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5 Montreal stories you must read this week: December 8

File photo of Santa Claus. Simone Padovani/Awakening/Getty Images

From bad Santa to a two-letter English word making waves at the National Assembly, here are the top five stories Global News covered in Montreal this week:

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Bad Santa

“My daughter turns to me and goes ‘Wow, Santa’s grumpy!’ Then she realized ‘Oh my god, is he mad at me? Am I getting gifts this year?'”

Meeting Santa is supposed to be a holiday highlight for kids and their parents, but for Melanie Cyr and her daughter, it was the opposite.

READ THE STORY: Bad Santa fired by Montreal shopping mall after complaints

Government mistake

“I was speechless, I asked her ‘can you repeat what you just said, did you say Joshua was accepted?’ she said ‘ya there was a mistake’.”

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A West Island family who turned to Global News after being denied Quebec’s supplement for children with exceptional needs has been told by a government official that they were turned down by mistake.

READ THE STORY: Retraite Quebec admits mistake and awards exceptional needs supplement to West Island family

Hook, line and sinker

“I set the oldest trap in the book.”

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Parti Québécois leader, Jean-François Lisée made the comment at a press conference Thursday afternoon, referring to the recently passed “bonjour, hi” motion. He said he was testing the Liberals’ language policy.

READ THE STORY: PQ leader ‘set trap’ with ‘bonjour-hi,’ Couillard speaks English in QP

Politics and sexual misconduct

“You shut your mouth because you want to work until the end of your days.”

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Powerful women who rise to the top level of Quebec provincial politics are not spared from sexual misconduct and harassment.

READ THE STORY: Quebec’s female politicians say sexual misconduct in legislature not uncommon

Would you donate your brain?

“I want to give back to the game that has given so much to me.”

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Kyries Hebert, a linebacker for the Montreal Alouettes says he’s donating his brain to The Concussion Legacy Foundation Canada for chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) research.

READ THE STORY: Alouettes’ linebacker Kyries Hebert pledges brain to CTE research

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