Advertisement 1
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Four Quebec MPs were diagnosed with cancer just before the election and are undergoing treatment. Not one has abandoned the race
Author of the article:
By Antoine Trépanier
Published Apr 22, 2025
Last updated 1day ago
10 minute read
Join the conversation
Article content
SAINT-LAMBERT, QUE — Alexandra Mendès didn’t know she had cancer when she was trying to oust former prime minister Justin Trudeau.
THIS CONTENT IS RESERVED FOR SUBSCRIBERS
Enjoy the latest local, national and international news.
- Exclusive articles by Conrad Black, Barbara Kay and others. Plus, special edition NP Platformed and First Reading newsletters and virtual events.
- Unlimited online access to National Post.
- National Post ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition to view on any device, share and comment on.
- Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword.
- Support local journalism.
SUBSCRIBE FOR MORE ARTICLES
Enjoy the latest local, national and international news.
- Exclusive articles by Conrad Black, Barbara Kay and others. Plus, special edition NP Platformed and First Reading newsletters and virtual events.
- Unlimited online access to National Post.
- National Post ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition to view on any device, share and comment on.
- Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword.
- Support local journalism.
REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES
Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience.
- Access articles from across Canada with one account.
- Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments.
- Enjoy additional articles per month.
- Get email updates from your favourite authors.
THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK.
Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience.
- Access articles from across Canada with one account
- Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments
- Enjoy additional articles per month
- Get email updates from your favourite authors
Sign In or Create an Account
or
View more offers
Article content
Article content
The bleeding started early last summer. She wasn’t really bothered with it. It didn’t hurt, she felt fine, she thought it was normal women stuff.
Article content
At the time, dozens, if not hundreds, of the Quebec Liberal MP’s constituents in Brossard—Saint-Lambert wanted her boss out. Personally, she didn’t want Trudeau to leave. But she had a mission: to convince someone to leave who wanted to stay.
Article content
Story continues below
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
“It was a total collapse,” she said of her party and her prime minister. “So, I was part of all the meetings, all the efforts, including the famous letter that we read to the prime minister (to ask him to leave).”
Article content
First Reading
Your guide to the world of Canadian politics. (Subscriber exclusive on Saturdays)
By signing up you consent to receive the above newsletter from Postmedia Network Inc.
Interested in more newsletters? Browse here.
Article content
And yet, she had blood in her urine. As the days went by, she didn’t worry about it. The caucus revolt was in full swing, and she was in the front row.
Article content
On Parliament Hill, chaos reigned in a tumultuous fall session. The NDP withdrew its support for the Liberals. Americans elected Donald Trump as U.S. president. The Conservatives called for an election. The Bloc Québécois threatened to join the Conservatives, and the Liberal caucus was desperate.
Article content
Then the real drama occurred on Dec. 16, when finance minister Chrystia Freeland resigned, blaming Justin Trudeau and his “costly political gimmicks” for her decision.
Article content
Meanwhile, Mendès’s bleeding wouldn’t stop. She drove back home after the Freeland bombshell and when she went to the bathroom, she couldn’t pee. When she finally did, there were blood clots.
Article content
Four days later, she underwent surgery to stop the bleeding, and a biopsy was performed.
Article content
Story continues below
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
“I didn’t have a very difficult recovery. Not difficult at all. On (Dec. 23), I cooked all day,” she said in a long interview at her campaign headquarters in Saint-Lambert.
Article content
Read More
- In Quebec's nationalist heartland, voters ponder a Conservative rendez-vous
- Poilievre pledges to keep Radio-Canada alive after 'defund the CBC' promise
Advertisement embed-more-topic
Story continues below
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
There was a tumour in her bladder. Was it cancer?
Article content
Four weeks after her surgery, she hadn’t heard anything, so she tracked down the doctor who told her the diagnosis: it was bladder cancer.
Article content
“I was surprised. I was very surprised,” she said, rubbing her face with a tissue.
Article content

Article content
At almost the same time, three other members of Parliament from Quebec were getting almost the same devastating diagnosis. Conservative MPs Jacques Gourde and Luc Berthold were both diagnosed with prostate cancer, and Bloc Québécois MP René Villemure with kidney cancer.
Article content
All of them are running to keep their seats in the 2025 federal election on April 28, mere weeks or months after their diagnoses. They are not the first candidates to run in a federal election with cancer. NDP leader Jack Layton did so in 2011, although most Canadians were not aware until he succumbed to the disease weeks after his party had its most successful election in history. And these Quebec candidates certainly won’t be the last, at least statistically. According to the Canadian Cancer Society, 675 people are diagnosed with cancer every day in Canada.
Advertisement 1
This advertisement has not loaded yet.
Trending
- CanadaWhat Pope Francis told Sophie Grégoire Trudeau when she asked him: 'You have a vice?'
- Canadian PoliticsMelanie Joly calls for 'majority' Liberal government days away from election
- CanadaCRA overpaid some Canadians in carbon tax payments and wants the money back. Here's how to know if that's you
- CanadaConservatives channel Viagra as record Ontario voters risk killing their mood: Election Power Meter
- NP CommentAmy Hamm: U.K. Supreme Court states the obvious — you aren't a woman just because you say you are
Advertisement 2
Advertisement
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
Running in a six-week federal election campaign is a sprint that can feel like a marathon. But these four brave MPs are also fighting for their lives, literally, undergoing exhausting chemotherapy, radiation treatment and surgery.
Article content
Not one of them considered abandoning their race.
Article content
The diagnosis
Article content
In December, Villemure was with colleagues in Montreal for a training session. He was tired, it had been a busy time in Ottawa. But that morning he was so exhausted he fell on the ground. He thought he had pneumonia and went to see his doctor. After a series of tests, he was told on the phone that he had kidney cancer.
Article content
That was in February. He faced imminent surgery to remove a kidney.
Article content
“It’s like a shovel hits you in the face,” said Villemure, who is running for re-election in Trois-Rivières. “When you see the word ‘cancer,’ you see death. It’s as simple as that.”
Article content
Luc Berthold, 59, knows that feeling well. The MP for Mégantic—L’Érable—Lotbinière is a prominent member of the Conservative Party, appointed deputy leader in 2022 (a role now held by Melissa Lantsman and Tim Uppal), and formerly served as shadow minister of health. Berthold learned he had prostate cancer after regular medical monitoring and some additional screening. His oncologist recommended surgery.
Article content
Story continues below
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
“Prostate cancer is an invisible cancer. I was not sick and I just kept going … But you always have (the diagnosis) on your mind. You’re always wondering when they’re going to remove it, and if the cancer has spread,” said Berthold.
Article content
According to the Canadian Cancer Society, surgery for prostate cancer may have side-effects such as swelling in the genital area, urinary incontinence and erectile dysfunction.
Article content
“What would have been more difficult was to have continued living with cancer. I didn’t even question the consequences for a moment. Let’s go!” Berthold said in an interview with National Post.
Article content
It’s like a shovel hits you in the face
Bloc Québécois MP René Villemure
Article content
On Feb. 10, as Berthold was preparing for surgery scheduled for two days later, he received the worst news of his life: his son had died by suicide. “I asked to postpone the operation,” he said. But after discussing it with his wife, Caro, they decided to go ahead with the procedure.
Article content
“Since then, my emotions have been mixed. I haven’t been able to cope with the cancer, even though I live with the consequences of the operation every day,” he said in an emotional phone conversation in the early days of the election campaign that officially began on March 23.
Article content
Story continues below
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
“It’s very difficult to combine the pain of losing a son with all that,” he added.
Article content
What he does know is that if he hadn’t seen a doctor last year and had all those tests, he would not have learned he had cancer. The disease was detected early and the risk of spread reduced.
Article content

Article content
His Conservative colleague, Jacques Gourde, 61, from the riding of Lévis—Lotbinière, is in the same boat. Last year, he finally went to see his family doctor for a battery of tests. “I’ve been a little neglectful about my health. Political life means we work for others, but we often forget ourselves,” said Gourde.
Article content
First elected in 2006, Gourde is well known in Ottawa for his frequent, colourful and intense speeches in the House of Commons. In February 2022, during the Freedom Convoy protests in Ottawa, as tensions were on the rise in Parliament, Gourde took the floor to ask then-employment minister Carla Qualtrough about the 1,610 people with addresses outside Canada who had received the Canada Emergency Response Benefit during the pandemic, at a cost of $11.9 million.
Article content
“Is there a vaccine for Liberal incompetence?” Gourde screamed in French. Everyone in the House laughed, including Qualtrough. That’s who Gourde is — a passionate man with a sense of humour who loves his work.
This advertisement has not loaded yet.
Story continues below
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
His cancer diagnosis came in early January. He’s glad he took those screening tests, which led to further examinations and the diagnosis.
Article content
What would voters think?
Article content
All four of these candidates with cancer struggled with how to tell their constituents. How many details would they divulge? Would they even be able to run for office again?
Article content
“You have to keep it very close because you can’t have people start speculating. And you need to be able to keep that message tightly controlled so that it doesn’t spin in a bad way,” said Karl Bélanger, who was press secretary for former NPD leader Jack Layton.
Article content
Bélanger was one of Layton’s closest advisers during his 2011 election campaign. Layton had prostate cancer and died in August of that year. Bélanger recalls the difficulty when his boss had to break the news.
Article content
“It’s a very personal (matter), and each individual deals with this differently … Sometimes they go on a sick leave and then they come back. So, you know, timing is also part of the equation. You don’t choose when you get sick,” Bélanger said.
Article content
The four Quebec candidates said they did not want to hide their news from their voters.
Article content
Story continues below
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content

Article content
While Mendès posted a video announcement on social media, Villemure decided on a written statement. They revealed they had cancer, that they would have to undergo treatment, and that they would still run for re-election. Their illness doesn’t prevent them from working, they said.
Article content
In Villemure’s case, rehabilitation from kidney surgery would take weeks, even months. But he knew he had to tell the public and his colleagues.
Article content
“The population has a certain right to know,” said Villemure, who is an ethicist by profession.
Article content
After a speech at a winter caucus retreat, Bloc Leader Yves-François Blanchet told his colleagues: “René has something to tell you.”
Article content
Villemure explained his cancer to them. There was an immense wave of love and support. “There, I shed a tear,” he said at his Trois-Rivières constituency office.
Article content
The other MPs received similar reactions. The Conservative party assured Gourde and Berthold they would help them every step of the way. The Liberals did the same with Mendès. Colleagues even offered to campaign for them. A few Bloc candidates, including the leader’s caravan, did exactly that for Villemure.
Article content
Story continues below
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content

Article content
All of them say they received hundreds, if not thousands, of messages, calls and kind words in the street. The outpouring of support helped with their decision to stay in politics.
Article content
They have been reassured by their doctors that their lives are not in danger. The cancer risk is omnipresent, yet they swear they can represent their constituents.
Article content
“Was I afraid of dying? Yes. Less so today, but I don’t like it,” said Villemure.
Article content
“I love what I do. I’ve always loved this riding and this job,” said Mendès. “I tell myself that staying home, staring at my four walls and thinking about death would probably be the worst thing I could do.”
Article content
Berthold said he would have liked the election to have been called earlier. “If it had been in the fall as requested, I would have been so happy,” he said with a laugh. Back then, he hadn’t yet received his diagnosis, the Conservatives were leading by a wide margin in the polls and were expected to form a majority government.
Article content
But here they are, on the eve of the election, running to win.
Article content
“Nobody’s running for office thinking they’re going to die,” said Bélanger. That wasn’t what Jack Layton was thinking, he said, and it came as a shock to everyone when things took a turn for the worse after the election. “Not only for the people working with (Jack), obviously, but for all Canadians.”
This advertisement has not loaded yet.
Story continues below
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
Campaigning with cancer
Article content

Article content
Each weekday of the campaign, Gourde sets aside two hours for his radiation therapy treatment. He has 28 sessions in total. “Every day, I go to Lévis to have my radiology treatment. It lasts three minutes. My last day is on May 1, so even on election day, (April) 28, I have to go for my treatment,” he said.
Article content
Gourde was present at Pierre Poilievre’s rally in Quebec City early in the campaign, where the Conservative leader announced his Quebec platform. Gourde looked tired. The treatment had clearly been draining.
Article content
He has changed his strategy for this campaign. The candidate has had the same team since 2006, and they know the riding inside out. The real race is for second place.
Article content
But he’s still campaigning. He’s doing less door-to-door canvassing than usual and is focusing on larger events.
Article content
Mendès is tired, too. Her first oncologist told her that her cancer was so aggressive she would have to undergo three months of intensive chemotherapy, have her bladder removed and wear a urinary bag for life.
Article content
She got a second opinion. She is currently participating in a clinical trial combining immunotherapy and chemotherapy. Mendès has her treatments every Friday, with a break every three weeks. This treatment plan will last six months.
Article content
Story continues below
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
I tell myself that staying home, staring at my four walls and thinking about death would probably be the worst thing I could do
Alexandra Mendes, Liberal MP
Article content
About two days after treatment, she said she feels better. “My brain is still there,” she said.
Article content
In late March at her campaign headquarters in Brossard, across the St. Lawrence River from Montreal, Mendès had forgotten her mask and couldn’t shake hands. Her doctor advised her to limit contact and to frequently wash her hands.
Article content
Around her, volunteers were everywhere, looking for tie wraps to install campaign signs. At the entrance sits five chairs — two of them are green Adirondack chairs — and a small table to put your coffee.
Article content
“This is where I meet voters. I invite them to come over here,” she said. Mendès doesn’t canvass herself, and she cannot be in a crowd.
Article content
“I am someone who hugs a lot of people and shakes a lot of hands. So, it’s interesting,” she said with a smile.
Article content

Article content
Berthold is often on television to debate other candidates, but is taking more time to rest.
Article content
For these candidates with cancer, schedules are based on doctors’ recommendations. Villemure’s doctor has advised him to avoid stress — of any kind. An election campaign is stressful, even for people like him who aren’t usually stressed.
Article content
Story continues below
This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below.
Article content
He isn’t personally campaigning — he had a kidney removed on April 4. Villemure’s team is campaigning in Trois-Rivières, where the race is too close to call between the Bloc, the Liberals and the Conservatives.
Article content
He’s shot a few videos and is active on social media. But there won’t be any debates. And he won’t be at his election night party.
Article content
Mendès’s doctor assured her she could do another two or three mandates. But she knows this election is probably her last. “I’m 61 years old,” she said with a laugh. “I don’t intend on seeking two or three other mandates.”
Article content
First, she must get re-elected. “By talking about it, I wanted to reassure, but at the same time be frank. To put that on the table and tell voters that if you are going to choose me again, you will do so knowing that I have this Damocles sword hanging over my head.”
Article content
Yet even when she was sick, she fought for her constituents and carried out her political responsibilities. Moreover, she helped achieve what most Canadians wanted: to get rid of Justin Trudeau.
Article content
This advertisement has not loaded yet.
Comments
You must be logged in to join the discussion or read more comments.
Create an AccountSign in
Join the Conversation
Postmedia is committed to maintaining a lively but civil forum for discussion. Please keep comments relevant and respectful. Comments may take up to an hour to appear on the site. You will receive an email if there is a reply to your comment, an update to a thread you follow or if a user you follow comments. Visit our Community Guidelines for more information.