logo
André Pratte: Pablo Rodriguez has won over the Quebec Liberals. That was the easy part

André Pratte: Pablo Rodriguez has won over the Quebec Liberals. That was the easy part

National Post19-06-2025
Article content
Rodriguez is a hard worker. He will need every ounce of energy he can muster; a tremendous amount of work is necessary to rebuild the QLP. Support for the party outside the region of Montreal is meagre. In many ridings, there are few party members left, no association and no money. Depending on the public opinion surveys in the next few months, finding first-rate candidates in all 125 ridings may not be an easy task.
Article content
The current political situation in Quebec does offer some hope for the provincial liberals. According to a Pallas poll conducted right after Rodriguez was elected, the PQ leads (as it has for months now) with 31 per cent of the vote, followed by the QLP at 26 per cent, its best score in five years. The party currently in government, François Legault's Coalition Avenir Québec, slides to third place, with only 15 per cent of voting intentions. With such numbers, the next provincial election may turn out to be a traditional PQ-QLP confrontation.
Article content
If this is so, it will be tempting for the provincial Liberals to run a campaign based solely on Quebecers' fear of another separation referendum, a strategy that has worked well in the past. In 2026, though, that would be a mistake. Although most Quebecers want to remain in Canada, especially with Donald Trump's annexation threats, their priorities lie elsewhere: the cost of living, the catastrophic state of public services, the shortage of housing, high immigration, etc. They will expect concrete and credible solutions to those problems from the parties vying for power.
Article content
Under their charismatic leader Paul St-Pierre Plamondon, the Péquistes have demonstrated a knack for developing original policy ideas. Rodriguez's Liberals will have to come up with their own, more convincing proposals. If they are not successful, Quebecers may vote PQ notwithstanding the referendum threat.
Article content
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Michael Taube: Poilievre proved Alberta separatists were never a force to be reckoned with
Michael Taube: Poilievre proved Alberta separatists were never a force to be reckoned with

National Post

time3 minutes ago

  • National Post

Michael Taube: Poilievre proved Alberta separatists were never a force to be reckoned with

Conservative Leader Pierre Poilievre easily won Monday's Battle River-Crowfoot byelection with 80.4 per cent of the vote. If anyone actually expected a different outcome in this extremely safe Alberta riding, they were fooling themselves. Article content While his victory wasn't surprising, the fact that he was in this potentially precarious position to begin with certainly was. Article content Article content Article content Poilievre had served as an MP since 2004 in two Ottawa-based ridings: Nepean-Carleton (redistricted in 2012) and Carleton. He lost to little-known Liberal candidate Bruce Fanjoy in the April 28 election. Several factors likely contributed to it, including: voters having turned away from Conservative candidates in the Ottawa region, concerns related to U.S. President Donald Trump and tariffs, and, as Poilievre suggested in a July 12 interview with CBC's The House, his campaign promise to cut public service jobs led to a 'very aggressive campaign, particularly the public sector unions … to defeat me on that basis.' Article content Article content No matter the reason or reasons, Poilievre needed to find a new parliamentary seat. This occurred when Conservative MP Damien Kurekresigned from his Battle River-Crowfoot seat and opened the doors to a byelection. Article content Battle River-Crowfoot has long been regarded as one of the safest Conservative ridings in Canada. Many residents in this rural Alberta riding have a fiscally conservative approach to politics and economics and socially conservative sensibilities. While the independence movement in Western Canada has some sway in these parts, its overall impact clearly didn't affect the byelection result. Article content The safeness of the seat didn't stop a slew of comments from the media and candidates like Bonnie Critchley, the independent military veteran who finished a surprising second in Battle River-Crowfoot, that Poilievre was an outsider in this race, and so would be at a disadvantage. While it's true that he had never lived in the riding, he was born and raised in Calgary and didn't move to Ottawa until 2000. Nevertheless the separatists in the riding pushed the narrative that because he called himself patriot, he didn't have the riding's best interests at heart — or the province's. They also pointed to his support of equalization payments and supply management as evidence of this. Article content Article content It didn't amount to much. This is one of the safest Conservative seats in Canada, and any perceived weaknesses in Poilievre's policies and beliefs was clearly exaggerated by his opponents. Article content The riding's current boundaries were created during the federal re-election distribution in 2012. There hasn't been a close election result to date. Kevin Sorenson won with 47,552 votes, or 80.91 per cent of the vote, in 2015. He was replaced by Damien Kurek, who won with 53,309 votes (85.49 per cent), 41,819 votes (71.3 per cent) and 53,684 votes (82.84 per cent) in 2019, 2021 and 2025, respectively.

Integrity commissioner sanctions Chatham councillor over hub project comments
Integrity commissioner sanctions Chatham councillor over hub project comments

CBC

time4 minutes ago

  • CBC

Integrity commissioner sanctions Chatham councillor over hub project comments

Social Sharing Chatham-Kent's integrity commissioner is recommending council impose sanctions against Ward 6 Coun. Alysson Storey. The investigation ensued after citizen complaints were filed. It's suggested her pay be docked for 10 days with a formal reprimand imposed. Council will now have to vote on the recommendations. In a 76-page report issued by the municipality's integrity commissioner Suzanne Craig, it said Storey "undermined staff" and "contravened" the code of conduct — mainly during a town hall meeting in Dresden in October and subsequent council session. "[Storey] either failed to appreciate or did not attend to the fact that her public comments at the Dresden meeting were received as undermining a council interim decision to move into the next phase of the project and in undermining the recommendations of staff upon which the decisions were made," Craig said in the conclusions portion of her report. That Dresden meeting was centred around the proposed $53-million Chatham-Kent community hub project that would combine municipal offices, along with a library and museum in the former Sears store at the Downtown Chatham Centre shopping mall. Among other things, Craig said the councillor made comments about municipal staff not being open about the project's financial specifics — and "gave oxygen to inaccurate comments." "A councillor may speak on a matter of importance to the community but may not make misstatements about staff's advice or drive a narrative which undermines staff reports through unsupported suggestions," the integrity commissioner penned. CBC News contacted Storey but didn't hear back by publication.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store