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Alliance Quebec

Alliance Quebec (AQ) was a group formed in 1982 to lobby on behalf of English-speaking Quebecers in the province of Quebec, Canada. It began as an umbrella group of many English-speaking organizations and institutions in the province, with approximately 15,000 members. At its height in the mid-1980s, the group had a network of affiliated anglophone groups throughout the province. However, a prolonged decline in influence, group cohesion, membership and funding ultimately led to its closure in 2005.

Early years — constructive engagement: 1982–1989 edit

The Parti Québécois (PQ), a party that supports the sovereignty of Quebec and the dominant use of French in most areas of public and business life, won a majority in the Quebec National Assembly (the province's legislature) in 1976. The vast majority of Quebec anglophones (i.e., Quebecers who speak English as a first language), who at that time made up approximately 13% of Quebec's population (see Language demographics of Quebec), did not support this party.[1] Some anglophones formed local lobby groups to promote federalism and argue against new laws such as the Charter of the French Language (also known as "Bill 101"). After the Parti Québécois was re-elected in 1981, several of these groups (notably the "Positive Action Committee" and the "Council of Quebec Minorities") joined in May 1982,[2] as "The Alliance of Language Communities in Quebec" (or "Alliance Québec") in an effort to gain more influence and to start a province-level dialogue between linguistic groups.[3]

AQ's ideology reflected a desire to promote the rights and interests of the English language community while recognizing there were legitimate goals being pursued by the provincial government in promoting the French language, such promotion having strong support in the majority Francophone population. Alliance Quebec's best-known accomplishments from its earliest years included:

  • Alliance Quebec's first success was to lobby the PQ to amend Bill 101. In 1983, the Charter of the French Language was amended (Law 57) to recognize in its preamble to the Charter of the French Language the institutions of the Anglophone community in Québec, abolish language testing for people educated in Quebec, and to widen the use of English in Anglophone communities and public institutions.
  • Alliance Quebec also worked to get English language health and social service guarantees. As a result, in 1986, Law 142 was enacted which compels regional authorities to draw up programmes for access in the English language to health and social services throughout Quebec.
  • With the financial support and legal leadership of Alliance Quebec, Bill 101's prohibition of English language signs was challenged in court. In 1988, in its decision Ford v. Quebec (Attorney General), the Supreme Court of Canada concluded that the prohibition of all other languages but French on public signs and posters and in commercial advertising was in opposition to the freedom of expression but opened the door to the clear predominance of French. This solution was ultimately adopted by the Government of Quebec and prevails to this day.

The group had widespread grassroots volunteer activity in its early years. It formed at least 20 regional chapters, including 8 in the anglophone neighbourhoods of Montreal. The federal government subsidized AQ in an effort to promote minority official language groups in the province, providing it with most of AQ's budget ($1.4 million in 1986).[4] Similar funding was provided to French language groups outside Quebec.

In addition to AQ's regional chapters, six federally funded anglophone groups outside of Montreal became affiliated with AQ and sent delegates to its annual convention. Affiliated Quebec anglophone universities, CEGEPs and health and social service institution and community associations were also allowed to send delegates. Institutional members brought AQ substantial public policy expertise and participated in the policy formulation process.

By the end of the 1980s, AQ claimed to have 40,000 people on its membership list[4] (including members of regional associations affiliated with AQ, such as the Townshippers' Association). This led to critiques that people who did not renew their memberships were not removed from this list and that the actual number of dues-paying members hovered around 5,000.[5]

Many of Alliance Quebec's founders were active in the Liberal Party of Quebec, the main opposition party while the PQ was in government. The Liberal Party of Quebec won the provincial election of 1985, and many of AQ's initial leaders were recruited to work for the new government. Several of AQ's highly educated and bilingual early staff members went on to become Liberal cabinet ministers in later years, such as Thomas Mulcair, Kathleen Weil, and Geoffrey Kelley (Jacques-Cartier), while others served as MNAs—Russell Williams (Nelligan), Russell Copeman (NDG). While this initially gave AQ strong lobbying contacts within the government, the departure of many of the group's founding leaders eventually hurt the group. Some have argued that the 1985 election was the beginning of a decline in influence of Alliance Quebec, as English-speakers believed the new government was friendlier and so the need for AQ was lower, while the Liberals had more connections with English-speakers than the PQ and so relied less on AQ to transmit their points of view.[6] The group also faced criticism, almost since its founding, that it was not aggressive enough in its demands.[7]

In December 1988, AQ's offices were destroyed in a case of arson. Then-president Royal Orr sued Le Journal de Montréal and Télé-Métropole, for falsely reporting that he was the "prime suspect" in setting the blaze.[8] The lawsuit was eventually settled out of court.[9]

Middle years — stagnation and infighting: 1989–1998 edit

AQ's weakened bargaining position was brought to prominence in 1989 when the Liberal government passed Bill 178. Although the Liberal Party had campaigned in 1985 to loosen the legal restrictions on languages other than French, Bill 178 overturned the Supreme Court's "Ford" decision (see above), restoring the prohibition on non-French commercial signage (with an exception for small signs inside stores). Alliance Quebec's inability to prevent the adoption of Bill 178 by the Liberal government it had perceived as an ally, opened it to criticism from the anglophone community.[10] Right-wing critics of AQ dubbed it "Compliance Quebec" and "the lamb lobby" for its perceived unwillingness to challenge the government.[11]

Internal tension arose among the directors of AQ over the issue of denied access to English language schools in the province. Tensions increased over whether or not to support the Liberals in the Quebec general election of 1989 in spite of Bill 178. Some prominent AQ leaders urged a protest vote by anglophones, either by spoiling their ballots or voting for the upstart Equality Party that opposed the Liberals' legislation. The Equality Party won four seats in the National Assembly in 1989, but quickly lost its support due to infighting, garnering only 0.3% of the vote in 1994. Rebuffed at the ballot box, some of the Equality Party's remaining active members instead concentrated on winning elected positions in Alliance Quebec[12] in order to have AQ promote the Equality Party's platform (notably, favouring a complete repeal of all mandatory use of French in Quebec, and partitioning Quebec in the event of independence). Public infighting between so-called "moderates" (sympathetic to the Liberal Party) and "radicals" (the remaining members of the Equality Party) within AQ throughout the 1990s, along with a gradual decrease in interest among the general Quebec population in language politics, led to the marginalization of AQ in the province's politics.

While infighting preoccupied the board of directors and annual convention, the grassroots elements of AQ became less active. Government funding allowed for a permanent staff for the group, which relied less and less on volunteers. AQ's smallest regional chapters, in Quebec's Magdalen Islands, Lower North Shore and Baie-Comeau, closed down for lack of members,[13] while six of the group's eight chapters on the Island of Montreal merged in order to avoid closing.[14]

In 1996, the Chief Electoral Officer of Quebec investigated alleged irregularities during the 1995 Quebec sovereignty referendum, finding among other things that votes in three mainly federalist ridings had been rejected without valid reasons. Alliance Quebec sued the Quebec government to try to force it to re-examine the rejected ballots in all 125 Quebec ridings. The trial judge ruled against AQ in 2000. AQ appealed, but ceased operations in 2005 (see below). In 2008 the Chief Electoral Officer got the court's permission to destroy the ballots after ruling that AQ's appeal had taken too long.[15]

Final years — radicalization and closure: 1998–2005 edit

In May 1998, the group elected a "radical" president, Montreal Gazette columnist William Johnson. Previously a vocal critic of AQ, he won by rallying a group known derisively as "angryphones" (mainly members of the tiny Equality Party and some listeners of right wing talk radio shows, particularly the Howard Galganov show). He in turn supported Equality Party members for positions on AQ's board of directors. Unlike previous presidents, he made no attempt to meet with political leaders, preferring to conduct his lobbying through media, such as on radio talk shows. Also unlike previous presidents, who generally accepted the objectives of Bill 101 and focused on changing how it was applied, Johnson questioned the commitment to tolerance and human rights of those who supported Bill 101.[16]

After his election, Johnson organized two demonstrations against stores, in particular Eaton's and The Hudson's Bay Company, that did not place English on their in-store advertising[17] (which was once again legal after amendments to the Charter of the French Language in 1994). Johnson told a crowd of demonstrators that he refused an Eaton's offer to put up English signs in their stores if AQ would quietly call off the protest, as Johnson wanted to make it a public issue. Johnson also had AQ's constitution amended to add his view that Canada's federal government should refuse to recognize a Quebec unilateral declaration of independence. Johnson also made headlines when the Entartistes threw a cream pie in his face while he marched in Montreal's 1998 Saint-Jean-Baptiste Day parade.[18]

Johnson's presidential campaign and his first six months as president temporarily brought more media attention and members to Alliance Quebec, as the PQ government and Quebec nationalist groups publicly criticized AQ's new, more confrontational tone. However, Johnson called off the group's protests in October 1998[19] and AQ's media coverage fell considerably, never to recover.[20] Johnson's presidency and those of his similarly minded successors also provoked a negative reaction from the mainstream community of anglophones that formerly supported AQ. Links to the community's key healthcare, educational and community institutions vanished.[21] Several events during these years highlighted the group's lack of support, which ultimately caused it to close down:

  • half of the group's board of directors (those not associated with the Equality Party) quit the group en masse in May 1999,[22] calling Johnson "a bully and a publicity hound";[23]
  • in a study published in 2000, only 16% of Quebec anglophones named Alliance Quebec as the group that best protected their interests;[24]
  • the number of members of AQ declined steadily (4,198 members in May 1998; 2,440 members in August 2001; 1,554 members in December 2003);[25]
  • Chapters and affiliated groups severed their ties, including some that removed the word "Alliance" from their names to avoid being associated with AQ;[26]
  • the severity of infighting among remaining members increased, sometimes requiring intervention by the courts;[27]
  • private donations ($250,000 in the mid-1990s) dropped over 90% from 1998 to 2003, with corporate donations stopping completely;
  • the federal government, its main sponsor (providing over 90% of AQ's annual budget), decreased funding to the group by 69% between 2000 and 2004. The first funding decrease (from $934,000 to $634,000 annually) came in 2001 after twenty anglophone groups ended their affiliation with Alliance Quebec and asked for separate government funding through the newly formed Quebec Community Groups Network. A second series of funding cuts (to $200,000 annually) came in 2003-2004 after federal government dissatisfaction with AQ's lack of spending controls and a drop in its membership and influence.[28] When the Department of Canadian Heritage finally discontinued its grant in 2005 after AQ failed to produce audited financial statements,[29] the group became insolvent and ceased activity.[30]

Structure edit

Alliance Quebec was registered as a non-profit association in Quebec, with a headquarters in Montreal. Anyone could join as a member by paying a nominal fee of $5–$10. Membership entitled them to participate in the regional chapter in which they lived. Each regional chapter had its own board of directors and executive and obtained their budget mainly from membership fees.

Each chapter could send nine delegates to the annual convention, which took place each May in Montreal. In the 1990s, six chapters in central Montreal merged, which allowed the merged chapter to send up to 54 delegates. (In the William Johnson era, the West Island chapter's number of delegates was increased to reflect that it was the chapter with the second-largest number of members.) A youth commission of members under thirty years of age also existed and could send up to 18 delegates to the convention. Affiliated groups such as the Townshippers' Association could also send delegates, as could affiliated universities, hospitals and community groups. The outgoing president and board of directors were also entitled to vote at the convention, representing 41 delegates. In theory, an annual convention could have nearly 400 delegates during the 1990s.[31] In practice, the number of delegates attending annual conventions decreased over time as membership fell and affiliated groups stopped participating; the annual convention in 1985 had about 470 delegates[32] while each of the conventions from 1999 onward had under 100 delegates.

The annual convention chose the president and treasurer of AQ for the upcoming year. (In the William Johnson era, the president's term was lengthened to two years, although each subsequent president resigned before the end of their full two-year term.) The delegates would also choose the board of directors. Half of the forty-person board of directors of AQ would be up for election annually for a two-year term; the top twenty candidates who received the most votes being elected. The new board of directors would meet immediately after the convention to choose the remaining executive positions, including vice president, vice president "off-island" (meaning from outside of Montreal), secretary, and chairman of the board. The group also had an "Advisory Council" of prominent anglophones to advise the group on important issues from time to time, but this fell into disuse by the late 1990s.

The executives and directors were volunteer positions (although the president received a stipend.) There were also a number of paid staff members (around two dozen in 1994),[33] such as a general director, a fundraiser, receptionists, researchers and organizers, paid for mainly from federal government grants.

For most of its existence, AQ also maintained committees to study issues. These included (at various times)committees for health and social services, education, access to English schools, youth employment, legal affairs, communication, internal rules, and membership. Some committees organized events and activities. One of these activities, "Youth Employment Services", became independent of AQ in the 1990s and continues to operate.[34] Larger chapters also had some committees, especially in the group's early years.

Presidents edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Stevenson, Garth (1999). Garth Stevenson, Community Besieged, p.135. McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP. ISBN 9780773518391. Retrieved 2011-04-10 – via Google Books.
  2. ^ "Montreal Gazette (February 27, 1982, p.A5)". 1982-02-27. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  3. ^ Levine, Marc (1982-11-05). See Marc Levine, The Reconquest of Montreal, p.124. Temple University Press. ISBN 9780877228998. Retrieved 2011-04-10 – via Google Books.
  4. ^ a b "Montreal Gazette (May 31, 1986, p.B-5)". Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  5. ^ Graeme Decarie, CJAD 800 radio (August 1989); see also Prosperi at p.59.
  6. ^ Stevenson, Garth (1999). Garth Stevenson,Community Besieged, p.201. ISBN 9780773518391. Retrieved 2011-04-10 – via Google Books.
  7. ^ ""Alliance Quebec report card: full marks for effort", Montreal Gazette (June 4, 1983)". News.google.ca. 1983-06-04. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  8. ^ "Candidate faces tough job". Stanstead Journal. August 23, 1989. p. 2. Retrieved August 18, 2017.
  9. ^ Garth Stevenson (1999). Community Besieged: The Anglophone Minority and the Politics of Quebec. McGill-Queen's University Press. p. 203. ISBN 9780773518391. Retrieved August 18, 2017 – via Internet Archive.
  10. ^ Stevenson, Garth (1999). Garth Stevenson, Community Besieged, p.204. ISBN 9780773518391. Retrieved 2011-04-10 – via Google Books.
  11. ^ Mordecai Richler, Oh Canada, Oh Quebec: Requiem for a Divided Country (Toronto: Penguin Books, 1992), 38.
  12. ^ "Philip Preville, "Million Dollar Bill", Montreal Mirror (April 9, 1998)". Montrealmirror.com. 1998-04-09. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  13. ^ Two members of these closed chapters could attend the annual convention: see Laurentianweb, "Alliance Quebec Information: Regional Community Organizations"
  14. ^ The new Montreal Chapter could send six times as many delegates to the annual convention as the other chapters; see LaurentianWeb, "Alliance Quebec Information"
  15. ^ . Cbc.ca. 2008-05-01. Archived from the original on May 2, 2008. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  16. ^ See e.g., W. Johnson, "The Historical Background of the Situation of English-speaking Quebecers", quoted in Language and Language Laws in Quebec
  17. ^ "CBC News". Cbc.ca. 1998-11-13. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  18. ^ . .canada.com. 2009-06-16. Archived from the original on 2013-10-17. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  19. ^ . Business.highbeam.com. 1998-10-12. Archived from the original on 2012-03-15. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  20. ^ "Google News archive for "Alliance Quebec"". Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  21. ^ "CBC News February 1, 2000". Cbc.ca. 2000-02-02. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  22. ^ "CBC News May 6, 1999". Cbc.ca. 1999-05-06. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  23. ^ > (Toledo Blade, May 7, 1999)
  24. ^ "CROP-Missisquoi Institute, Survey of the English-Speaking Community of Quebec, 2000". Ocol-clo.gc.ca. 2008-09-26. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  25. ^ . Archives.vigile.net. 2003-12-05. Archived from the original on 2011-07-24. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  26. ^ Neighbours Rouyn Noranda 2007-10-11 at the Wayback Machine, formerly Alliance Quebec Rouyn-Noranda Chapter; "Regional Association of West Quebecers", formerly "The Outaouais Alliance"
  27. ^ "D'Andrea v. Alliance Quebec, March 30, 2004 (Quebec Superior Court)". Jugements.qc.ca. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  28. ^ Francis Scarpaleggia, MP[permanent dead link]
  29. ^ T. Peloquin, "Alliance Québec poursuivi pour loyer impayé" (La Presse 30 June 2005)
  30. ^ . Archives.vigile.net. Archived from the original on 2011-07-24. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  31. ^ Chris Goodfellow (1998-05-01). ""Alliance Quebec Information" (1998)". LaurentianWeb. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  32. ^ "Montreal Gazette (May 1, 1985, p.A4)". 1985-05-01. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  33. ^ Paul Prosperi (1995). The Dynamics of Ethno-Linguistic Mobilization in Canada: A Case Study of Alliance Quebec (PDF) (MA thesis). University of Ottawa.
  34. ^ Youth Employment Services website
  35. ^ Stevenson, Garth (1999). G. Stevenson, Community Besieged, p.185. ISBN 9780773518391. Retrieved 2011-04-10 – via Google Books.
  36. ^ "Val D'Or Star (July 12, 1989, p.5". 1989-07-12. Retrieved 2011-04-10.
  37. ^ "Constance Hope Biography (Pradeium Adivsors, 2008)". Praedium-advisors.com. Retrieved 2011-04-10.

Further reading edit

  • P. Prosperi, The Dynamics of Ethno-Linguistic Mobilisation in Canada: a Case Study of Alliance Quebec (University of Ottawa: December 1995)

alliance, quebec, group, formed, 1982, lobby, behalf, english, speaking, quebecers, province, quebec, canada, began, umbrella, group, many, english, speaking, organizations, institutions, province, with, approximately, members, height, 1980s, group, network, a. Alliance Quebec AQ was a group formed in 1982 to lobby on behalf of English speaking Quebecers in the province of Quebec Canada It began as an umbrella group of many English speaking organizations and institutions in the province with approximately 15 000 members At its height in the mid 1980s the group had a network of affiliated anglophone groups throughout the province However a prolonged decline in influence group cohesion membership and funding ultimately led to its closure in 2005 Contents 1 Early years constructive engagement 1982 1989 2 Middle years stagnation and infighting 1989 1998 3 Final years radicalization and closure 1998 2005 4 Structure 5 Presidents 6 Notes 7 Further readingEarly years constructive engagement 1982 1989 editThe Parti Quebecois PQ a party that supports the sovereignty of Quebec and the dominant use of French in most areas of public and business life won a majority in the Quebec National Assembly the province s legislature in 1976 The vast majority of Quebec anglophones i e Quebecers who speak English as a first language who at that time made up approximately 13 of Quebec s population see Language demographics of Quebec did not support this party 1 Some anglophones formed local lobby groups to promote federalism and argue against new laws such as the Charter of the French Language also known as Bill 101 After the Parti Quebecois was re elected in 1981 several of these groups notably the Positive Action Committee and the Council of Quebec Minorities joined in May 1982 2 as The Alliance of Language Communities in Quebec or Alliance Quebec in an effort to gain more influence and to start a province level dialogue between linguistic groups 3 AQ s ideology reflected a desire to promote the rights and interests of the English language community while recognizing there were legitimate goals being pursued by the provincial government in promoting the French language such promotion having strong support in the majority Francophone population Alliance Quebec s best known accomplishments from its earliest years included Alliance Quebec s first success was to lobby the PQ to amend Bill 101 In 1983 the Charter of the French Language was amended Law 57 to recognize in its preamble to the Charter of the French Language the institutions of the Anglophone community in Quebec abolish language testing for people educated in Quebec and to widen the use of English in Anglophone communities and public institutions Alliance Quebec also worked to get English language health and social service guarantees As a result in 1986 Law 142 was enacted which compels regional authorities to draw up programmes for access in the English language to health and social services throughout Quebec With the financial support and legal leadership of Alliance Quebec Bill 101 s prohibition of English language signs was challenged in court In 1988 in its decision Ford v Quebec Attorney General the Supreme Court of Canada concluded that the prohibition of all other languages but French on public signs and posters and in commercial advertising was in opposition to the freedom of expression but opened the door to the clear predominance of French This solution was ultimately adopted by the Government of Quebec and prevails to this day The group had widespread grassroots volunteer activity in its early years It formed at least 20 regional chapters including 8 in the anglophone neighbourhoods of Montreal The federal government subsidized AQ in an effort to promote minority official language groups in the province providing it with most of AQ s budget 1 4 million in 1986 4 Similar funding was provided to French language groups outside Quebec In addition to AQ s regional chapters six federally funded anglophone groups outside of Montreal became affiliated with AQ and sent delegates to its annual convention Affiliated Quebec anglophone universities CEGEPs and health and social service institution and community associations were also allowed to send delegates Institutional members brought AQ substantial public policy expertise and participated in the policy formulation process By the end of the 1980s AQ claimed to have 40 000 people on its membership list 4 including members of regional associations affiliated with AQ such as the Townshippers Association This led to critiques that people who did not renew their memberships were not removed from this list and that the actual number of dues paying members hovered around 5 000 5 Many of Alliance Quebec s founders were active in the Liberal Party of Quebec the main opposition party while the PQ was in government The Liberal Party of Quebec won the provincial election of 1985 and many of AQ s initial leaders were recruited to work for the new government Several of AQ s highly educated and bilingual early staff members went on to become Liberal cabinet ministers in later years such as Thomas Mulcair Kathleen Weil and Geoffrey Kelley Jacques Cartier while others served as MNAs Russell Williams Nelligan Russell Copeman NDG While this initially gave AQ strong lobbying contacts within the government the departure of many of the group s founding leaders eventually hurt the group Some have argued that the 1985 election was the beginning of a decline in influence of Alliance Quebec as English speakers believed the new government was friendlier and so the need for AQ was lower while the Liberals had more connections with English speakers than the PQ and so relied less on AQ to transmit their points of view 6 The group also faced criticism almost since its founding that it was not aggressive enough in its demands 7 In December 1988 AQ s offices were destroyed in a case of arson Then president Royal Orr sued Le Journal de Montreal and Tele Metropole for falsely reporting that he was the prime suspect in setting the blaze 8 The lawsuit was eventually settled out of court 9 Middle years stagnation and infighting 1989 1998 editAQ s weakened bargaining position was brought to prominence in 1989 when the Liberal government passed Bill 178 Although the Liberal Party had campaigned in 1985 to loosen the legal restrictions on languages other than French Bill 178 overturned the Supreme Court s Ford decision see above restoring the prohibition on non French commercial signage with an exception for small signs inside stores Alliance Quebec s inability to prevent the adoption of Bill 178 by the Liberal government it had perceived as an ally opened it to criticism from the anglophone community 10 Right wing critics of AQ dubbed it Compliance Quebec and the lamb lobby for its perceived unwillingness to challenge the government 11 Internal tension arose among the directors of AQ over the issue of denied access to English language schools in the province Tensions increased over whether or not to support the Liberals in the Quebec general election of 1989 in spite of Bill 178 Some prominent AQ leaders urged a protest vote by anglophones either by spoiling their ballots or voting for the upstart Equality Party that opposed the Liberals legislation The Equality Party won four seats in the National Assembly in 1989 but quickly lost its support due to infighting garnering only 0 3 of the vote in 1994 Rebuffed at the ballot box some of the Equality Party s remaining active members instead concentrated on winning elected positions in Alliance Quebec 12 in order to have AQ promote the Equality Party s platform notably favouring a complete repeal of all mandatory use of French in Quebec and partitioning Quebec in the event of independence Public infighting between so called moderates sympathetic to the Liberal Party and radicals the remaining members of the Equality Party within AQ throughout the 1990s along with a gradual decrease in interest among the general Quebec population in language politics led to the marginalization of AQ in the province s politics While infighting preoccupied the board of directors and annual convention the grassroots elements of AQ became less active Government funding allowed for a permanent staff for the group which relied less and less on volunteers AQ s smallest regional chapters in Quebec s Magdalen Islands Lower North Shore and Baie Comeau closed down for lack of members 13 while six of the group s eight chapters on the Island of Montreal merged in order to avoid closing 14 In 1996 the Chief Electoral Officer of Quebec investigated alleged irregularities during the 1995 Quebec sovereignty referendum finding among other things that votes in three mainly federalist ridings had been rejected without valid reasons Alliance Quebec sued the Quebec government to try to force it to re examine the rejected ballots in all 125 Quebec ridings The trial judge ruled against AQ in 2000 AQ appealed but ceased operations in 2005 see below In 2008 the Chief Electoral Officer got the court s permission to destroy the ballots after ruling that AQ s appeal had taken too long 15 Final years radicalization and closure 1998 2005 editIn May 1998 the group elected a radical president Montreal Gazette columnist William Johnson Previously a vocal critic of AQ he won by rallying a group known derisively as angryphones mainly members of the tiny Equality Party and some listeners of right wing talk radio shows particularly the Howard Galganov show He in turn supported Equality Party members for positions on AQ s board of directors Unlike previous presidents he made no attempt to meet with political leaders preferring to conduct his lobbying through media such as on radio talk shows Also unlike previous presidents who generally accepted the objectives of Bill 101 and focused on changing how it was applied Johnson questioned the commitment to tolerance and human rights of those who supported Bill 101 16 After his election Johnson organized two demonstrations against stores in particular Eaton s and The Hudson s Bay Company that did not place English on their in store advertising 17 which was once again legal after amendments to the Charter of the French Language in 1994 Johnson told a crowd of demonstrators that he refused an Eaton s offer to put up English signs in their stores if AQ would quietly call off the protest as Johnson wanted to make it a public issue Johnson also had AQ s constitution amended to add his view that Canada s federal government should refuse to recognize a Quebec unilateral declaration of independence Johnson also made headlines when the Entartistes threw a cream pie in his face while he marched in Montreal s 1998 Saint Jean Baptiste Day parade 18 Johnson s presidential campaign and his first six months as president temporarily brought more media attention and members to Alliance Quebec as the PQ government and Quebec nationalist groups publicly criticized AQ s new more confrontational tone However Johnson called off the group s protests in October 1998 19 and AQ s media coverage fell considerably never to recover 20 Johnson s presidency and those of his similarly minded successors also provoked a negative reaction from the mainstream community of anglophones that formerly supported AQ Links to the community s key healthcare educational and community institutions vanished 21 Several events during these years highlighted the group s lack of support which ultimately caused it to close down half of the group s board of directors those not associated with the Equality Party quit the group en masse in May 1999 22 calling Johnson a bully and a publicity hound 23 in a study published in 2000 only 16 of Quebec anglophones named Alliance Quebec as the group that best protected their interests 24 the number of members of AQ declined steadily 4 198 members in May 1998 2 440 members in August 2001 1 554 members in December 2003 25 Chapters and affiliated groups severed their ties including some that removed the word Alliance from their names to avoid being associated with AQ 26 the severity of infighting among remaining members increased sometimes requiring intervention by the courts 27 private donations 250 000 in the mid 1990s dropped over 90 from 1998 to 2003 with corporate donations stopping completely the federal government its main sponsor providing over 90 of AQ s annual budget decreased funding to the group by 69 between 2000 and 2004 The first funding decrease from 934 000 to 634 000 annually came in 2001 after twenty anglophone groups ended their affiliation with Alliance Quebec and asked for separate government funding through the newly formed Quebec Community Groups Network A second series of funding cuts to 200 000 annually came in 2003 2004 after federal government dissatisfaction with AQ s lack of spending controls and a drop in its membership and influence 28 When the Department of Canadian Heritage finally discontinued its grant in 2005 after AQ failed to produce audited financial statements 29 the group became insolvent and ceased activity 30 Structure editAlliance Quebec was registered as a non profit association in Quebec with a headquarters in Montreal Anyone could join as a member by paying a nominal fee of 5 10 Membership entitled them to participate in the regional chapter in which they lived Each regional chapter had its own board of directors and executive and obtained their budget mainly from membership fees Each chapter could send nine delegates to the annual convention which took place each May in Montreal In the 1990s six chapters in central Montreal merged which allowed the merged chapter to send up to 54 delegates In the William Johnson era the West Island chapter s number of delegates was increased to reflect that it was the chapter with the second largest number of members A youth commission of members under thirty years of age also existed and could send up to 18 delegates to the convention Affiliated groups such as the Townshippers Association could also send delegates as could affiliated universities hospitals and community groups The outgoing president and board of directors were also entitled to vote at the convention representing 41 delegates In theory an annual convention could have nearly 400 delegates during the 1990s 31 In practice the number of delegates attending annual conventions decreased over time as membership fell and affiliated groups stopped participating the annual convention in 1985 had about 470 delegates 32 while each of the conventions from 1999 onward had under 100 delegates The annual convention chose the president and treasurer of AQ for the upcoming year In the William Johnson era the president s term was lengthened to two years although each subsequent president resigned before the end of their full two year term The delegates would also choose the board of directors Half of the forty person board of directors of AQ would be up for election annually for a two year term the top twenty candidates who received the most votes being elected The new board of directors would meet immediately after the convention to choose the remaining executive positions including vice president vice president off island meaning from outside of Montreal secretary and chairman of the board The group also had an Advisory Council of prominent anglophones to advise the group on important issues from time to time but this fell into disuse by the late 1990s The executives and directors were volunteer positions although the president received a stipend There were also a number of paid staff members around two dozen in 1994 33 such as a general director a fundraiser receptionists researchers and organizers paid for mainly from federal government grants For most of its existence AQ also maintained committees to study issues These included at various times committees for health and social services education access to English schools youth employment legal affairs communication internal rules and membership Some committees organized events and activities One of these activities Youth Employment Services became independent of AQ in the 1990s and continues to operate 34 Larger chapters also had some committees especially in the group s early years Presidents editEric Maldoff 1982 1985 lawyer Michael Goldbloom 1985 1987 lawyer Royal Orr 1987 1989 teacher 35 Peter M Blaikie Q C 1989 lawyer Robert Keaton 1989 1993 political science professor 36 Michael Hamelin 1993 1997 lawyer Immigration and Refugee Board member Constance Middleton Hope 1997 1998 educator 37 William Johnson 1998 2000 journalist author Anthony Housefather 2000 2001 lawyer municipal politician Brent Tyler 2001 2004 lawyer Darryl Gray 2004 2005 member of the clergyNotes edit Stevenson Garth 1999 Garth Stevenson Community Besieged p 135 McGill Queen s Press MQUP ISBN 9780773518391 Retrieved 2011 04 10 via Google Books Montreal Gazette February 27 1982 p A5 1982 02 27 Retrieved 2011 04 10 Levine Marc 1982 11 05 See Marc Levine The Reconquest of Montreal p 124 Temple University Press ISBN 9780877228998 Retrieved 2011 04 10 via Google Books a b Montreal Gazette May 31 1986 p B 5 Retrieved 2011 04 10 Graeme Decarie CJAD 800 radio August 1989 see also Prosperi at p 59 Stevenson Garth 1999 Garth Stevenson Community Besieged p 201 ISBN 9780773518391 Retrieved 2011 04 10 via Google Books Alliance Quebec report card full marks for effort Montreal Gazette June 4 1983 News google ca 1983 06 04 Retrieved 2011 04 10 Candidate faces tough job Stanstead Journal August 23 1989 p 2 Retrieved August 18 2017 Garth Stevenson 1999 Community Besieged The Anglophone Minority and the Politics of Quebec McGill Queen s University Press p 203 ISBN 9780773518391 Retrieved August 18 2017 via Internet Archive Stevenson Garth 1999 Garth Stevenson Community Besieged p 204 ISBN 9780773518391 Retrieved 2011 04 10 via Google Books Mordecai Richler Oh Canada Oh Quebec Requiem for a Divided Country Toronto Penguin Books 1992 38 Philip Preville Million Dollar Bill Montreal Mirror April 9 1998 Montrealmirror com 1998 04 09 Retrieved 2011 04 10 Two members of these closed chapters could attend the annual convention see Laurentianweb Alliance Quebec Information Regional Community Organizations The new Montreal Chapter could send six times as many delegates to the annual convention as the other chapters see LaurentianWeb Alliance Quebec Information CBC News May 1 2008 Cbc ca 2008 05 01 Archived from the original on May 2 2008 Retrieved 2011 04 10 See e g W Johnson The Historical Background of the Situation of English speaking Quebecers quoted in Language and Language Laws in Quebec CBC News Cbc ca 1998 11 13 Retrieved 2011 04 10 Montreal Gazette 16 June 2009 canada com 2009 06 16 Archived from the original on 2013 10 17 Retrieved 2011 04 10 Maclean s October 12 1998 Business highbeam com 1998 10 12 Archived from the original on 2012 03 15 Retrieved 2011 04 10 Google News archive for Alliance Quebec Retrieved 2011 04 10 CBC News February 1 2000 Cbc ca 2000 02 02 Retrieved 2011 04 10 CBC News May 6 1999 Cbc ca 1999 05 06 Retrieved 2011 04 10 gt Toledo Blade May 7 1999 CROP Missisquoi Institute Survey of the English Speaking Community of Quebec 2000 Ocol clo gc ca 2008 09 26 Retrieved 2011 04 10 La Presse December 5 2003 Archives vigile net 2003 12 05 Archived from the original on 2011 07 24 Retrieved 2011 04 10 Neighbours Rouyn Noranda Archived 2007 10 11 at the Wayback Machine formerly Alliance Quebec Rouyn Noranda Chapter Regional Association of West Quebecers formerly The Outaouais Alliance D Andrea v Alliance Quebec March 30 2004 Quebec Superior Court Jugements qc ca Retrieved 2011 04 10 Francis Scarpaleggia MP permanent dead link T Peloquin Alliance Quebec poursuivi pour loyer impaye La Presse 30 June 2005 Ottawa Citizen May 20 2005 Archives vigile net Archived from the original on 2011 07 24 Retrieved 2011 04 10 Chris Goodfellow 1998 05 01 Alliance Quebec Information 1998 LaurentianWeb Retrieved 2011 04 10 Montreal Gazette May 1 1985 p A4 1985 05 01 Retrieved 2011 04 10 Paul Prosperi 1995 The Dynamics of Ethno Linguistic Mobilization in Canada A Case Study of Alliance Quebec PDF MA thesis University of Ottawa Youth Employment Services website Stevenson Garth 1999 G Stevenson Community Besieged p 185 ISBN 9780773518391 Retrieved 2011 04 10 via Google Books Val D Or Star July 12 1989 p 5 1989 07 12 Retrieved 2011 04 10 Constance Hope Biography Pradeium Adivsors 2008 Praedium advisors com Retrieved 2011 04 10 Further reading editM Patriquin Stomping Toward Oblivion Montreal Hour February 5 2004 P Prosperi The Dynamics of Ethno Linguistic Mobilisation in Canada a Case Study of Alliance Quebec University of Ottawa December 1995 Internet Archive of Alliance Quebec website 1997 2005 aq qc ca defunct Internet Archive of Alliance Quebec website 2003 2005 alliancequebec ca defunct Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alliance Quebec amp oldid 1194740322, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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