Background
He was born in Saint-Wenceslas, Quebec and became a crown attorney and lawyer by profession.
He was born in Saint-Wenceslas, Quebec and became a crown attorney and lawyer by profession.
Université de Montréal.
He served as a senior Crown Attorney for Terrebonne district, then as a municipal solicitor for Lachute. He received a King"s Counsel designation by the late 1940s. He was first elected to Parliament at the Argenteuil riding as an Independent Conservative in a by-election on 28 February 1938 but was defeated in the 1940 federal election in which he ran as an official Conservative candidate under the National Government banner the party was using in that election.
Héon lost to James McGibbon of the Liberal party.
Although Héon frequently took a nationalist position, he sided with plans for Canada to join World World War II when the issue was debated in Parliament in September 1939 but opposed plans to introduce conscription. Héon subsequently joined the Progressive Conservative caucus immediately prior to the beginning of the 1949 federal election campaign and became party leader George A. Drew"s Quebec lieutenant in charge of the Tory campaign in that province.
Due to redistribution he ran for re-election in the new riding of Argenteuil—Deux-Montagnes and was defeated by Philippe Valois of the Liberals.