logo
Quebec Liberals hope to boost their fortunes as they choose new leader

Quebec Liberals hope to boost their fortunes as they choose new leader

CBC17 hours ago

After a drawn-out campaign overshadowed by upheaval in Ottawa and threats from the United States, Quebec Liberals will choose a new leader this weekend who they hope will revive the party from years of inertia.
The Liberals suffered back-to-back defeats to François Legault's upstart Coalition Avenir Québec in 2018 and 2022. The party has struggled to connect to francophone voters in regions outside of Montreal, and has failed to benefit from Legault's waning popularity in recent years.
Instead, the sovereigntist Parti Québécois has surged in the polls and seems poised to form the next government, despite holding just five of the 125 seats in the provincial legislature. With the next election set for October 2026 in a province known for dramatic electoral swings, the pressure is on for the Liberals to prove they're still a vital force.
The question card-carrying Liberals must answer before choosing their new leader is simple, said Pablo Rodriguez, a leadership candidate and former federal minister.
"Who can beat François Legault and the Parti Québécois?" said Rodriguez, 57. "Who can bring us back to power in 2026?"
The timing of the campaign, which began in January, has made it difficult for the party to capture the public's attention. Former prime minister Justin Trudeau's decision to resign kicked off a whirlwind federal leadership race in February, followed by a general election, with U.S. President Donald Trump's threats of tariffs and annexation looming over it all.
"The [Quebec] leadership race has unfortunately been drowned out," said Sébastien Dallaire, an executive vice-president with the polling firm Leger.
Rodriguez, the most well-known of the five candidates, is the presumed front-runner. After nine years in Trudeau's government, he left Ottawa last September to seek the provincial leadership and has emphasized his lengthy political resumé. A Leger survey of the general population published in May showed him leading his rivals by a wide margin.
But the party's leadership rules make it hard to predict the results, which will be revealed at a convention in Quebec City on Saturday, said Sophie Villeneuve, a political analyst and former Parti Québécois staffer.
The Liberals have assigned an equal number of points to each of Quebec's 125 ridings. In each riding, one third of the points are reserved for members aged 25 and younger. That means the winner will have to appeal to young voters and those outside Montreal. That could be a challenge for Rodriguez, whose federal seat was in the city, Villeneuve said.
"I think that Mr. Rodriguez is very well-known in Montreal, but not so well-known in the regions of Quebec," she said. "And it's through the regions that the Liberal party can hope to win back the trust of Quebec voters."
Although there is some overlap among members, the provincial Liberals are not affiliated with the federal Liberal party.
The Quebec Liberals currently hold just 19 seats in the provincial legislature, mostly in and around Montreal. The concentration of Liberal voters in the city has allowed them to hang on to Official Opposition status.
A look at the candidates
Karl Blackburn, former president of a Quebec employers group who hails from the Saguenay area, said the Liberals need to re-establish themselves as the party of the economy and the regions.
"Mr. Rodriguez is zero for two on these issues," said Blackburn, 57, who is leaning heavily on his business credentials.
Blackburn's campaign has commissioned a poll of party members that it claims shows Rodriguez with a slight lead, but not enough to win on the first round of the party's ranked ballot system. His team says Rodriguez's support is focused in Montreal, which could give Blackburn an advantage in a second round, when voters' second choices start to matter.
Villeneuve also predicted there will be no winner in the first round. But she said Blackburn, who was a member of the provincial legislature during the Liberal government of former premier Jean Charest, "represents the Liberal party's past" at a time when it's looking for renewal.
Meanwhile, Charles Milliard, former head of the federation of Quebec chambers of commerce, is pitching himself as the youthful option. A political newcomer, he compared himself in an interview to charismatic Parti Québécois Leader Paul St-Pierre Plamondon, who had never held office before taking the reins of the party in 2020.
"I like the way he does politics," said Milliard, 45. "We obviously have different views on the future of Quebec, but I think it would be a very interesting match next year."
Marc Bélanger, an international trade lawyer, and Mario Roy, an economist and farmer, are also seeking the party's leadership.
The leading candidates offer similar lines on many of the major issues facing Quebec. They've attacked Legault's record on the economy, pointing to the record $13.6-billion deficit the government tabled this year. They've expressed openness to new pipeline projects in Quebec, which have long been a non-starter in the province.
And they're promising to unify Quebecers after years of what they call divisive politics under the Coalition Avenir Québec government, pointing to Legault's focus on identity issues such as immigration, secularism and the French language.
"The first job of a premier is to unite the people, not to divide them," Rodriguez said. "So just by changing the tone, that will change a lot of things."
They're also presenting the Liberals as the best option for those who want to avoid another referendum on independence, which the Parti Québécois has promised to hold by 2030.
"I really feel that Quebecers are due for a change," Blackburn said. "And that change won't be a referendum like Mr. St-Pierre Plamondon is proposing. It will be a vision that looks to the future."
Regardless of who the party elects on Saturday, the Liberals will have their work cut out for them if they're to have a shot at forming the next government, Dallaire said.
"Somehow the long-standing relationship between the Liberal party and their francophone voters in Quebec got broken," he said.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Protester gets on Ford Fest stage in Etobicoke at annual Ontario PC event
Protester gets on Ford Fest stage in Etobicoke at annual Ontario PC event

CBC

time3 hours ago

  • CBC

Protester gets on Ford Fest stage in Etobicoke at annual Ontario PC event

A protester made it onto the stage at a Ford Fest event in Etobicoke organized by the Ontario Progressive Conservative Party on Friday. Ontario Premier Doug Ford was speaking in Centennial Park, when the protester confronted him and was quickly ushered off the stage. The annual event this year was billed as a celebration of the party's third straight majority provincial government win. In February, Ford led the party to victory in a snap winter election fought amid the spectre of U.S. tariffs. The protester shouted about Grassy Narrows as they were pulled off stage. Ford accused the protester of spray painting "everything" and putting up stickers "all over the place" on Thursday night. "That's not what the people want. We live in a peaceful province and we're going to continue to build... That's what we're going to do," Ford told the crowd. Grassy Narrows First Nation, a northwestern Ontario community, has faced decades of mercury contamination. The poisoning has impacted an estimated 90 per cent of the population of Grassy Narrows, also known as Asubpeeschoseewagong Netum Anishinabek. Earlier, Ford thanked Toronto Mayor Olivia Chow for renaming Centennial Park Stadium after his late brother and former Toronto mayor Rob Ford. The stadium, renamed in May, is now called Rob Ford Stadium. "It was Mayor Chow that named that stadium after Rob. I'll be forever, forever grateful. So when you see her, just thank her. She is really amazing," Ford said. The premier also highlighted his government's work on infrastructure, citing progress on transit lines, the construction of two new Catholic schools and a new community centre in Etobicoke

G7 leaders will get a 'truly Albertan experience' says Kananaskis lodge GM
G7 leaders will get a 'truly Albertan experience' says Kananaskis lodge GM

National Post

time5 hours ago

  • National Post

G7 leaders will get a 'truly Albertan experience' says Kananaskis lodge GM

A host of world leaders will land in Calgary this weekend before making themselves at home in one of Canada's prized natural gems for three days of discussion on economic instability, war, political relations and other matters of global importance at the G7 summit. Article content Guests have already begun arriving at the Pomeroy Kananaskis Mountain lodge, according to Elizabeth Hovey-Smith, the lodge's general manager. For staff who have worked there for years, the next week will look quite different from the average work day. Article content Article content Article content For one, a controlled access zone has been created around the property by the Integrated Safety and Security Group, a multi-agency team lead by the RCMP that includes the Calgary Police Service, Alberta Sheriffs, provincial conservation officers and members of the Canadian Armed Forces. Article content Anyone entering Kananaskis Country requires accreditation, with different levels of permission afforded to people depending on their roles and requirement to enter certain areas of the lodge, Hovey-Smith said. Article content 'Normally, to get into K-Country, all you need is to register your licence plate and pay for your conservation pass,' she said. 'But now there are roadblocks.' Article content Staff are shuttled from the Stoney Nakoda resort and pass through several security checkpoints. Employees who want to hike in the region have to drive outside the zone. Article content Within the lodge, certain spots only allow certain employees, Hovey-Smith said. Article content 'I'm general manager, but that doesn't mean I get to go everywhere, because I might not need to,' she said. Article content 'Certainly, that's very different,' she said. 'That's not normal practice for us but very understandable, given the high-level conversations and people that are going to be attending.' Article content This year's summit, attended by leaders from Canada, U.S., Japan, France, Germany, Italy, France and the European Union — as well as invited guests from Australia, Brazil, Indonesia, India, Mexico, South Korea, South Africa and Ukraine — will focus on topics around economic instability and the Russia-Ukraine crisis. Article content The lodge is no stranger to hosting events of this political significance; it hosted the G8 summit in 2002, one of three events since the lodge was taken over by the Pomeroy group that it has hosted an event that it was completely taken over by a client, according to Hovey-Smith.

Awaiting sex crimes trials, billionaire Frank Stronach in Austria for a TV appearance
Awaiting sex crimes trials, billionaire Frank Stronach in Austria for a TV appearance

CBC

time5 hours ago

  • CBC

Awaiting sex crimes trials, billionaire Frank Stronach in Austria for a TV appearance

Social Sharing On June 5, Canadian billionaire Frank Stronach was doing what has preoccupied him for years: hawking his economic ideas in front of the camera. But this was not one of his regular speeches at his Aurora, Ont., restaurant or at some Canadian business gala. The 92-year-old, who is to stand trial in Toronto and Newmarket, Ont., next year for more than a dozen alleged sex crimes, gave his economic stump speech an ocean away, in Austria, on a current affairs news program. Stronach, who had to surrender his passport to the courts when he was arrested in June 2024, has been in the country of his birth for three weeks, CBC News has learned. Court documents obtained by CBC News show that Stronach's bail conditions were quietly altered on May 21, granting him the return of his passport and ability to travel from May 24 to June 14. The section of the document set aside to provide reasons why a bail condition should be changed contains only a single sentence with no further explanation: "To allow Mr. Stronach to travel to Austria." The change to Stronach's bail conditions, which were requested by his Toronto lawyer, Leora Shemesh, was approved by assistant Crown attorney Jelena Vlacic. The alteration did not require a hearing before a judge, because the Crown did not object. Vlacic confirmed in an interview that she consented to the change. "I'm not in a position to sort of make any comments," she said when asked why she agreed. Not unusual to grant passport request: lawyer Although Stronach was required to surrender his passport last year, his bail conditions do not mention any other restrictions on travel, a common feature, said Ottawa criminal lawyer Michael Spratt. "Bail is not intended to be punitive," he told CBC News in a Friday interview. "An accused person is presumed innocent." Spratt said the primary reason a court orders the surrender of a passport is to prevent an accused person from fleeing the country. While someone of Stronach's wealth has the means to leave, Spratt said that is not the only consideration at hand. "If someone, say, suddenly moved a lot of assets into that country, or bought a home there, or bought a one-way ticket to a country that doesn't have an extradition treaty, the Crown might take a much harder look at that," said Spratt, who is not part of the Stronach case. If those sorts of conditions don't exist, the Crown is likely to grant the return of a passport, he said. Spratt said in a case like Stronach's, where a high-profile person is facing multiple criminal charges, the release of a passport will raise some eyebrows. But it is not unusual for such a request to be granted. Shemesh, in an emailed statement to CBC News, said the paperwork was a "formality." "He is presumed innocent. He has no criminal record. He maintains his innocence and enjoys the same freedoms we all do." 'A disappointing double standard for wealthy' Stronach is a well-known political and business figure in Austria. Aside from the fame and wealth he garnered from leading the Ontario-based auto-parts giant Magna for decades, he once ran his own political party in Austria. Called Team Stronach, the party had limited electoral success in 2013 but was a thing of the past by 2014. He surrendered his passport at the courthouse in Brampton, Ont., on June 7, 2024. Stronach, 91 at the time, was arrested and charged with sexual assault, rape and forcible confinement in cases involving 10 women dating back decades. By October 2024, his charge sheet ballooned to 18 criminal counts. Stronach has denied all of the charges against him, calling the allegations made by the women "lies." He now faces two trials. Twelve of the charges against him will be heard in a Toronto courtroom starting on Nov. 16, 2026. The remaining charges will be tried in York Region, with a jury trial scheduled to begin on June 1, 2026. CBC News reached out to several of the women who allege Stronach assaulted them. They declined to comment or could not be reached on Friday. "I'm baffled by Frank Stronach's presence in Austria. It was reported that he had surrendered his passport," said Jane Boon, a former Magna intern who says she had a sexual encounter with Stronach in 1986, when she was 19 and he was 54. Last year, Boon spoke to Fifth Estate reporter Mark Kelley about her uncomfortable sexual experience with Stronach, which is not part of any of the criminal cases the former auto-parts magnate is facing. "It was a horrible abuse of power," she told Kelley. "This extravagant trip suggests a disappointing double standard for wealthy defendants of serious crimes," she said Friday of Stronach's recent trip to Austria. However, Spratt said it is not uncommon for passports to be returned to people facing a criminal trial. Sometimes it is for a medical or family emergency, he said, and other times for something as simple as a vacation. Requests to change bail are also common in high-profile cases, including sex crime trials. In January 2014, then-CBC Radio host Jian Ghomeshi faced seven sexual assault charges, for which he was later acquitted. He, too, had to surrender his passport, and his bail conditions required him to live with his mother. The Crown later agreed to modify his bail, which included the return of his passport. But former fashion mogul Peter Nygard, currently serving 11 years in prison after being found guilty of four counts of sexual assault, was denied changes to his bail in 2024 because a judge said he presented a flight risk.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store