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Canada: Federal government to change rules on Quebec secession
By Keith Jones
4 December 1999
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In the face of widespread opposition among Canada's political
elite, Prime Minister Jean Chretien has announced his Liberal
government will soon take action to lay out the procedure Quebec
would have to follow to legally secede from Canada. Speaking last
week, Chretien declared, It has to be done so that they
will know, everybody will know, that to have a negotiation [on
secession], we have to follow the advice of the Supreme Court.
Last year, Canada's Supreme Court ruled that a unilateral declaration
of independence by Quebec would be illegal under the Canadian
constitution and international law. At the same time, it said
that the Canadian federal government and Canada's nine other provinces
would be legally obligated to negotiate the terms of secession
if a clear majority of Quebecers voted in favor of
separation in a provincial referendum with a clear question.
Chretien's cabinet is currently debating what form the federal
government's rewriting of the rules of the game on
secession should takea simple statement from the Prime Minister,
a parliamentary resolution or the adoption of a law on secession.
According to press reports, Chretien himself strongly favors legislation.
A draft bill stipulating the conditions that would have to be
met before the federal government would negotiate secession with
Quebec or any other province and outlining the subjects to negotiated
is said to have been presented to cabinet for discussion.
Apparently the draft law uses the same language as the Supreme
Court in insisting upon a clear question and a clear
majority, while providing no definition of either. Since
the 1995 Quebec referendum, in which the supporters of Quebec's
secession fell just 50,000 votes short of a majority, Chretien
has repeatedly said that a bare majority would be insufficient
to trigger negotiations on secession. Without committing to any
specific figure, Chretien and his Intergovernmental Affairs Minister,
Stephane Dion, have frequently suggested that 60 percent would
be a more reasonable benchmark.
The draft legislation reportedly also incorporates the Supreme
Court's stipulation that negotiations on secession would have
to involve a host of questionsmany of them highly contentiousincluding
the division of Canada's more than $600 billion federal debt,
minority rights, and Quebec's borders.
Quebec nationalists, including the main federalist provincial
party in Quebec, the Parti Libéral du Québec (PLQ),
have long held that Quebec's borders are inviolable. But since
1995, Chretien, Dion, and many of the Liberals' federalist opponents,
including the Official Opposition Reform Party, have said that
if Canada is divisible so is Quebec. The threat to partition Quebec
is aimed at the very heart of the Quebec indépendentiste
project, since it targets Quebec's north, which has a sparse,
majority aboriginal population but produces most of Quebec's abundant
hydro-electrical power, and western Quebec, where anglophones
and immigrants constitute large minorities, and where Montreal,
Quebec's metropolis, is situated.
Plan B and the Supreme Court ruling
In 1980 and 1995, Parti Québécois (PQ) provincial
governments held referendums seeking a popular mandate to negotiate
a new partnership with the rest of Canada based on the recognition
of Quebec as an independent state. The Canadian government, federal
cabinet ministers and Quebec federalists participated in both
referendum campaigns, thus lending them legitimacy as expressions
of the popular will, even while arguing that the process was flawed.
Like Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau in 1980, Chretien termed the
1995 referendum question duplicitous because it asked Quebecers
to authorize negotiations between Quebec and Canada on the creation
of a new, state-to-state federation, not Quebec's separation from
Canada. And both Trudeau and Chretien said that a bare majority
Yes vote would not and could not compel them to negotiate
the break up of the country.
Still, Chretien calculated in 1995, as Trudeau had in 1980,
that the federalists could beat the PQ on its own terms, and that
to make a challenge to the legitimacy of the PQ's referendum process
the pivot of the federalist campaign against secession would enable
the PQ to seize the moral high groundto claim that the federalists
were fearful of and not ready to recognize Quebecers' democratic
will and right-to-self-determination.
But the near-loss of the 1995 referendum staggered Chretien
and his advisors and caused them to outline a new hardline
strategy against Quebec secession. Plan B centers on the economic
and political costs to Quebec of withdrawing from the Canadian
federal state. For decades partition had been dismissed as a quack
theory of the ultra-right, but following the October 1995 referendum
Chretien and Dion suggested it was a very real possibility should
Quebec secede.
As part of its new hardline strategy, the federal Liberal government
petitioned Canada's Supreme Court in September 1996 to rule on
the constitutionality of secession. Recognizing that the federal
government was trying to rewrite the rules of the game so as to
reduce the significance of, if not delegitimize, a future majority
referendum vote in favor of Quebec sovereignty of
independence, the PQ government and its supporters refused to
participate in Supreme Court case on secession.
In their unanimous August 1998 ruling, the nine Supreme Court
justices supported key aspects of the federal government's Plan
B: under Canadian and international law a unilateral declaration
of independence is illegal no matter the size of a referendum
majority in favor of separation; Quebec's borders would have to
be the subject of negotiation in the event of secession and such
negotiations would have to take into account the Canadian government's
legal obligations to Canada's aboriginal peoples and Quebec's
other minorities.
But while introducing new impediments to Quebec's secession,
the Supreme Court went beyond the original terms of reference
of the federal government and stipulated that the federal government
and the other nine provinces have a binding constitutional
obligation to negotiate secession if a clear majority
of Quebecers answer yes to a clear question authorizing
secession.
Its boycott of the case notwithstanding, the PQ proclaimed
the Supreme Court judgment a victory, because for
the first time a key federal institution had stipulated under
what conditions Quebec would be allowed to withdraw from the federal
state.
Clearly, this was the reaction the judges had both anticipated
and wanted. By issuing a sagacious judgment that could
win approval from both sides, the Court sought to place new obstacles
to secession, while simultaneously boosting its legitimacy so
as to be able to serve as an arbiter in the event
the crisis of Canada's federal state reaches the boiling point.
Central to the Court's strategy was to refuse to clearly define
its attitude to a host of questions, so as to leave itself and
Canada's federalist politicians the maximum room for maneuver
in the event of a yes vote in favor of secession.
Thus the court ruled that the obligation to negotiate secession
only has constitutional force if a clear majority
vote yes in answer to a clear question, but it refused
to define either a clear majority or a clear question, saying
that this should be decided by the politicians. Declared the Supreme
Court, it will be for the political actors to determine
what constitutes a clear majority on a clear question' in
the circumstances under which a future referendum vote may be
taken.
Canada's political elite divided
Chretien's anti-Quebec secession initiative has been widely
criticized by the PLQ, Quebec's main federalist provincial party,
the Tories, and the other federal opposition parties including
Reform, and by most of the press in English Canada and Quebec.
It is also widely rumored that most of Chretien's Quebec ministers,
including the number two man in the government Finance Minster
Paul Martin, don't think he should proceed.
There are two orders of disagreement.
The vast majority of federalist politicians who oppose Chretien's
attempt to stipulate the rules of secession do so for tactical
reasons. They argue that to quantify the level of support needed
to trigger negotiations on separation will strengthen the Quebec
separatists: it will allow the PQ to paint the federalists' as
anti-democratic and it will tie the hands of a future federal
government.
Second, and even more importantly, they point to the crisis
in the PQ camp. Support for separation has plummeted in the past
four years. There are several reasons for this. The PQ has imposed
massive social spending cuts. Despite the PQ's attempts to tailor
independence to the needs of big business, there is growing skepticism
in the Quebec bourgeoisie about the feasibility of independence
under conditions of ever-intensifying world economic integration.
Last but not least, the Clinton administration has repeatedly
voiced strong support for the maintenance of the Canadian federation.
Last month, former Michigan Governor and US Ambassador to Canada
James Blanchard said an independent Quebec would not gain automatic
entry to the North American Free Trade Agreement. We would
want our extra pound of flesh.
Given the crisis of the PQ, would it not be better, argue Chretien's
federalist opponents, to let sleeping dogs lie.
But there is a second order of disagreement. The PLQ and the
dominant faction of the Quebec bourgeoisie are adamantly opposed
to Chretien's Plan B, above all to his invocation of the threat
of partition. While they oppose secession, they recognize that
Quebec would be economically hobbled, if not convulsed by civil
war, in the event that the rest of Canada tried to exact partition
as the price for Quebec independence.
There has been much press speculation as to why Chretien is
so determined to lay down the rules of secession despite strong
opposition from federalist circles. Much of this speculation has
centered on Chretien's personal motivations; his concern that
he not be remembered as the Prime Minister who almost lost
the country. There is no question Chretien was badly shaken
by the events of the fall of 1995. Just days before the 1995 referendum
he burst into tears in a cabinet meeting and had to be consoled
by his colleagues. A few months after the referendum, he seized
a protester by the throat at a demonstration in Quebec.
But behind Chretien's actions lie more than personal considerations.
Important section of big business are gravely concerned by the
weakening of the federal state, as Canada becomes ever more economically
integrated with the US, and by the economic costs of the instability
of the Canadian federation. Significantly, Conrad Black's National
Post, the voice of the most aggressive sections of Canadian
big business and otherwise a virulent critic of the Chretien government
has hailed the Prime Minister for defending Canada
against the separatists.
Chretien, for his part, has drawn the connection between his
current initiative to strength the federal state with his government's
drive to slash social spending so as to eliminate the federal
deficit. In both cases, he affirms he was willing to court unpopularity
to strengthen Canada.
See Also:
Clinton appeals for Canadian
unity
[12 October 1999]
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