (CDN-NDG Mayor Gracia Kasoki Katahwa, who is from Kinshasa, is the first black woman to be elected borough mayor). Kacou is originally from Ivory Coast. He moved to Montreal in 2012 at the age of 25 after spending some time in France. His candidacy, he tells The Suburban, “brings hope to all the communities, all the diverse communities of Montreal. Montreal is a very mixed and a diverse population, and we need this representation into our (political) offices.”
Craig Sauvé's Transition Montreal party is also seeking city leadership. Sauvé is currently the city councilor for Saint-Henri—Little-Burgundy—Pointe-Saint-Charles. He had represented the district as an Independent after leaving Projet Montréal in 2021 due to “unfounded” allegations of sexual assault. He left, he said at the time, not to be a distraction to the party.
Sauvé also ran in the 2024 federal by-election in the LaSalle–Émard–Verdun riding. He faced criticism at the time for a pamphlet that featured a photo of Sauvé posing with the Palestinian flag.
A day after Ensemble Montréal introduced its full team for the CDN-NDG borough, the city's newest municipal party, Futur Montréal, announced that Jean-François Kacou will be running in the November election as the party's leader and as candidate for mayor of Montreal.
Kacou is no stranger to municipal politics. The former Executive Director of the City of Percé had also been the Executive Director of Ensemble Montréal. In fact, he is one of the principal drafters of the party's constitution, and oversaw its adoption.
However last fall he was dismissed from the party “without justification or notice (notice).” Kacou was hired, he says, to get the party back on track, and to help create its constitution. “And after that they let me go.”
He was originally hired by them, he says, based on his track record in Percé, where he oversaw major initiatives in sustainability, development, and tourism.
“What we did in Percé was great,” Kacou says, “and this is what we want to do with Futur Montréal. We want to bring something fresh, something new into the mix in municipal politics in Montreal.”
“We make a great time,” he says, “and we think we can take City Hall.”
He chose Futur Montréal as “the most viable alternative in this municipal election.” Projet Montréal and Ensemble Montréal are “two sides of the same coin.” Which is why he did not gravitate toward Mayor Plante's party after being fired from Ensemble Montréal. “I'm not a Projet Montréal person,” he says. He wanted to be a part of a team “that listens, that are open to new ideas and to conversation with people.” Projet Montréal has been criticized about its unilateral decision making and lack of consultation.
That said, Futur Montréal's priorities are not very different from either Projet Montréal's or Ensemble Montréal's: mobility, affordable housing, fighting homelessness.
On bicycle paths, Kacou says the city is too divided. “We need to bring back the cohesion between cyclists, automobilists, pedestrians, and all users of the roads” and change “the ideology of Projet Montréal that we’ve been enduring for eight years.”
Kacou is the first Afro-Canadian in Montreal's history to run for city mayor (CDN-NDG Mayor Gracia Kasoki Katahwa, who is from Kinshasa, is the first black woman to be elected borough mayor). Kacou is originally from Ivory Coast. He moved to Montreal in 2012 at the age of 25 after spending some time in France. His candidacy, he tells The Suburban, “brings hope to all the communities, all the diverse communities of Montreal. Montreal is a very mixed and a diverse population, and we need this representation into our (political) offices.”
Craig Sauvé's Transition Montreal party is also seeking city leadership. Sauvé is currently the city councilor for Saint-Henri—Little-Burgundy—Pointe-Saint-Charles. He had represented the district as an Independent after leaving Projet Montréal in 2021 due to “unfounded” allegations of sexual assault. He left, he said at the time, not to be a distraction to the party.
Sauvé also ran in the 2024 federal by-election in the LaSalle–Émard–Verdun riding. He faced criticism at the time for a pamphlet that featured a photo of Sauvé posing with the Palestinian flag.
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Archive
2025
April
May
Futur Montréal launches a major radio campaign, reaching more than 4 million impressions across the cityFutur Montréal reacts to the revelations about Soraya Martinez Ferrada: transparency and consistency above allFutur Montréal is now listed on the Elections Québec website as “awaiting authorization”Citizen Power in Action: An unmissable roundtable with legal, political and community leadersFutur Montréal reaffirms its desire to present 103 candidates in the 19 boroughs
June
July
August
New Montreal party proposes rapid-response, AI monitoring to fight hate crimesFutur Montréal proposes anti-hate action plan featuring AI threat detection, quick-response officersA new candidate is running for mayor of MontrealA new candidate for mayor of MontrealFuture Montreal unveils party leader, mayoral candidateNew party Futur Montréal announces Jean-François Kacou as mayoral candidateFutur Montréal announces mayoral candidateFutur Montréal announces a strong team of candidates across the cityFutur Montréal proudly announces the candidacy of Svetlana Chernienko in the CDN–NDG Loyola district
September
Municipal elections: the new Futur Montréal party recruits its candidates on social networksFutur Montréal withdraws Anastasia Marcelin's candidacy for mayor of Montreal NorthFutur Montréal launches its “Commerce & Access First” PolicyDowntown Montreal merchants sound alarm over safety, financial security41% of Montrealers are still undecided: Futur Montréal is ready to lead them into the futureFutur Montréal announces its candidates for Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce, Montreal's largest boroughFutur Montréal presents Bénita Jacques as candidate for mayor of Villeray–Saint-Michel–Parc-ExtensionFutur Montréal presents respected legal professional and community advocate Cosimo La Rosa as its candidate for city councillor in Ville-Marie (Peter-McGill district)Futur Montréal announces its complete list of candidates for the Villeray–Saint-Michel–Parc-Extension boroughFutur Montréal expands its ranks with 13 new candidates for the 2025 municipal election
October
Futur Montréal commits to Cavendish extension: a clear plan to end decades of delaysFutur Montréal candidate Gulnar Mousa proposes transforming the abandoned Empress Theatre into a women's shelter and empowerment centerFutur Montréal's blueprint to tackle band-aid approach to homelessnessFrom buses every 15 minutes to housing for the homeless, Futur Montréal launches official platformFuture Montreal's Jean-François Kacou wants to create a city for the 21st century
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