Manon Jeannotte | |
---|---|
30th Lieutenant Governor of Quebec | |
Assumed office 25 January 2024 | |
Monarch | Charles III |
Governor General | Mary Simon |
Premier | François Legault |
Preceded by | J. Michel Doyon |
Personal details | |
Born | Canada |
Manon Jeannotte is the 30th and current lieutenant governor of Quebec.[1] She is a member of the Gespeg Mi'kmaq First Nation.[2] Following her appointment, the National Assembly of Quebec unanimously voted a non-binding motion to abolish the position of Lieutenant Governor.[3] She assumed the role of Lieutenant Governor on 25 January 2024, choosing to be sworn in at her office rather than in the National Assembly as is customary.[4]
Jeannotte holds an EMBA from McGill University and HEC Montréal. She is a Certified Corporate Director (CCD) from Université Laval and has also completed a post-graduate microprogramme in interculturalism in Quebec at Université de Sherbrooke.[1]
Prior to her appointment as 30th Lieutenant Governor of Quebec,[5] Jeannotte was Director of the First Nations Executive Education at HEC Montréal, which she also co-initiated.
Jeannotte has made her mark with the Micmac Nation of Gespeg, first as a councillor from 2003 to 2008, then from 2011 to 2015, before taking on the role of Chief from 2015 to 2019.
Early in her career, she had the opportunity to write a memoir on the presence of the Mi'gma in the Gaspé region for submission to the Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Canada. She was then recruited through a pan-Canadian competition as an Aboriginal trainee analyst at Statistics Canada.
She has also been actively involved in a number of organisations and has sat on several boards of directors:
Jeannotte was named the most outstanding student in the McGill-HEC Montréal EMBA programme by ROB Magazine in 2017.
She also received a certificate of recognition from the Quebec Council of Senior Federal Officials for her contribution to the partnership for the "Commemoration of First Nations and Inuit History in Quebec".
She is a recipient of the King Charles III Coronation Medal (Canada).[6]