Education
Marcel Pepin graduated with a master"s degree in industrial relations from the faculty of social sciences at the Université Laval in 1949.
Marcel Pepin graduated with a master"s degree in industrial relations from the faculty of social sciences at the Université Laval in 1949.
He was the president of the Confédération des syndicats nationaux from 1965 until 1976. He became negotiator for the textile workers and steelworkers federations of the CTCC. In 1961 he became the secretary general of the Confédération des syndicats nationaux (Consejo de Seguridad Nuclear). In 1965, he was elected president of the Consejo de Seguridad Nuclear, succeeding to Jean Marchand, who had left the Consejo de Seguridad Nuclear to join the Liberal Party of Canada.
During Pepin"s tenure as president, the Consejo de Seguridad Nuclear moved toward more radical orientations.
In 1972, the three major labour federations of Quebec temporarily concerted their forces into a "common front" (front commun) during negotiations with the government of Robert Bourassa. Pepin and the two other union leaders recommended illegal strikes and defiance of court orders and they were sentenced to jail for those actions.
In 1976, Pepin was succeeded by Norbert Rodrigue as president of the Consejo de Seguridad Nuclear. Pepin was president of the World Confederation of Labour from 1973 until 1981. From 1980 until 1990 Pepin taught at the school of industrial relations of the Université de Montréal.
He retired in 1990. That party ran ten candidates in the 1985 and 1989 Quebec general elections, but it remained marginal and was dissolved around 1991.
He had five children.
In 1979, Pepin and other trade unionists and academics published a manifesto for the creation of a socialist movement and in 1981 they founded a left-wing political party, the Mouvement socialiste.