Émilise Lessard-Therrien

Émilise Lessard-Therrien
Lessard-Therrien in 2022
Co-Spokesperson for Québec Solidaire
In office
November 26, 2023  April 29, 2024
Preceded byManon Massé
Succeeded byChristine Labrie (interim)
Member of the National Assembly of Quebec for Rouyn-Noranda–Témiscamingue
In office
October 1, 2018  August 28, 2022
Preceded byLuc Blanchette
Succeeded byDaniel Bernard
Personal details
Born (1991-11-27) November 27, 1991
Duhamel-Ouest, Quebec, Canada
Political partyQuébec solidaire
ResidenceDuhamel-Ouest, Québec
EducationUQAM
Université du Québec en Abitibi-Témiscamingue
ProfessionTeacher, organic farmer

Émilise Lessard-Therrien (born November 27, 1991) is a Québécoise politician, who was a co-spokesperson of Québec solidaire from 2023 to 2024. She was elected to the National Assembly of Quebec in the 2018 Quebec general election. She represented the electoral district of Rouyn-Noranda–Témiscamingue as a member of Québec solidaire until her defeat in the 2022 Quebec general election.

In November 2023, Lessard-Therrien was elected co-spokesperson of Québec Solidaire at the party congress in Gatineau, defeating Ruba Ghazal and Christine Labrie. She obtained 50.3% of the votes in the second round, against 49.7% for Ghazal. After taking leave for health reasons in late March 2024, she resigned as co-spokesperson on April 29 of the same year.

She is a proponent of Quebec independence, regional decentralization and food sovereignty in Quebec. She is engaged in campaigns against arsenic pollution emitted by the copper factory Fonderie Horne in Rouyn-Noranda.

In March 2019, Lessard-Therrien in an interview expressed concern over possible land grabs in the province by Chinese investors. She said that, with climate change, Quebec would be one of the few places left with good, arable land and fresh water in a few years’ time and that the Temiscamingue region had much unexploited land that was being scouted by Chinese investors. She also said "Between us, we call them predators," she said. "They are predators of agricultural land. And we see them, we feel them. And what I’m saying is that fallow land still has potential to be farmed again, but land that belongs to China may never feed Quebecers, and it’s important that we be concerned now." Responding to the criticism, she acknowledged that her statement was badly formulated, and that she was critical of large investors dominating agricultural lands, no matter where they are from.