By Joseph Marshall
Cote Saint Luc has a new mayor, and it happened in the most dramatic way possible. After a campaign that divided the city and a recount that had residents checking updates like it was a federal election, David Tordjman has defeated longtime mayor Mitchell Brownstein by seven votes. Seven votes in a city of more than twenty three thousand electors.
Nothing about this race felt normal. On election night, Brownstein looked like he was holding on. Then numbers shifted. Tordjman pulled ahead by a single vote. A single vote in a city where almost every household knows one of the candidates personally. By the next morning the entire suburb was talking about nothing else. Synagogues were buzzing, grocery store aisles turned into debate halls and everyone wanted to know what on earth had happened at the ballot boxes.
Brownstein called for a recount right away, and many expected it to flip the result back in his favour. Instead, once judges and officials sorted through the piles, the lead widened slightly and Tordjman ended up with a seven vote win. It was a calm, almost clinical announcement that carried the weight of a political upset nobody saw coming.
This was not just a contest between two politicians. It was a fight over what kind of leadership the city’s Jewish majority wants during a time of rising antisemitism, anxiety about safety and growing frustration over the massive redevelopment proposals hanging over the community.
Brownstein’s supporters believed his steady voice and public stance against antisemitism made him the right man to guide the city through an uncertain period. Many simply trusted him and felt he had earned more time. Tordjman’s supporters argued that the city needed new energy, tougher oversight on development and a firmer hand on security. They wanted someone who would not just respond to issues but challenge the status quo.
The result has split the city, but not in a chaotic way. It has people talking openly about what they want from their elected officials and what kind of future they want for Cote Saint Luc. For some, it feels like a loss of a familiar presence. For others, it feels like overdue change.
What is clear is that residents cared enough to make this one of the closest municipal races Quebec has seen in years. And they did it at a time when the Jewish community is feeling pressure from every direction.
Cote Saint Luc now enters a new chapter. Tordjman takes office with a narrow mandate but a loud message behind it: voters wanted something different. How he responds to that, and how he handles a deeply engaged but divided electorate, will define the next four years.
In the end, seven votes decided who will lead one of the strongest Jewish communities in the country. In Cote Saint Luc, that is enough to change everything.
