Institute for Public Affairs of Montreal |
|
The Quebec Election A Transition Not a Transformation |
|
Beryl P. Wajsman | 27 March 2007 |
|
|
In the immortal words of “Ti-René”, everybody take a valium. It would be tempting to write that Monday’s election results were somehow “transformational” in the sense that Perhaps the most that can be said is that after Monday’s Quebec election the motto for the Province should be changed from “Je me souviens” to “Non, je n’ai rien oublié.” Not in the sense of Charles Aznavour’s personal memory of betrayed love, but in the sense of Quebeckers’ collective memory of betrayed hopes. Despite the first minority government since 1878, this election was more a transition than a transformation. What happened was a race to the bottom by mediocre parties whose leaders left no one excited and whose platforms were a muddled re-hash of worn ideas. As with all majority governments this one was the Liberals to lose and they did. Voters cast ballots not for anything that was proposed, but for that which they least opposed. And, no, they forgot nothing. Most Quebeckers were tired of referendum discussions. André Boisclair didn’t seem to get the memo. He went so far into the fray as to audaciously declare that even with a minority government he would bully ahead with one anyway. His case wasn’t helped any by his ill-advised attempt at obfuscation in calling the planned referendum a “public consultation”. Those who wanted separation saw it as cowardice. Those who didn’t saw it as deceit. In either case Boisclair was hurt even more when one of his star candidates, former CSN President Marc Laviolette, seemed to mimic Jacques Parizeau’s “lobster trap” comment by saying “It doesn’t matter if the cat is black or white as long as he catches the mouse.” The PQ’s elitist contempt for Quebeckers was not lost on voters.
Looking back on the Liberal record the amount of baggage is astonishing. Failed health and drug care policies; an inability to produce promised tax cuts; expansion of nanny-state regulations; no reduction in the bureaucracy; labour policies that brought over a million demonstrators into the streets; the private school funding debacle and the daycare mess. To the broad public it seemed every file the Liberals touched turned to mush. Even the one time during the campaign that Charest spoke candidly - on the divisibility of Charest even failed to get a bounce from the goodies in Harper’s budget by turning around and promising $700 million of that money as tax cuts. I first got wind that something was amiss last fall. Charest’s Liberals were well behind the PQ in the polls. But I was told by several leading labour leaders that there was no way Boisclair could be sold in the regions and not to bet on a PQ win. “Le Québec profonde” was about ready to revolt - not against anglophones - but against the In the last election, because of bad blood between FTQ President Henri Massé and Premier Landry, the FTQ – This time around Massé announced early in the campaign that though he felt the PQ platform was closest to labour’s agenda, he would not be endorsing André Boisclair’s leadership. The signal to the PQ was clear. Expect labour votes, but don’t hold your breath for labour work. And without that, getting the optimal PQ turnout proved well nigh impossible. What labour didn’t foresee however was the rise of the ADQ. There was inner turmoil among Liberals as well. Several high-ranking advisers wanted Charest to wait until late April for a vote to make sure the snowbirds were back from down south. They felt that the 2-4% voter difference would be important in at least a dozen ridings. But most senior Liberals wrote off the ADQ - nobody saw its strength coming - and discounted the danger. They were as wrong as labour’s bosses. With many PQ ridings disaffected with Boisclair personally, and many Liberal ridings disaffected with Charest politically, The big surprise was Dumont gave Quebeckers enough of an “optique” that he would vote with those who would renounce referendums on sovereignty (though no one is clear on what his “autonomy” means); that he would work to roll back big government and make Quebec more competitive (though he was sparse on specifics and wants yet more unspecified powers from Ottawa); that he would protect Quebec values (though few can define them and Dumont’s own comments about “our founding European cultural and religious traditions” are troubling) that they have entrusted him with the power to shape our purpose. And perhaps he has the maturity to properly steward that trust. For what was particularly telling in the leaders’ remarks Monday night was that while Boisclair continued the sturm-und-drang of “sang et langue” going on about “notre patrie” and keeping alive the dreams of “those who came here 400 years ago”, Dumont talked about the hopes of working people, the elderly and young families trying to make ends meet on constricting incomes and trying to make their dreams realities despite restrictive rule. The irony was not lost on the dozen or so reporters I was with. The “left-wing” Boisclair played the exclusionary ethnic card of his cultural “uberclass”. The supposedly “right-wing” Beryl Wajsman is president of the Institute for Public Affairs of
|