Futur Montreal’s Jean-François Kacou wants to create a city for the 21st century
By Daniel J. Rowe Published: October 27, 2025 at 1:55PM EDT
CTV News anchor Mutsumi Takahashi spoke to the five main candidates for Montreal’s next mayor.
Futur Montreal is led by manager and strategist Jean-François Kacou.
Mutusumi Takahashi:
“Your party says that it offers what you call a pragmatic vision for a 21st-century city’s future challenges. What exactly is your vision for that 21st Century City?
Jean-François Kacou:
“First of all, our vision for Montreal is a city that moves, so that’s why we want the best bus network in the world. We also want a city that takes care of its residents. This morning, we had the opportunity to announce our platform, where we announced that we want to professionalize the College of elected officials to diversify our revenue and also to invest in our food security and sovereignty, and on top of that, in our energy for the ecological transition. So this will be our vision for the Montreal of the 21st Century.”
Mutusumi Takahashi:
“The issue of linguistic rights is very important for the English community. What is your commitment to them under your administration? Will they always be guaranteed essential services in English?”
Jean-François Kacou:
“First of all, I want to emphasize the fact that a lot of our candidates are English speakers, and in Futur Montreal, we respect the right, also, of English speakers to speak their language, to feel welcome in Montreal because we are to live in peace in this city. So we are one of the few parties that have our pamphlets in the two languages: French and English. So that shows our commitment to offer services also to English people when we will be in power.”
Mutusumi Takahashi:
“What do you think is Montreal’s biggest problem right now, and how would you fix it?”
Jean-François Kacou:
“We think the biggest problem here is affordability. We have, since 2019, 300,000 people leaving this city, and they left the city that they love, and it pains them in the heart. Me, myself, I experienced unaffordability in this city. What do we want to do for Futur Montreal? We want to do a levy on luxury homes, luxury houses, excluding family housing, to directly invest in nonprofits that build affordable housing. And why nonprofit? Because we think these are the organizations that will construct really cheap houses that will keep Montrealers in the city that they love.”
Mutusumi Takahashi:
“If there is one single most important thing that your party is offering that the other parties are not offering, that would improve the lives of Montrealers, what is it?”
Jean-François Kacou:
“We think we need parking towers in Montreal because we also have a portrait of mobility. We want to promote the bus, yes, we want to promote the metro. We want to promote, also, the bicycle, with more secure bike lanes outside of commercial arteries. But people need their auto to drive in Montreal. We think about pregnant women, families, professionals of the construction trade, mobility-restrained people. So that’s why we want to build parking towers with public-private partnerships that will increase the quality of life of Montreal and make them reconnect with their downtown.”
Mutusumi Takahashi:
“There are always so many promises during election campaigns. What assurance do we have that you will keep your promises?”
Jean-François Kacou:
“First of all, you can count on the Futur Montreal administration when we are in power. The first order of business will be to count on the conscientiousness of the elected officials on trans-partisanship. We want to focus also on operation costs, redundancies in our administration, and we want to quickly create the commission on revenue diversification so that we will have the means to keep our promises and less be dependent on property taxes. We think the Montreal of the future is a city that thinks for ourselves and diversifies our revenue.”
CTV News anchor Mutsumi Takahashi spoke to the five main candidates for Montreal’s next mayor.
Futur Montreal is led by manager and strategist Jean-François Kacou.
Mutusumi Takahashi:
“Your party says that it offers what you call a pragmatic vision for a 21st-century city’s future challenges. What exactly is your vision for that 21st Century City?
Jean-François Kacou:
“First of all, our vision for Montreal is a city that moves, so that’s why we want the best bus network in the world. We also want a city that takes care of its residents. This morning, we had the opportunity to announce our platform, where we announced that we want to professionalize the College of elected officials to diversify our revenue and also to invest in our food security and sovereignty, and on top of that, in our energy for the ecological transition. So this will be our vision for the Montreal of the 21st Century.”
Mutusumi Takahashi:
“The issue of linguistic rights is very important for the English community. What is your commitment to them under your administration? Will they always be guaranteed essential services in English?”
Jean-François Kacou:
“First of all, I want to emphasize the fact that a lot of our candidates are English speakers, and in Futur Montreal, we respect the right, also, of English speakers to speak their language, to feel welcome in Montreal because we are to live in peace in this city. So we are one of the few parties that have our pamphlets in the two languages: French and English. So that shows our commitment to offer services also to English people when we will be in power.”
Mutusumi Takahashi:
“What do you think is Montreal’s biggest problem right now, and how would you fix it?”
Jean-François Kacou:
“We think the biggest problem here is affordability. We have, since 2019, 300,000 people leaving this city, and they left the city that they love, and it pains them in the heart. Me, myself, I experienced unaffordability in this city. What do we want to do for Futur Montreal? We want to do a levy on luxury homes, luxury houses, excluding family housing, to directly invest in nonprofits that build affordable housing. And why nonprofit? Because we think these are the organizations that will construct really cheap houses that will keep Montrealers in the city that they love.”
Mutusumi Takahashi:
“If there is one single most important thing that your party is offering that the other parties are not offering, that would improve the lives of Montrealers, what is it?”
Jean-François Kacou:
“We think we need parking towers in Montreal because we also have a portrait of mobility. We want to promote the bus, yes, we want to promote the metro. We want to promote, also, the bicycle, with more secure bike lanes outside of commercial arteries. But people need their auto to drive in Montreal. We think about pregnant women, families, professionals of the construction trade, mobility-restrained people. So that’s why we want to build parking towers with public-private partnerships that will increase the quality of life of Montreal and make them reconnect with their downtown.”
Mutusumi Takahashi:
“There are always so many promises during election campaigns. What assurance do we have that you will keep your promises?”
Jean-François Kacou:
“First of all, you can count on the Futur Montreal administration when we are in power. The first order of business will be to count on the conscientiousness of the elected officials on trans-partisanship. We want to focus also on operation costs, redundancies in our administration, and we want to quickly create the commission on revenue diversification so that we will have the means to keep our promises and less be dependent on property taxes. We think the Montreal of the future is a city that thinks for ourselves and diversifies our revenue.”
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 2025
 April
 May
Futur Montréal lance une grande campagne radio, atteignant plus de 4 millions d’impressions à travers la villeFutur Montréal réagit aux révélations sur Soraya Martinez Ferrada : transparence et cohérence avant toutFutur Montréal figure désormais sur le site d’Élections Québec comme “en attente d’autorisation”Le Pouvoir Citoyen en Action : Une table ronde incontournable avec des leaders juridiques, politiques et communautairesFutur Montréal réaffirme sa volonté de présenter 103 candidats dans les 19 arrondissements
 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 officersUn nouveau candidat se lance à la mairie de MontréalUn nouveau candidat à la mairie de MontréalFutur Montréal unveils party leader, mayoral candidateNew party Futur Montréal announces Jean-François Kacou as mayoral candidateFutur Montréal announces mayoral candidateFutur Montréal annonce une solide équipe de candidats à travers la villeFutur Montréal annonce fièrement la candidature de Svetlana Chernienko dans le district de CDN–NDG Loyola
 September
Élections municipales: le nouveau parti Futur Montréal recrute ses candidats sur les réseaux sociauxFutur Montréal retire la candidature d’Anastasia Marcelin à la mairie de Montréal-NordFutur Montréal lance sa Politique « Commerce & Accès d’abord »Downtown Montreal merchants sound alarm over safety, financial security41 % des Montréalais sont encore indécis : Futur Montréal est prêt à les mener vers l’avenirFutur Montréal annonce ses candidats pour Côte-des-Neiges–Notre-Dame-de-Grâce, le plus grand arrondissement de MontréalFutur Montréal présente Bénita Jacques comme candidate à la mairie de Villeray–Saint-Michel–Parc-ExtensionFutur Montréal présente le professionnel du droit respecté et défenseur communautaire Cosimo La Rosa comme candidat au poste de conseiller de ville dans Ville-Marie (district Peter-McGill)Futur Montréal annonce sa liste complète de candidats pour l’arrondissement Villeray–Saint-Michel–Parc-ExtensionFutur Montréal élargit ses rangs avec 13 nouveaux candidats pour l’élection municipale de 2025
 October
Futur Montréal s’engage à réaliser l’extension de Cavendish : un plan clair pour mettre fin à des décennies de retardLa candidate de Futur Montréal, Gulnar Mousa, propose de transformer le théâtre Empress abandonné en refuge et centre d’autonomisation pour femmesFutur Montréal’s blueprint to tackle band-aid approach to homelessnessFrom buses every 15 minutes to housing for the homeless, Futur Montréal launches official platformFutur Montreal’s Jean-François Kacou wants to create a city for the 21st century
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