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Wikipedia

Parti Québécois

The Parti Québécois (pronounced [paʁti kebekwa]; French for '"Quebec Party"'; PQ) is a sovereignist[9] and social democratic[1] provincial political party in Quebec, Canada. The PQ advocates national sovereignty for Quebec involving independence of the province of Quebec from Canada and establishing a sovereign state. The PQ has also promoted the possibility of maintaining a loose political and economic sovereignty-association between Quebec and Canada. The party traditionally has support from the labour movement, but unlike most other social democratic parties, its ties with organized labour are informal.[10] Members and supporters of the PQ are nicknamed péquistes (Quebec French pronunciation: [pekɪst] (listen)[11]), a French word derived from the pronunciation of the party's initials in Quebec French.

Parti Québécois
AbbreviationPQ
LeaderPaul St-Pierre Plamondon
PresidentDieudonné Ella Oyono [fr]
FoundersRené Lévesque
Gilles Grégoire
Founded11 October 1968 (1968-10-11)
Merger ofMouvement Souveraineté-Association,
Ralliement national,
Rassemblement pour l'Indépendance Nationale
Headquarters1200, avenue Papineau
Suite 150
Montreal, Quebec
H2K 4R5
IdeologyQuebec nationalism[1]
Quebec sovereigntism
Social democracy[1][2][3][4]
Economic nationalism[5]
Political positionCentre-left[6][7][8]
Regional affiliationCOPPPAL (observer)
ColoursBlue
Seats in the National Assembly
3 / 125
Website
www.pq.org

The party is an associate member of COPPPAL.[12] The party has strong informal ties to the Bloc Québécois (BQ, whose members are known as "Bloquistes"), the federal party that has also advocated for the secession of Quebec from Canada, but the two are not linked organizationally. As with its federal counterpart, the Parti Québécois has been supported by a wide range of voters in Quebec, from large sections of organized labour to more conservative rural voters.[13][14]

History

Formation

The PQ is the result of the 1968 merger between former Quebec Liberal Party cabinet minister René Lévesque's Mouvement Souveraineté-Association and the Ralliement national.[15] Following the creation of the PQ, the Rassemblement pour l'Indépendance Nationale held a general assembly that voted to dissolve the RIN. Its former members were invited to join the new Parti Québécois.

The PQ's primary goals were to obtain political, economic and social autonomy for the province of Quebec. Lévesque introduced the strategy of referendums early in the 1970s.[16]

Lévesque and the PQ's first government

The PQ faced its first electoral test in the 1970 provincial election, winning seven seats. However, Lévesque was unable to get into the renamed National Assembly. Although it lost one seat in 1973, the decimation of the other parties, particularly the Union Nationale, allowed it to become the official opposition even though Lévesque was still unable to win a seat.

In the 1976 provincial election, the Parti Québécois won government for the first time, taking 71 of the 110 seats available. Lévesque became the Premier of Quebec. This provided cause for celebration among many French-speaking Quebecers, while it resulted in an acceleration of the migration of the province's Anglophone population and related economic activity toward Toronto.

The first PQ government was known as the "republic of professors" because of the large number of scholars in Lévesque's cabinet. The PQ was the first government to recognize the rights of Aboriginal peoples to self-determination, insofar as this self-determination did not affect the territorial integrity of Quebec. The PQ passed laws on public consultations and the financing of political parties, which ensured equal financing of political parties and limited contributions by individuals to $3000. However, the most prominent legacy of the PQ is the Charter of the French Language (Bill 101), a framework law which defines the linguistic primacy of French and seeks to make French the common public language of Quebec. It allowed the advancement of francophones towards management roles, until then largely out of their reach. Despite the fact that 85% of the population spoke French and most of them did not understand English, the language of management was English in most medium and large businesses. Critics, both Francophone and Anglophone, have however criticized the charter for restraining citizens' linguistic school choice, as it forbids immigrants and Quebecers of French descent from attending English-language schools funded by the state (private schools remained an option for those who could afford tuition). The Parti Québécois initiated the 1980 Quebec referendum seeking a mandate to begin negotiation for sovereignty-association.[17] It was rejected by 60 per cent of voters.

The party was re-elected in the 1981 election, but in November 1984 it experienced the most severe internal crisis of its existence. Lévesque wanted to focus on governing Quebec rather than sovereignty, and also wanted to adopt a more conciliatory approach on constitutional issues. This angered the more ardent sovereigntists, known as the purs et durs. Lévesque was forced to resign as a result. In September 1985, the party leadership election chose Pierre-Marc Johnson as his successor.

Despite its social-democratic past, the PQ failed to gain admission into the Socialist International, after the membership application was vetoed by the federal New Democratic Party.[18][19][20]

1985 defeat

The PQ led by Johnson was defeated by the Quebec Liberal Party in the 1985 election that saw Robert Bourassa return as premier. The Liberals served in office for two terms and attempted to negotiate a constitutional settlement with the rest of Canada but with the failure of the Meech Lake Accord and the Charlottetown Accord, two packages of proposed amendments to the Canadian constitution, the question of Quebec's status remained unresolved and the Quebec sovereignty movement revived.

Return to power under Parizeau

The PQ returned to power under the leadership of hardline sovereigntist Jacques Parizeau in the 1994 Quebec election. This saw the PQ win 77 seats and 44% of the vote, on a promise to hold an independence referendum within a year.[21] The following year, Parizeau called the 1995 Quebec referendum proposing negotiations on sovereignty. Again, the sovereigntists lost the vote. The final count showed 49.42% of voters supported negotiations that could eventually lead to sovereignty. On the night of the defeat, an emotionally drained Premier Parizeau stated that the loss was caused by "money and ethnic votes" (which led to accusations that Parizeau was racist) as well as by the divided votes amongst francophones. Parizeau resigned the next day (as he is alleged to have planned beforehand in case of a defeat).

Bouchard government

Lucien Bouchard, a former member of Prime Minister Brian Mulroney's Cabinet and later founder of the Bloc Québécois, a federal-level sovereigntist party, succeeded Parizeau as PQ leader, but chose not to call another referendum due to the absence of "winning conditions". Bouchard's government then balanced the provincial budget – a feat achieved in Canada only by the federal government and a few of the ten Canadian provinces at that point – by reducing government spending, including social programs. The PQ was re-elected in the 1998 election, despite receiving fewer votes than the Quebec Liberal Party led by former federal deputy prime minister Jean Charest. Bouchard resigned in 2001, and was succeeded as PQ leader and Quebec Premier by Bernard Landry, a former PQ Finance minister. Under Landry's leadership, the party lost the 2003 election to Jean Charest's Liberals.

Return to opposition

Mid-late 2004 was difficult for Landry's leadership, which was being contested. A vote was held during the party's June 2005 convention to determine whether Landry continued to have the confidence of the party membership. Landry said he wanted at least 80% of approval and after gaining 76.2% approval on the confidence vote from party membership on 4 June 2005, Landry announced his intention to resign.[22]

Louise Harel had been chosen to replace him until a new leader, André Boisclair, was elected 15 November 2005, through the party's 2005 leadership election. At the time of Boisclair's election, the PQ was as much as 20 percent ahead of the Liberals in opinion polls, suggesting that Boisclair would lead them to a landslide majority government in the next election.[23]

Splintering on the right and the left

Progressives on the left wing of the PQ perceived a rightward move by the party towards neoliberalism under Bouchard, Landry and Boisclair. In 2006, a new left-wing party, Québec solidaire, was formed which included many activists who would have formerly been members or supporters of the PQ. Over subsequent elections, the QS would attract increasing support from left-wing sovereigntists disillusioned with the PQ, while on the right, the ADQ and later the Coalition Avenir Québec attracted the votes of right-wing and soft sovereigntists who eventually become Quebec autonomists and Canadian federalists while retaining their Quebec nationalist identities, resulting in the PQ being squeezed from both sides.

Third place

The PQ was unable to maintain the momentum it briefly had under Boisclair, and in the 2007 provincial election, the party fell to 36 seats and behind the conservative Action démocratique du Québec (ADQ) in number of seats and the popular vote: this is the first time since 1973 that the party did not form the government or Official Opposition. Boisclair said that the voters clearly did not support a strategy of a rapid referendum in the first mandate of a PQ government. Instead of a policy convention following the election, the party held a presidents' council. The party caucus in the provincial legislative assembly was said to have supported Boisclair continuing as leader.

On 8 May 2007 Boisclair announced his resignation as leader of the PQ.[24] This was effective immediately, although Boisclair confirmed he would remain within the PQ caucus for the time being. He was replaced by veteran MNA François Gendron, pending a leadership race and convention.

 
Former PQ leader Pauline Marois greets voters in Quebec City on the eve of the 2012 general election.

Former Bloc Québécois leader Gilles Duceppe was the first to announce his intention to run for party leadership, on 11 May 2007. He was followed the same day by Pauline Marois. In a surprise move, Duceppe withdrew on the 12th – leaving Marois the only declared candidate. No other candidates came forward, and on 26 June 2007, Marois won the leadership by acclamation.

In June 2011, the party was shaken when three of its most prominent MNAs—popular actor Pierre Curzi, former cabinet minister Louise Beaudoin, and Lisette Lapointe, the wife of former premier Jacques Parizeau, followed the next day by a fourth, Jean-Martin Aussant, quit the party to sit as independents over Marois's support for a bill changing the law to permit an agreement between the City of Québec and Quebecor Inc. concerning the management of the new sports and entertainment complex in Quebec City.[25] Unrest continued later in the month when a fifth MNA, Benoit Charette, also quit, citing his dissatisfaction with the party's sole focus being sovereignty. Beaudoin rejoined the PQ caucus in 2012.[26]

Marois minority government

The party won a minority government under Marois in the 2012 provincial election with 54 of 125 seats in the National Assembly. It embarked on a program of "sovereigntist governance" in relations with the rest of Canada, to return Quebec to balanced budgets through higher taxes and debt reduction, to increase the use of French in public services, and to address resource development in Northern Quebec. However the PQ's 'new Bill 101' did not pass. The centrepiece of the government's program was a Quebec Charter of Values which would have curtailed minority religious identity by banning the wearing of religious symbols by those in the employ of the government, particularly Sikh turbans, Muslim veils and Jewish kippahs.

2014 defeat

Based on the charter's growing popularity among francophones, Marois called an early election for 7 April 2014 in an attempt to win a majority government. Despite leading in the polls when the writ was dropped, the campaign went badly due to several mishaps. The recruitment of star candidate Pierre Karl Péladeau, whose comments made sovereignty and the prospect of another referendum a focus of the campaign, as well as feminist Janette Bertrand suggesting that wealthy Muslim men were taking over swimming pools, among other incidents badly hurt the PQ.[1] Marois' government was defeated by the Liberals, led by Philippe Couillard, in the 2014 provincial election which resulted in a Liberal majority government. The PQ won 25% of the vote and 30 seats, its worst result in terms of popular vote since 1970. Marois lost her own seat, and announced her intention to resign as PQ leader that night.[27]

Stéphane Bédard was chosen interim parliamentary leader by the PQ caucus on 10 April 2014.[28]

On 20 October 2014 Lévis by-election, PQ candidate Alexandre Bégin came in third place, with 8.28% of the popular vote, only narrowly beating Québec Solidaire.[29]

Péladeau leadership

On 27 November 2014, Pierre Karl Péladeau announced his intentions to run for PQ's leadership, joining Bernard Drainville, Martine Ouellet, Jean-François Lisée, Alexandre Cloutier, and Pierre Céré.[30]

Despite a fiercely contested race, Péladeau was the frontrunner for much of the campaign, causing Jean-François Lisée to drop out in January 2015, Bernard Drainville to drop out on 22 April 2015,[31] and Pierre Céré to follow Drainville only five days before the leadership election.[32]

On 15 May 2015, Pierre Karl Péladeau was elected permanent leader.[33]

On 2 May 2016, Péladeau announced that he was retiring from politics to dedicate more time to his family.[34]

Jean-François Lisée leadership

Jean-François Lisée was elected leader of Parti Québécois on 7 October 2016.

Lisée charged Manon Massé with reneging in unsuccessful deliberations for a putative electoral alliance between the Parti Québécois and Québec Solidaire in 2017.[35][36]

Collapse and brief loss of official party status

For the 2018 provincial election, the PQ ruled out holding a referendum on sovereignty until 2022 at the earliest.[37] With the sovereignty issue taken off the table for the first time in almost half a century, the 2018 election unfolded in a historic way, being the first time in a half century a party other than the Parti Québécois or Liberals were elected to power, with a Coalition Avenir Québec majority win. It also marked, for the first time in 42 years, that the Parti Québécois failed to win a sufficient number of seats to maintain its official party status. With only 10 seats won, not only did it lose official status, but was relegated to third place (tied with Québec solidaire). The PQ was reduced to its smallest presence in the National Assembly since its first election in 1970. In this election the Parti Québécois only garnered 17% of the popular vote, the lowest score in party's history.

With few exceptions, its support bled to the CAQ, which took several ridings that had been in PQ hands for 40 years or more, by large margins in many cases. A number of longtime PQ supporters defected to the CAQ because they no longer believed sovereignty was a realistic goal.[37] Notably, the party was completely shut out of Montreal for the first time in memory, including its traditional stronghold in the heavily francophone eastern portion. Historically, when the PQ won government, the eastern half of the Island of Montreal was coated light blue. Many younger sovereigntists defected to Québec Solidaire.

Leader Jean-François Lisée was defeated in his own riding and resigned thereafter, accepting the blame for his party's failure and collapse. After 50 years in the forefront of Quebec politics, the Parti Québécois had been pushed into marginal status. According to The Globe and Mail, within hours of the results being known, there was speculation that the party's very survival was in doubt; there were concerns that it was no longer capable of attracting enough support "to justify its political usefulness".[38] Christian Bourque of Montreal-based pollster Léger Marketing suggested that the PQ was likely finished in its present form, and would have to merge with another sovereigntist party to avoid fading into irrelevance.[39] On 27 November 2018, the CAQ granted both the PQ and Québec Solidaire official status in the legislature, despite the parties being short on seats and percentage of the popular vote in order to qualify.[40][41]

However, on 11 March 2019, Catherine Fournier, the current youngest MNA in the party and the province and the only PQ MNA from Greater Montreal, resigned from the Parti Québécois to sit as an independent, claiming the party had lost its way. At the same time, several members of the PQ's youth wing expressed concern that the party might not have a future.[42][43] Fournier's defection dropped the party into fourth place, losing its standing as second opposition and potentially, losing their official party status once again.

The next leadership election occurred on 9 October 2020, with lawyer Paul St-Pierre Plamondon being elected as the tenth Parti Québécois leader.[44]

Fading out and loss of official party status

The 2022 provincial election saw even further erosion and an unprecedented loss of support for the Parti Quebecois. Not only did the party once again not form government or the official opposition, but saw its lowest number of elected seats in the history of the PQ's existence–only 3 seats won (the previous lowest, the 1973 election, was six seats). Although new party leader Paul St-Pierre Plamondon managed to win his seat, the PQ lost its official party status and came in a distant fourth place. With just over 14% of the popular vote, it broke a new record low for the party, resulting in the PQ's smallest presence ever in the National Assembly. The movement of most voter support over to the CAQ and other nationalist parties put into question the party's relevance and its ability to survive in future.

Barred from Quebec legislature

On December 1, 2022, the PQ's 3 newly elected members were barred from the Quebec legislature following their refusal to swear an oath to the King, as required by the Constitution Act, 1867. [45] In response, on December 9, 2022, the CAQ passed a bill abolishing the requirement, allowing the PQ into the legislature by early 2023, however its legality is being questioned.[46]

Relationship with the Bloc Québécois

The Bloc Québécois (BQ) is a federal political party founded in 1990 by former Progressive Conservative MP Lucien Bouchard. It has traditionally had close ties to the Parti Québécois and shares its principal objective of sovereignty. The two parties have frequently shared political candidates, and have supported each other during election campaigns. The two parties have a similar membership and voter base. Prominent members of either party often attend and speak at both organizations' public events. Gilles Duceppe, the former Bloc leader, is also the son of Jean Duceppe, a Quebec actor who helped found the PQ.

In June 2014, Mario Beaulieu, a former PQ riding president and Bloc candidate, was elected leader of the Bloc Québécois. Notwithstanding his previous ties to both parties, Beaulieu has been critical of what he sees as a too timid approach to sovereignty by both the Bloc and PQ. Beaulieu's election as Bloc leader was more warmly received by the PQ's rival party, Option nationale, than by the PQ.[47][48][49]

Ties to far right groups

In 2018, the Montreal Gazette reported on an investigation into two closed Facebook groups, whose stated aim is to bolster the PQ, by anti-racist activist Jeff Ray. Ray found that many participants, while supporters of the PQ, were also members of far-right groups like La Meute and Storm Alliance. This included "grassroots activists to aspiring candidates to officials on the executive council" on the PQ side, and "key personalities of the far right" on the other.[50]

 
Logo of the party from 1985 to 2007
 
Logo of the party from 2007 to 2021

The party's distinctive logo was designed in 1968 by painter and poet Roland Giguère. It consists of a stylised letter Q, represented by a blue circle broken by a red arrow. The creator meant it as an allegory of the Parti Québécois breaking the circle of colonialism which he claimed Canada was imposing on Quebec and opening Quebec upon the world and the future.[51] The PQ has made very few significant modifications to its logo during its history. In 1985 it made the circle and arrow slightly thicker, and placed the tip of the latter at the centre of the circle. The original saw it span the whole diameter. When placed upon a blue background instead of a white one, the circle was commonly turned to white, the single main design variation currently observed.

The party revealed a new logo on 21 February 2007, at the beginning of the 2007 provincial election campaign. While maintaining the basic style of past logos, the Q was redesigned and modernized. In addition, the tail of the Q was recoloured green. This logo was replaced in 2021 with a new logo that incorporated the fleur-de-lis into the letter "Q".[52]

Party policy

The Parti Québécois centres on the protection of the Franco-Québécois identity, up to or including the ultimate result of sovereignty-association. Sovereigntism, however, is 'Article 1' in its party program.[53]

After then-French President Nicolas Sarkozy rejected the long-standing "non-interference, non-indifference" stance towards Quebec should it seek sovereignty in 2009, PQ leader and Premier Pauline Marois' visit to France in October 2012 saw her reinstate it with French President François Hollande.[54] Also during her visit, Marois commented that "Canada's current foreign policy corresponds to neither our values nor our interests".[55]

The PQ delivered a brief to the reasonable accommodation commission on minorities, which conducted hearings across the province. The commission briefing looked to reformulate the relations between Quebec's francophone and minority populations. Its task was to be a platform for the PQ's protectionism of French.[56]

Marois stated there is nothing dogmatic in Francophones wishing to declare their existence even if it includes developing legislation requiring newcomers to have a basic understanding of French before becoming citizens of Quebec.[citation needed] (Note that there are no official citizens of Quebec[citation needed]; residents of Quebec are citizens of Canada.)

Further to her desire to protect French in Quebec, during Marois' visit to France in October 2012, she recommended that the "French elite" conduct themselves only in French on the international scene.[57] However, some of Marois' international critics scoffed at her pretension that the "French elite" were Québécois.

Marois stated the PQ understands the arrival of newcomers is attractive and they "contribute greatly" to Quebec's growth, but she stated that does not imply that to better assimilate them that "we must erase our own history."[58]

As of 2014, the PQ electoral program describes the party's main commitment: "Aspiring to political liberty, the Parti Québécois has as its first objective to achieve the sovereignty of Quebec after consulting the population by a referendum to be held at the moment that the government judges appropriate."[59]

Other electoral issues were the Quebec Charter of Values, and language.[60]

Like the Coalition Avenir Québec, the PQ supported the Quebec ban on face covering but also argued the ban is not extensive enough.[61]

Slogans

These are the slogans used by the Parti Québécois in general election campaigns throughout its history. They are displayed with an unofficial translation. The elections in which the PQ won or remained in power are in bold.

  • 1970: OUI – Yes
  • 1973: J'ai le goût du Québec – I have a taste for Quebec
  • 1976: On a besoin d'un vrai gouvernement – We need a real government
  • 1981: Faut rester forts au Québec – We must remain strong in Quebec
  • 1985: Le Québec avec Johnson – Québec with Johnson
  • 1989: Je prends le parti du Québec – I'm choosing Quebec's party / I'm taking Quebec's side (double meaning)
  • 1994: L'autre façon de gouverner – The other way of governing
  • 1998: J'ai confiance – I am confident / I trust
  • 2003: Restons forts – Let us stay strong
  • 2007: Reconstruisons notre Québec – Let us rebuild our Quebec
  • 2008: Québec gagnant avec Pauline – Quebec winning with Pauline
  • 2012: À nous de choisir – The choice is ours
  • 2014: Plus prospère, plus fort, plus indépendant, plus accueillant – More prosperous, stronger, more independent, more welcoming
  • 2018: Sérieusement – Seriously
  • 2022: Le Québec qui s'assume. Pour vrai. – A Quebec that accepts itself. For real[62]

Party leaders

Until 5 June 2005, the office of Leader of the Parti Québécois was known as President of the Parti Québécois.

Party leader Years as party leader Years as Premier
René Lévesque 1968–85 1976–85
Nadia Brédimas-Assimopoulos 1985 (interim) None
Pierre-Marc Johnson 1985–87 1985
Guy Chevrette 1987–88 (interim) None
Jacques Parizeau 1988–96 1994–96
Lucien Bouchard 1996–2001 1996–2001
Bernard Landry 2001–05 2001–03
Louise Harel 2005 (interim) None
André Boisclair 2005–07 None
François Gendron 2007 (interim) None
Pauline Marois 2007–14 2012–14
Stéphane Bédard 2014–15 (interim) None
Pierre Karl Péladeau 2015–16 None
Sylvain Gaudreault 2016 (interim) None
Jean-François Lisée 2016–18 None
Pascal Bérubé 2018–2020 (interim) None
Paul St-Pierre Plamondon 2020–present None

Leaders in the legislature

When a Parti Québécois leader does not have a seat in the National Assembly, another member leads the party in the legislature.

Parliamentary leader Years as parliamentary leader Comments
René Lévesque 1968–70 René Lévesque sat as an Independent member until 29 April 1970 election.
Camille Laurin 1970–73 René Lévesque did not have a seat from 29 April 1970 to 29 October 1973.
Jacques-Yvan Morin 1973–76 René Lévesque did not have a seat from 29 October 1973 to 15 November 1976.
René Lévesque 1976–85
Pierre-Marc Johnson 1985–87
Guy Chevrette 1987–89 Became Leader of the Opposition when Johnson resigned on 10 November 1987. Remained parliamentary leader after Jacques Parizeau became party leader from 19 March 1988 until Parizeau won a seat on 25 September 1989.
Jacques Parizeau 1989–96
Lucien Bouchard 1996–2001 Lucien Bouchard did not have a seat from 27 January 1996 to 19 February 1996.
Bernard Landry 2001–05
Louise Harel 2005–06 André Boisclair did not have a seat from 15 November 2005 to 14 August 2006.
André Boisclair 2006–07
François Gendron 2007
Pauline Marois 2007–14 Pauline Marois lost her seat on 7 April 2014 and announced her resignation as leader.
Stéphane Bédard 2014–15 Interim leader between Marois' defeat and Péladeau's election
Pierre Karl Péladeau 2015–16
Sylvain Gaudreault 2016 Interim leader following Péladeau's resignation
Jean-François Lisée 2016–18 Lost his seat in the general election
Pascal Bérubé 2018–21 Interim leader following Lisée's resignation, remains legislative leader, as current leader, Paul St-Pierre Plamondon does not have seat in National Assembly
Joël Arseneau 2021–present

Party presidents

Until 5 June 2005, the office of President of the Parti Québécois was known as First Vice-president of the Parti Québécois.[63]

Party president Years as party president Comments
Gilles Grégoire 1968–71
Camille Laurin 1971–79
Louise Harel 1979–81
Sylvain Simard 1981–84
Nadia Assimopoulos 1984–88 Nadia Assimopoulos served as acting leader (then known as president) from 20 June 1985 to 29 September 1985.
Pauline Marois 1988–89
Bernard Landry 1989–94
Monique Simard 1994–96
Fabien Béchard 1996–2000
Marie Malavoy 2000–05
Monique Richard 2005–09
Jonathan Valois 2009–11
Raymond Archambault 2011–2017
Gabrielle Lemieux 2017–2019
Dieudonné Ella Oyono 2019–present

Leadership elections

General election results

General election Leader # of seats won Change +/- % of popular vote Result
1970 René Lévesque
7 / 108
  7 23.06% No status
1973
6 / 110
  1 30.22% Official Opposition
1976
71 / 110
  65 41.37% Majority government
1981
80 / 122
  9 49.26% Majority government
1985 Pierre-Marc Johnson
23 / 122
  57 38.69% Official Opposition
1989 Jacques Parizeau
29 / 125
  6 40.16% Official Opposition
1994
77 / 125
  48 44.75% Majority government
1998 Lucien Bouchard
76 / 125
  1 42.87% Majority government
2003 Bernard Landry
45 / 125
  29 33.24% Official Opposition
2007 André Boisclair
36 / 125
  9 28.35% Third Party
2008 Pauline Marois
51 / 125
  15 35.17% Official Opposition
2012
54 / 125
  3 31.95% Minority government
2014
30 / 125
  24 25.38% Official Opposition
2018 Jean-François Lisée
10 / 125
  20 17.06% Third Party
2022 Paul St-Pierre Plamondon
3 / 125
  7 14.61% No status

See also

References

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Further reading

  • Lévesque, Michel and Pelletier, Martin (Sept. 2007). , Bibliothèque de l'Assemblée nationale du Québec, 244 pages
  • Dubuc, Pierre (2003). L'autre histoire de l'indépendance : de Pierre Vallières à Charles Gagnon, de Claude Morin à Paul Desmarais, Trois-Pistoles: Éditions Trois-Pistoles, 288 pages ISBN 2-89583-076-2
  • Fraser, Graham (2001). René Lévesque & the Parti Québécois in Power, Montreal: McGill-Queen's University Press, 434 pages ISBN 0-7735-2310-3 [First Ed. Toronto: Macmillan, 1984]
  • Godin, Pierre (1997). René Lévesque, Héros malgré lui, Éditions Boréal ISBN 2-89052-833-2
  • Lévesque, René (1986). Memoirs, Toronto: McClelland & Stewart, 368 pages ISBN 0-7710-5285-5 [translated by Philip Stratford]
  • Poitras, Annick, L'État du Québec 2015, Montréal, Institut du Nouveau-Monde, Delbusso, 2015, 288 p. (ISBN 978-2-923792-69-9).
  • Bernier Arcand, Philippe, Le Parti québécois : d'un nationalisme à l'autre, Montréal, Poètes de brousse, 2015, 160 p. (ISBN 978-2-923338-85-9).
  • Panneton, Jean-Charles, Le gouvernement Lévesque, t. 1 : De la genèse du PQ au 15 novembre 1976, Québec, Septentrion, 2016.
  • Panneton, Jean-Charles, Le gouvernement Lévesque, t. 2 : Du temps des réformes au référendum de 1980, Québec, Septentrion, 2017.

External links

  • Official website
  • (archived)

parti, québécois, pronounced, paʁti, kebekwa, french, quebec, party, sovereignist, social, democratic, provincial, political, party, quebec, canada, advocates, national, sovereignty, quebec, involving, independence, province, quebec, from, canada, establishing. The Parti Quebecois pronounced paʁti kebekwa French for Quebec Party PQ is a sovereignist 9 and social democratic 1 provincial political party in Quebec Canada The PQ advocates national sovereignty for Quebec involving independence of the province of Quebec from Canada and establishing a sovereign state The PQ has also promoted the possibility of maintaining a loose political and economic sovereignty association between Quebec and Canada The party traditionally has support from the labour movement but unlike most other social democratic parties its ties with organized labour are informal 10 Members and supporters of the PQ are nicknamed pequistes Quebec French pronunciation pekɪst listen 11 a French word derived from the pronunciation of the party s initials in Quebec French Parti QuebecoisAbbreviationPQLeaderPaul St Pierre PlamondonPresidentDieudonne Ella Oyono fr FoundersRene LevesqueGilles GregoireFounded11 October 1968 1968 10 11 Merger ofMouvement Souverainete Association Ralliement national Rassemblement pour l Independance NationaleHeadquarters1200 avenue Papineau Suite 150Montreal QuebecH2K 4R5IdeologyQuebec nationalism 1 Quebec sovereigntismSocial democracy 1 2 3 4 Economic nationalism 5 Political positionCentre left 6 7 8 Regional affiliationCOPPPAL observer ColoursBlueSeats in the National Assembly3 125Websitewww wbr pq wbr orgPolitics of QuebecPolitical partiesElectionsThe party is an associate member of COPPPAL 12 The party has strong informal ties to the Bloc Quebecois BQ whose members are known as Bloquistes the federal party that has also advocated for the secession of Quebec from Canada but the two are not linked organizationally As with its federal counterpart the Parti Quebecois has been supported by a wide range of voters in Quebec from large sections of organized labour to more conservative rural voters 13 14 Contents 1 History 1 1 Formation 1 2 Levesque and the PQ s first government 1 3 1985 defeat 1 4 Return to power under Parizeau 1 5 Bouchard government 1 6 Return to opposition 1 7 Splintering on the right and the left 1 8 Third place 1 9 Marois minority government 1 10 2014 defeat 1 11 Peladeau leadership 1 12 Jean Francois Lisee leadership 1 13 Collapse and brief loss of official party status 1 14 Fading out and loss of official party status 1 15 Barred from Quebec legislature 2 Relationship with the Bloc Quebecois 2 1 Ties to far right groups 3 Logo 4 Party policy 5 Slogans 6 Party leaders 7 Leaders in the legislature 8 Party presidents 9 Leadership elections 10 General election results 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksHistory EditFormation Edit The PQ is the result of the 1968 merger between former Quebec Liberal Party cabinet minister Rene Levesque s Mouvement Souverainete Association and the Ralliement national 15 Following the creation of the PQ the Rassemblement pour l Independance Nationale held a general assembly that voted to dissolve the RIN Its former members were invited to join the new Parti Quebecois The PQ s primary goals were to obtain political economic and social autonomy for the province of Quebec Levesque introduced the strategy of referendums early in the 1970s 16 Levesque and the PQ s first government Edit The PQ faced its first electoral test in the 1970 provincial election winning seven seats However Levesque was unable to get into the renamed National Assembly Although it lost one seat in 1973 the decimation of the other parties particularly the Union Nationale allowed it to become the official opposition even though Levesque was still unable to win a seat In the 1976 provincial election the Parti Quebecois won government for the first time taking 71 of the 110 seats available Levesque became the Premier of Quebec This provided cause for celebration among many French speaking Quebecers while it resulted in an acceleration of the migration of the province s Anglophone population and related economic activity toward Toronto The first PQ government was known as the republic of professors because of the large number of scholars in Levesque s cabinet The PQ was the first government to recognize the rights of Aboriginal peoples to self determination insofar as this self determination did not affect the territorial integrity of Quebec The PQ passed laws on public consultations and the financing of political parties which ensured equal financing of political parties and limited contributions by individuals to 3000 However the most prominent legacy of the PQ is the Charter of the French Language Bill 101 a framework law which defines the linguistic primacy of French and seeks to make French the common public language of Quebec It allowed the advancement of francophones towards management roles until then largely out of their reach Despite the fact that 85 of the population spoke French and most of them did not understand English the language of management was English in most medium and large businesses Critics both Francophone and Anglophone have however criticized the charter for restraining citizens linguistic school choice as it forbids immigrants and Quebecers of French descent from attending English language schools funded by the state private schools remained an option for those who could afford tuition The Parti Quebecois initiated the 1980 Quebec referendum seeking a mandate to begin negotiation for sovereignty association 17 It was rejected by 60 per cent of voters The party was re elected in the 1981 election but in November 1984 it experienced the most severe internal crisis of its existence Levesque wanted to focus on governing Quebec rather than sovereignty and also wanted to adopt a more conciliatory approach on constitutional issues This angered the more ardent sovereigntists known as the purs et durs Levesque was forced to resign as a result In September 1985 the party leadership election chose Pierre Marc Johnson as his successor Despite its social democratic past the PQ failed to gain admission into the Socialist International after the membership application was vetoed by the federal New Democratic Party 18 19 20 1985 defeat Edit The PQ led by Johnson was defeated by the Quebec Liberal Party in the 1985 election that saw Robert Bourassa return as premier The Liberals served in office for two terms and attempted to negotiate a constitutional settlement with the rest of Canada but with the failure of the Meech Lake Accord and the Charlottetown Accord two packages of proposed amendments to the Canadian constitution the question of Quebec s status remained unresolved and the Quebec sovereignty movement revived Return to power under Parizeau Edit The PQ returned to power under the leadership of hardline sovereigntist Jacques Parizeau in the 1994 Quebec election This saw the PQ win 77 seats and 44 of the vote on a promise to hold an independence referendum within a year 21 The following year Parizeau called the 1995 Quebec referendum proposing negotiations on sovereignty Again the sovereigntists lost the vote The final count showed 49 42 of voters supported negotiations that could eventually lead to sovereignty On the night of the defeat an emotionally drained Premier Parizeau stated that the loss was caused by money and ethnic votes which led to accusations that Parizeau was racist as well as by the divided votes amongst francophones Parizeau resigned the next day as he is alleged to have planned beforehand in case of a defeat Bouchard government Edit Lucien Bouchard a former member of Prime Minister Brian Mulroney s Cabinet and later founder of the Bloc Quebecois a federal level sovereigntist party succeeded Parizeau as PQ leader but chose not to call another referendum due to the absence of winning conditions Bouchard s government then balanced the provincial budget a feat achieved in Canada only by the federal government and a few of the ten Canadian provinces at that point by reducing government spending including social programs The PQ was re elected in the 1998 election despite receiving fewer votes than the Quebec Liberal Party led by former federal deputy prime minister Jean Charest Bouchard resigned in 2001 and was succeeded as PQ leader and Quebec Premier by Bernard Landry a former PQ Finance minister Under Landry s leadership the party lost the 2003 election to Jean Charest s Liberals Return to opposition Edit Mid late 2004 was difficult for Landry s leadership which was being contested A vote was held during the party s June 2005 convention to determine whether Landry continued to have the confidence of the party membership Landry said he wanted at least 80 of approval and after gaining 76 2 approval on the confidence vote from party membership on 4 June 2005 Landry announced his intention to resign 22 Louise Harel had been chosen to replace him until a new leader Andre Boisclair was elected 15 November 2005 through the party s 2005 leadership election At the time of Boisclair s election the PQ was as much as 20 percent ahead of the Liberals in opinion polls suggesting that Boisclair would lead them to a landslide majority government in the next election 23 Splintering on the right and the left Edit Progressives on the left wing of the PQ perceived a rightward move by the party towards neoliberalism under Bouchard Landry and Boisclair In 2006 a new left wing party Quebec solidaire was formed which included many activists who would have formerly been members or supporters of the PQ Over subsequent elections the QS would attract increasing support from left wing sovereigntists disillusioned with the PQ while on the right the ADQ and later the Coalition Avenir Quebec attracted the votes of right wing and soft sovereigntists who eventually become Quebec autonomists and Canadian federalists while retaining their Quebec nationalist identities resulting in the PQ being squeezed from both sides Third place Edit The PQ was unable to maintain the momentum it briefly had under Boisclair and in the 2007 provincial election the party fell to 36 seats and behind the conservative Action democratique du Quebec ADQ in number of seats and the popular vote this is the first time since 1973 that the party did not form the government or Official Opposition Boisclair said that the voters clearly did not support a strategy of a rapid referendum in the first mandate of a PQ government Instead of a policy convention following the election the party held a presidents council The party caucus in the provincial legislative assembly was said to have supported Boisclair continuing as leader On 8 May 2007 Boisclair announced his resignation as leader of the PQ 24 This was effective immediately although Boisclair confirmed he would remain within the PQ caucus for the time being He was replaced by veteran MNA Francois Gendron pending a leadership race and convention Former PQ leader Pauline Marois greets voters in Quebec City on the eve of the 2012 general election Former Bloc Quebecois leader Gilles Duceppe was the first to announce his intention to run for party leadership on 11 May 2007 He was followed the same day by Pauline Marois In a surprise move Duceppe withdrew on the 12th leaving Marois the only declared candidate No other candidates came forward and on 26 June 2007 Marois won the leadership by acclamation In June 2011 the party was shaken when three of its most prominent MNAs popular actor Pierre Curzi former cabinet minister Louise Beaudoin and Lisette Lapointe the wife of former premier Jacques Parizeau followed the next day by a fourth Jean Martin Aussant quit the party to sit as independents over Marois s support for a bill changing the law to permit an agreement between the City of Quebec and Quebecor Inc concerning the management of the new sports and entertainment complex in Quebec City 25 Unrest continued later in the month when a fifth MNA Benoit Charette also quit citing his dissatisfaction with the party s sole focus being sovereignty Beaudoin rejoined the PQ caucus in 2012 26 Marois minority government Edit The party won a minority government under Marois in the 2012 provincial election with 54 of 125 seats in the National Assembly It embarked on a program of sovereigntist governance in relations with the rest of Canada to return Quebec to balanced budgets through higher taxes and debt reduction to increase the use of French in public services and to address resource development in Northern Quebec However the PQ s new Bill 101 did not pass The centrepiece of the government s program was a Quebec Charter of Values which would have curtailed minority religious identity by banning the wearing of religious symbols by those in the employ of the government particularly Sikh turbans Muslim veils and Jewish kippahs 2014 defeat Edit Based on the charter s growing popularity among francophones Marois called an early election for 7 April 2014 in an attempt to win a majority government Despite leading in the polls when the writ was dropped the campaign went badly due to several mishaps The recruitment of star candidate Pierre Karl Peladeau whose comments made sovereignty and the prospect of another referendum a focus of the campaign as well as feminist Janette Bertrand suggesting that wealthy Muslim men were taking over swimming pools among other incidents badly hurt the PQ 1 Marois government was defeated by the Liberals led by Philippe Couillard in the 2014 provincial election which resulted in a Liberal majority government The PQ won 25 of the vote and 30 seats its worst result in terms of popular vote since 1970 Marois lost her own seat and announced her intention to resign as PQ leader that night 27 Stephane Bedard was chosen interim parliamentary leader by the PQ caucus on 10 April 2014 28 On 20 October 2014 Levis by election PQ candidate Alexandre Begin came in third place with 8 28 of the popular vote only narrowly beating Quebec Solidaire 29 Peladeau leadership Edit See also 2015 Parti Quebecois leadership election On 27 November 2014 Pierre Karl Peladeau announced his intentions to run for PQ s leadership joining Bernard Drainville Martine Ouellet Jean Francois Lisee Alexandre Cloutier and Pierre Cere 30 Despite a fiercely contested race Peladeau was the frontrunner for much of the campaign causing Jean Francois Lisee to drop out in January 2015 Bernard Drainville to drop out on 22 April 2015 31 and Pierre Cere to follow Drainville only five days before the leadership election 32 On 15 May 2015 Pierre Karl Peladeau was elected permanent leader 33 On 2 May 2016 Peladeau announced that he was retiring from politics to dedicate more time to his family 34 Jean Francois Lisee leadership Edit Jean Francois Lisee was elected leader of Parti Quebecois on 7 October 2016 Lisee charged Manon Masse with reneging in unsuccessful deliberations for a putative electoral alliance between the Parti Quebecois and Quebec Solidaire in 2017 35 36 Collapse and brief loss of official party status Edit For the 2018 provincial election the PQ ruled out holding a referendum on sovereignty until 2022 at the earliest 37 With the sovereignty issue taken off the table for the first time in almost half a century the 2018 election unfolded in a historic way being the first time in a half century a party other than the Parti Quebecois or Liberals were elected to power with a Coalition Avenir Quebec majority win It also marked for the first time in 42 years that the Parti Quebecois failed to win a sufficient number of seats to maintain its official party status With only 10 seats won not only did it lose official status but was relegated to third place tied with Quebec solidaire The PQ was reduced to its smallest presence in the National Assembly since its first election in 1970 In this election the Parti Quebecois only garnered 17 of the popular vote the lowest score in party s history With few exceptions its support bled to the CAQ which took several ridings that had been in PQ hands for 40 years or more by large margins in many cases A number of longtime PQ supporters defected to the CAQ because they no longer believed sovereignty was a realistic goal 37 Notably the party was completely shut out of Montreal for the first time in memory including its traditional stronghold in the heavily francophone eastern portion Historically when the PQ won government the eastern half of the Island of Montreal was coated light blue Many younger sovereigntists defected to Quebec Solidaire Leader Jean Francois Lisee was defeated in his own riding and resigned thereafter accepting the blame for his party s failure and collapse After 50 years in the forefront of Quebec politics the Parti Quebecois had been pushed into marginal status According to The Globe and Mail within hours of the results being known there was speculation that the party s very survival was in doubt there were concerns that it was no longer capable of attracting enough support to justify its political usefulness 38 Christian Bourque of Montreal based pollster Leger Marketing suggested that the PQ was likely finished in its present form and would have to merge with another sovereigntist party to avoid fading into irrelevance 39 On 27 November 2018 the CAQ granted both the PQ and Quebec Solidaire official status in the legislature despite the parties being short on seats and percentage of the popular vote in order to qualify 40 41 However on 11 March 2019 Catherine Fournier the current youngest MNA in the party and the province and the only PQ MNA from Greater Montreal resigned from the Parti Quebecois to sit as an independent claiming the party had lost its way At the same time several members of the PQ s youth wing expressed concern that the party might not have a future 42 43 Fournier s defection dropped the party into fourth place losing its standing as second opposition and potentially losing their official party status once again The next leadership election occurred on 9 October 2020 with lawyer Paul St Pierre Plamondon being elected as the tenth Parti Quebecois leader 44 Fading out and loss of official party status Edit The 2022 provincial election saw even further erosion and an unprecedented loss of support for the Parti Quebecois Not only did the party once again not form government or the official opposition but saw its lowest number of elected seats in the history of the PQ s existence only 3 seats won the previous lowest the 1973 election was six seats Although new party leader Paul St Pierre Plamondon managed to win his seat the PQ lost its official party status and came in a distant fourth place With just over 14 of the popular vote it broke a new record low for the party resulting in the PQ s smallest presence ever in the National Assembly The movement of most voter support over to the CAQ and other nationalist parties put into question the party s relevance and its ability to survive in future Barred from Quebec legislature Edit On December 1 2022 the PQ s 3 newly elected members were barred from the Quebec legislature following their refusal to swear an oath to the King as required by the Constitution Act 1867 45 In response on December 9 2022 the CAQ passed a bill abolishing the requirement allowing the PQ into the legislature by early 2023 however its legality is being questioned 46 Relationship with the Bloc Quebecois EditThe Bloc Quebecois BQ is a federal political party founded in 1990 by former Progressive Conservative MP Lucien Bouchard It has traditionally had close ties to the Parti Quebecois and shares its principal objective of sovereignty The two parties have frequently shared political candidates and have supported each other during election campaigns The two parties have a similar membership and voter base Prominent members of either party often attend and speak at both organizations public events Gilles Duceppe the former Bloc leader is also the son of Jean Duceppe a Quebec actor who helped found the PQ In June 2014 Mario Beaulieu a former PQ riding president and Bloc candidate was elected leader of the Bloc Quebecois Notwithstanding his previous ties to both parties Beaulieu has been critical of what he sees as a too timid approach to sovereignty by both the Bloc and PQ Beaulieu s election as Bloc leader was more warmly received by the PQ s rival party Option nationale than by the PQ 47 48 49 Ties to far right groups Edit In 2018 the Montreal Gazette reported on an investigation into two closed Facebook groups whose stated aim is to bolster the PQ by anti racist activist Jeff Ray Ray found that many participants while supporters of the PQ were also members of far right groups like La Meute and Storm Alliance This included grassroots activists to aspiring candidates to officials on the executive council on the PQ side and key personalities of the far right on the other 50 Logo Edit Logo of the party from 1985 to 2007 Logo of the party from 2007 to 2021 The party s distinctive logo was designed in 1968 by painter and poet Roland Giguere It consists of a stylised letter Q represented by a blue circle broken by a red arrow The creator meant it as an allegory of the Parti Quebecois breaking the circle of colonialism which he claimed Canada was imposing on Quebec and opening Quebec upon the world and the future 51 The PQ has made very few significant modifications to its logo during its history In 1985 it made the circle and arrow slightly thicker and placed the tip of the latter at the centre of the circle The original saw it span the whole diameter When placed upon a blue background instead of a white one the circle was commonly turned to white the single main design variation currently observed The party revealed a new logo on 21 February 2007 at the beginning of the 2007 provincial election campaign While maintaining the basic style of past logos the Q was redesigned and modernized In addition the tail of the Q was recoloured green This logo was replaced in 2021 with a new logo that incorporated the fleur de lis into the letter Q 52 Party policy EditThis article needs to be updated Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information March 2017 This article may be unbalanced towards certain viewpoints Please improve the article by adding information on neglected viewpoints or discuss the issue on the talk page March 2017 The Parti Quebecois centres on the protection of the Franco Quebecois identity up to or including the ultimate result of sovereignty association Sovereigntism however is Article 1 in its party program 53 After then French President Nicolas Sarkozy rejected the long standing non interference non indifference stance towards Quebec should it seek sovereignty in 2009 PQ leader and Premier Pauline Marois visit to France in October 2012 saw her reinstate it with French President Francois Hollande 54 Also during her visit Marois commented that Canada s current foreign policy corresponds to neither our values nor our interests 55 The PQ delivered a brief to the reasonable accommodation commission on minorities which conducted hearings across the province The commission briefing looked to reformulate the relations between Quebec s francophone and minority populations Its task was to be a platform for the PQ s protectionism of French 56 Marois stated there is nothing dogmatic in Francophones wishing to declare their existence even if it includes developing legislation requiring newcomers to have a basic understanding of French before becoming citizens of Quebec citation needed Note that there are no official citizens of Quebec citation needed residents of Quebec are citizens of Canada Further to her desire to protect French in Quebec during Marois visit to France in October 2012 she recommended that the French elite conduct themselves only in French on the international scene 57 However some of Marois international critics scoffed at her pretension that the French elite were Quebecois Marois stated the PQ understands the arrival of newcomers is attractive and they contribute greatly to Quebec s growth but she stated that does not imply that to better assimilate them that we must erase our own history 58 As of 2014 the PQ electoral program describes the party s main commitment Aspiring to political liberty the Parti Quebecois has as its first objective to achieve the sovereignty of Quebec after consulting the population by a referendum to be held at the moment that the government judges appropriate 59 Other electoral issues were the Quebec Charter of Values and language 60 Like the Coalition Avenir Quebec the PQ supported the Quebec ban on face covering but also argued the ban is not extensive enough 61 Slogans EditThese are the slogans used by the Parti Quebecois in general election campaigns throughout its history They are displayed with an unofficial translation The elections in which the PQ won or remained in power are in bold 1970 OUI Yes 1973 J ai le gout du Quebec I have a taste for Quebec 1976 On a besoin d un vrai gouvernement We need a real government 1981 Faut rester forts au Quebec We must remain strong in Quebec 1985 Le Quebec avec Johnson Quebec with Johnson 1989 Je prends le parti du Quebec I m choosing Quebec s party I m taking Quebec s side double meaning 1994 L autre facon de gouverner The other way of governing 1998 J ai confiance I am confident I trust 2003 Restons forts Let us stay strong 2007 Reconstruisons notre Quebec Let us rebuild our Quebec 2008 Quebec gagnant avec Pauline Quebec winning with Pauline 2012 A nous de choisir The choice is ours 2014 Plus prospere plus fort plus independant plus accueillant More prosperous stronger more independent more welcoming 2018 Serieusement Seriously 2022 Le Quebec qui s assume Pour vrai A Quebec that accepts itself For real 62 Party leaders EditUntil 5 June 2005 the office of Leader of the Parti Quebecois was known as President of the Parti Quebecois Party leader Years as party leader Years as PremierRene Levesque 1968 85 1976 85Nadia Bredimas Assimopoulos 1985 interim NonePierre Marc Johnson 1985 87 1985Guy Chevrette 1987 88 interim NoneJacques Parizeau 1988 96 1994 96Lucien Bouchard 1996 2001 1996 2001Bernard Landry 2001 05 2001 03Louise Harel 2005 interim NoneAndre Boisclair 2005 07 NoneFrancois Gendron 2007 interim NonePauline Marois 2007 14 2012 14Stephane Bedard 2014 15 interim NonePierre Karl Peladeau 2015 16 NoneSylvain Gaudreault 2016 interim NoneJean Francois Lisee 2016 18 NonePascal Berube 2018 2020 interim NonePaul St Pierre Plamondon 2020 present NoneLeaders in the legislature EditWhen a Parti Quebecois leader does not have a seat in the National Assembly another member leads the party in the legislature Parliamentary leader Years as parliamentary leader CommentsRene Levesque 1968 70 Rene Levesque sat as an Independent member until 29 April 1970 election Camille Laurin 1970 73 Rene Levesque did not have a seat from 29 April 1970 to 29 October 1973 Jacques Yvan Morin 1973 76 Rene Levesque did not have a seat from 29 October 1973 to 15 November 1976 Rene Levesque 1976 85Pierre Marc Johnson 1985 87Guy Chevrette 1987 89 Became Leader of the Opposition when Johnson resigned on 10 November 1987 Remained parliamentary leader after Jacques Parizeau became party leader from 19 March 1988 until Parizeau won a seat on 25 September 1989 Jacques Parizeau 1989 96Lucien Bouchard 1996 2001 Lucien Bouchard did not have a seat from 27 January 1996 to 19 February 1996 Bernard Landry 2001 05Louise Harel 2005 06 Andre Boisclair did not have a seat from 15 November 2005 to 14 August 2006 Andre Boisclair 2006 07Francois Gendron 2007Pauline Marois 2007 14 Pauline Marois lost her seat on 7 April 2014 and announced her resignation as leader Stephane Bedard 2014 15 Interim leader between Marois defeat and Peladeau s electionPierre Karl Peladeau 2015 16Sylvain Gaudreault 2016 Interim leader following Peladeau s resignationJean Francois Lisee 2016 18 Lost his seat in the general electionPascal Berube 2018 21 Interim leader following Lisee s resignation remains legislative leader as current leader Paul St Pierre Plamondon does not have seat in National AssemblyJoel Arseneau 2021 presentParty presidents EditUntil 5 June 2005 the office of President of the Parti Quebecois was known as First Vice president of the Parti Quebecois 63 Party president Years as party president CommentsGilles Gregoire 1968 71Camille Laurin 1971 79Louise Harel 1979 81Sylvain Simard 1981 84Nadia Assimopoulos 1984 88 Nadia Assimopoulos served as acting leader then known as president from 20 June 1985 to 29 September 1985 Pauline Marois 1988 89Bernard Landry 1989 94Monique Simard 1994 96Fabien Bechard 1996 2000Marie Malavoy 2000 05Monique Richard 2005 09Jonathan Valois 2009 11Raymond Archambault 2011 2017Gabrielle Lemieux 2017 2019Dieudonne Ella Oyono 2019 presentLeadership elections EditParti Quebecois leadership elections 1985 Parti Quebecois leadership election 2005 Parti Quebecois leadership election 2007 Parti Quebecois leadership election 2015 Parti Quebecois leadership election 2016 Parti Quebecois leadership election 2020 Parti Quebecois leadership electionGeneral election results EditGeneral election Leader of seats won Change of popular vote Result1970 Rene Levesque 7 108 7 23 06 No status1973 6 110 1 30 22 Official Opposition1976 71 110 65 41 37 Majority government1981 80 122 9 49 26 Majority government1985 Pierre Marc Johnson 23 122 57 38 69 Official Opposition1989 Jacques Parizeau 29 125 6 40 16 Official Opposition1994 77 125 48 44 75 Majority government1998 Lucien Bouchard 76 125 1 42 87 Majority government2003 Bernard Landry 45 125 29 33 24 Official Opposition2007 Andre Boisclair 36 125 9 28 35 Third Party2008 Pauline Marois 51 125 15 35 17 Official Opposition2012 54 125 3 31 95 Minority government2014 30 125 24 25 38 Official Opposition2018 Jean Francois Lisee 10 125 20 17 06 Third Party2022 Paul St Pierre Plamondon 3 125 7 14 61 No statusSee also EditSPQ Libre Parti Quebecois Crisis 1984 Politics of Quebec History of Quebec List of political parties in Quebec Sovereigntist events and strategies Secessionist movements of Canada Parti Quebecois leadership electionsReferences Edit a b c How Political Parties Respond Interest Aggregation Revisited Routledge 2 August 2004 p 149 ISBN 978 1 134 27668 4 Retrieved 18 August 2012 Rodney S Haddow Thomas Richard Klassen 2006 Partisanship globalization and Canadian labour market policy Toronto ON University of Toronto Press p 56 ISBN 978 0 8020 9090 4 Geoffrey Hale Geoffrey E Hale 2006 Uneasy Partnership The Politics of Business and Government in Canada University of Toronto Press p 24 ISBN 978 1 55111 504 7 Retrieved 18 August 2012 Cecil Young 2004 One Canada Trafford Publishing p 37 ISBN 978 1 4120 2235 4 Retrieved 18 August 2012 CBC News 23 24 August 2018 Where Quebec s parties stand on the issues that matter most to you CBC News Britannica Book of the Year 2013 ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc 2013 p 402 ISBN 978 1 62513 103 4 Retrieved 2 October 2017 Banting Keith Myles John 2013 Inequality and the Fading of Redistributive Politics Vancouver UBC Press p 385 ISBN 978 0 7748 2601 3 Retrieved 2 October 2017 Bergo Havard 16 October 2016 New leader new tactics for Quebec s Parti Quebecois Global Risk Insights Retrieved 2 October 2017 Liam D Anderson 2013 Federal Solutions to Ethnic Problems Accommodating Diversity Routledge p 210 ISBN 978 0 415 78161 9 Cameron I Crouch 10 September 2009 Managing Terrorism and Insurgency Regeneration Recruitment and Attrition Routledge p 19 ISBN 978 1 135 23018 0 J Patrick Boyer 25 July 1996 Direct Democracy in Canada The History and Future of Referendums Dundurn p 133 ISBN 978 1 4597 1884 5 Eric Braun 1 January 2003 Canada in Pictures Twenty First Century Books p 20 ISBN 978 0 8225 4679 5 Amilcar Antonio Barreto 1 January 1998 Language Elites and the State Nationalism in Puerto Rico and Quebec Greenwood Publishing Group p 104 ISBN 978 0 275 96183 1 Leslie Brokaw Erin Trahan 23 February 2011 Frommer s Montreal and Quebec City 2011 John Wiley amp Sons p 9 ISBN 978 0 470 96494 1 Schmidt Ingo Evans Bryan 19 July 2012 Social Democracy After the Cold War Bryan Evans Ingo Schmidt Google Boeken ISBN 978 1 926836 87 4 Retrieved 19 October 2012 Pequiste definition of Pequiste in Oxford dictionary British amp World English Oxforddictionaries com 2 April 2014 Archived from the original on 7 March 2014 Retrieved 9 April 2014 Paises y partidos miembros Archived from the original on 23 October 2016 Retrieved 18 October 2016 Boisclair gets emotional talking about homophobia CTV News 4 March 2007 Archived from the original on 29 March 2012 Retrieved 30 December 2011 Results suggest rift between urban rural voters Canadian Broadcasting Corporation 24 January 2006 Retrieved 14 May 2013 Cameron I Crouch 10 September 2009 Managing Terrorism and Insurgency Regeneration Recruitment and Attrition Routledge p 51 ISBN 978 1 135 23018 0 https montrealgazette com news echoing 6255813 story html ixzz1oMhu9Q2n dead link Quebec and the Constitution A Timeline of Dead Ends Montreal Gazette June 1 2017 Seymour Martin Lipset Rafael Gomez Ivan Katchanovski 2004 The paradox of American unionism Why Americans like unions more than Canadians do but join much less Cornell University Press p 63 ISBN 978 0 8014 4200 1 Retrieved 18 August 2012 Alvin Finkel 1 April 1997 Our Lives Canada After 1945 James Lorimer amp Company p 200 ISBN 978 1 55028 551 2 Retrieved 18 August 2012 Nelson Wiseman 2007 In Search of Canadian Political Culture UBC Press p 176 ISBN 978 0 7748 1388 4 Retrieved 18 August 2012 UPDATE 1 Former Quebec separatist leader Parizeau dies at 84 Reuters Retrieved 18 October 2016 dead link Bernard Landry quits as Parti Quebecois leader 5 May 2005 Archived from the original on 10 September 2005 Retrieved 9 May 2007 Hebert Chantal 27 March 2007 PQ fails miserably to rally sovereignists The Star Toronto Retrieved 9 May 2007 Mason Christopher 8 May 2007 Quebec Separatist Leader Resigns The New York Times Retrieved 9 May 2007 PQ left reeling after three top members of Quebec sovereigntist party quit The Canadian Press 6 June 2011 Archived from the original on 21 July 2011 Retrieved 6 June 2011 Philip Authier 3 April 2012 Parti Quebecois leader Pauline Marois welcomes MNA Louise Beaudoin back into the fold Montreal Gazette Archived from the original on 5 April 2012 Retrieved 3 April 2012 Pauline Marois resigns as PQ leader after crushing defeat CTV News 7 April 2014 Retrieved 8 April 2014 PQ elects Stephane Bedard to interim leader post CTV News 10 April 2014 Retrieved 10 April 2014 Vendeville Geoffrey 21 October 2014 CAQ holds the fort in Levis byelection The Montreal Gazette Retrieved 21 October 2014 Authier Philip 27 November 2014 Pierre Karl Peladeau joins the PQ leadership race Montreal Gazette Retrieved 20 October 2015 Authier Philip 22 April 2015 Drainville drops out of PQ race after concluding the troops want PKP Montreal Gazette Retrieved 20 October 2015 Authier Philip 14 May 2015 After long campaign fate of new PQ leader in the hands of party members Montreal Gazette Retrieved 20 October 2015 Pierre Karl Peladeau elected leader of Parti Quebecois CTV News 15 May 2015 Retrieved 15 May 2015 Peladeau stuns political world steps down for family reasons Montreal Gazette 2 May 2016 Retrieved 5 May 2016 Quebec election PQ s Lisee defends rogue attack on Quebec solidaire by Marian Scott Montreal Gazette 26 September 2018 Quebec solidaire Rejet clair d une alliance avec le PQ 21 May 2017 a b Martin Patriquin 30 September 2018 Canada holdout of Quebec separatism faces end of the dream The Guardian After 50 years Parti Quebecois pushed to political margins as Lisee loses Montreal seat and resigns Martin Patriquin 2 October 2018 Quebec election CAQ victory proves separatism is no longer a major issue The Guardian Presse Canadienne 22 November 2018 PQ and QS to get official party status in National Assembly Monteral Gazette Retrieved 6 December 2018 Parties reach agreement in principle to give PQ and QS official party status Montreal Gazette 22 November 2018 Retrieved 6 December 2018 PQ may have no future youth wing members say in open letter The Canadian Press 11 March 2019 Retrieved 19 March 2019 They ve lost their way PQ MNA Catherine Fournier quits party CTV News Montreal 11 March 2019 Retrieved 19 March 2019 Paul St Pierre Plamondon wins PQ leadership pledges to rebuild party Montreal Gazette Canadian Press 10 October 2020 Retrieved 22 October 2020 PQ barred from Quebec legislature as Legault reiterates plan to abolish oath requirement December 2022 Quebec adopts law making oath to King optional for elected members 9 December 2022 Don Macpherson Mario Beaulieu s victory shows the Bloc s irrelevance The Gazette Archived from the original on 14 July 2014 Les deputes bloquistes lancent un appel au calme Huffington Post 16 June 2014 Retrieved 3 July 2014 Gagnon Lysiane 18 June 2014 Will the Bloc Self Destruct The Globe and Mail Retrieved 3 July 2014 Solyom Catherine 5 June 2018 Blurring the lines between Quebec s far right and political mainstream on Facebook Montreal Gazette Retrieved 8 May 2020 Archives de Radio Canada Fondation du Parti quebecois 8 May 2007 Archived from the original on 12 February 2008 Retrieved 9 May 2007 Voici le nouveau logo du Parti Quebecois Le Journal de Montreal 4 December 2021 Retrieved 1 January 2022 Fidler Richard 7 June 2011 Life on the Left Behind those resignations from the Parti Quebecois Lifeonleft blogspot ca Retrieved 9 April 2014 Dougherty Kevin 15 October 2012 France s president embraces traditional ni ni stance on Quebec s future Montrealgazette com Archived from the original on 18 October 2012 Retrieved 19 October 2012 Parti Quebecois Premier Pauline Marois tears a strip off Harper s foreign policy Ottawacitizen com Archived from the original on 30 January 2013 Retrieved 19 October 2012 globeandmail com National The Globe and Mail Toronto Archived from the original on 9 January 2009 Letter Marois telling France what to do Montrealgazette com Archived from the original on 19 October 2012 Retrieved 19 October 2012 PQ leader defends citizenship plan Canada com 21 October 2007 Archived from the original on 4 November 2012 Retrieved 20 January 2012 William Johnson Hard truths for separatists National Post Fullcomment nationalpost com Archived from the original on 18 March 2014 Retrieved 9 April 2014 Authier Philip Drainville blames referendum not charter for PQ fall montrealgazette com Archived from the original on 19 October 2016 Retrieved 18 October 2016 M D and Erasmus Quebec s ban on face coverings risks inflaming inter communal tensions The Economist October 20 2017 PQ announces election slogan Le Quebec qui s assume Pour vrai Montreal Gazette 21 August 2022 Retrieved 9 September 2022 Conseil national Le PQ ne profite pas de l impopularite de Jean Charest www ledevoir com 12 February 2005 Retrieved 12 February 2005 Further reading EditLevesque Michel and Pelletier Martin Sept 2007 Le Parti quebecois bibliographie 1968 2007 Bibliotheque de l Assemblee nationale du Quebec 244 pages Dubuc Pierre 2003 L autre histoire de l independance de Pierre Vallieres a Charles Gagnon de Claude Morin a Paul Desmarais Trois Pistoles Editions Trois Pistoles 288 pages ISBN 2 89583 076 2 Fraser Graham 2001 Rene Levesque amp the Parti Quebecois in Power Montreal McGill Queen s University Press 434 pages ISBN 0 7735 2310 3 First Ed Toronto Macmillan 1984 Godin Pierre 1997 Rene Levesque Heros malgre lui Editions Boreal ISBN 2 89052 833 2 Levesque Rene 1986 Memoirs Toronto McClelland amp Stewart 368 pages ISBN 0 7710 5285 5 translated by Philip Stratford Poitras Annick L Etat du Quebec 2015 Montreal Institut du Nouveau Monde Delbusso 2015 288 p ISBN 978 2 923792 69 9 Bernier Arcand Philippe Le Parti quebecois d un nationalisme a l autre Montreal Poetes de brousse 2015 160 p ISBN 978 2 923338 85 9 Panneton Jean Charles Le gouvernement Levesque t 1 De la genese du PQ au 15 novembre 1976 Quebec Septentrion 2016 Panneton Jean Charles Le gouvernement Levesque t 2 Du temps des reformes au referendum de 1980 Quebec Septentrion 2017 Montreal Gazette 15 October 2012 External links EditOfficial website Parti quebecois parliamentary group website archived Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Parti Quebecois amp oldid 1128161540, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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