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Crisis of Parti Québécois regime heralds coming
political upheavals
By Guy Charron
15 August 2002
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A series of by-elections have revealed a dramatic drop in popular
support for the Parti Québécois, the pro- indépendantiste
party that has formed Quebecs provincial government since
the fall of 1994.
Quebecs governing party won just one of seven by-elections
held in April and mid-June, although five of the seats at issue
had been held by the PQ, four of them by cabinet ministers. Among
the defeated candidates was star recruit David Levine
who was named to the PQ cabinet last winter, although he did not
have a National Assembly seata rare occurrence in Quebec,
as in other jurisdictions which operate under a British-derived
parliamentary system.
Were the by-election results to be repeated in a provincial
election, the PQ would be reduced to third-party status in the
National Assembly behind both its traditional federalist rivals,
the Liberals, and a right-wing nationalist grouping, the Action
démocratique du Québec (ADQ), which in two previous
provincial elections has never won more than 12 percent of the
popular vote. Political pundits have drawn parallels between the
PQs electoral prospectsthe next provincial election
must be held before the end of 2003and the historic routs
the federal Conservatives suffered in 1993 and the British Columbia
New Democratic Party in 2001. After two terms in office, both
of these parties saw their parliamentary representation slashed
to just two seats.
Quebec Premier and PQ leader Bernard Landry has publicly conceded
his perplexity at the string of by-election defeats and adverse
opinion polls. At different times he has blamed the PQs
plunging fortunes on his partys communications strategy,
the media, and public complacency. According to Landry, Quebecers
have forgotten what life was like prior to the Quiet Revolution
of the early 1960s, when the Quebec provincial government took
responsibility for administering education and health care from
the hands of the Catholic Church and greatly expanded public and
social services.
Landrys comments only serve to underscore his and the
PQs isolation and estrangement from the mass of working
people. The PQ first came to office in 1976, promising a favourable
prejudice toward the labor movement, but by the early 1980s
it was slashing public spending and imposing a battery of anti-union
laws.
Returned to provincial office in 1994, after a decade in opposition,
the PQ has dismantled public services, closing hospitals and eliminating
thousands of health care and education jobs, and presided over
growing poverty and social polarization. In per capita terms,
the PQ has cut spending on public services and social programs
even more drastically than Ontarios Tory government, which
has boasted of being a Reagan- or Thatcher-style, right-wing government,
stigmatized the poor, and baited the unions.
Parallels with the federal Liberal government
The indépendantistes portray Jean Chrétien
and his federal Liberal government as their worst enemies. But
like the federal Liberal government, the PQ regime imposed massive
public spending cuts in the name of eliminating the budget deficit;
then, when the deficit disappeared, rejected calls for the restoration
of public spending, implementing tax cuts for big business and
the well-to-do instead.
The right-wing, big business policies of the PQ account for
its dramatic slide in support among the population at large. But
the PQ government, again like the Chrétien Liberal government,
has come under increasing pressure from big business to intensify
the assault on the working class, through further tax cuts, the
gutting of environmental and workplace regulations and the reorganization
of public services so as to subjugate them more directly to the
imperatives of the market.
In the case of the PQ, this has taken the form of increasingly
strident demands from big business that it should scrap the modèle
Québécoisthe name given to the Quebec
states activist role in promoting economic development and
the corporatist collaboration it has fostered between the government,
big business and the union bureaucracy. Since the 1960s, the modèle
Québécois has been the consensus strategy of the
Quebec elite and underpinned the policy of all Quebec governments,
PQ or Liberal.
Cabinet calls for the PQ to veer further right
In a transparent attempt to rally the support of big business,
a section of the PQ leadership has responded to the partys
by-election defeats by urging the government to heed the corporate
calls for downsizing the state. Speaking on June 20,
the day after the PQ had lost three of four by-elections, André
Boisclair, minister of state for the environment and water, declared,
Ordinary people in everyday life require that the Parti
Québécois situate itself more towards the centre.
The PQ, he said, must take note of a very big concern on
the part of the ordinary people of the middle class, who demand
more freedom in the relations that they are able to have with
the Québécois state.
There is no need to be afraid of challenging the modèle
Québécois, without throwing overboard the gains
of the Quiet Revolution, added Health Minister and former
corporate boss François Legault.
The next day the president of the Treasury Board, Joseph Facal,
considered a Landry confidant, weighed in with the observation
that the PQ has a program that gives the impression of having
been written in 1978. The PQ has erected as a dogma
the sacrosanct modèle Québécois, refusing
to look at its failingsthe corporatism, rigidity, dependence
on the state it engenders; the astronomical debt it has produced.
In a veiled attack on the PQs close ties to the union
bureaucracy, Facal added that his party assigns too much
importance to the spokespersons of certain lobby groups, and urgently
requires to reconnect with the middle class, the silent majority
that is the vertebral column of society. Making clear his
support for further tax cuts, the Treasury Board president observed
that 44 percent of Québécois pay no tax. Imagine
the pressure on the others.
Facals broadside against the program of his own party
was duly noted and applauded by the big business media. One
can almost hear the cry: Yes! raised in response to
the way out orchestrated by Facal, wrote Don MacPherson,
a prominent columnist at the Montreal Gazette, an English-language
daily traditionally opposed to the PQ. Only Le Devoir,
the pro-nationalist journal of the Québécois intellectual
elite, failed to endorse Facals comments.
The cabinet calls for the PQ to take up the banner of deregulation
and privatization raise the prospect of a major split within the
PQ cabinet over the governments orientation. Other ministers,
who are closer to the partys petty-bourgeois nationalist
cadre and to the trade union bureaucracy, like Louise Beaudoin,
who holds the quixotically-named post of Minister responsible
for the Observatory Committee on Globalization, have been
urging the government to refurbish its sovereignist and
social-democratic credentials.
Landry himself has claimed to be governing along the lines
of French Socialist Prime Minister Lionel Jospin, a claim that
has taken on ominous tones for his government given the rout of
Jospin and the Socialists in the recent French presidential and
parliamentary elections.
In keeping with this pretence, the PQ announced in June a new
anti-poverty program. Like similar programs pioneered
by Jospin, this program, while packaged in left-wing rhetoric,
is in fact a right-wing measure. Businesses will receive government
subsidies to employ welfare recipients in low-wage jobs, thus
providing them with cheap labor and the government with a new
means of threatening the poor with the loss of their subsistence
benefits.
By emphasizing its sovereignist or pro-independence credentials,
the PQ is trying to mobilize its radical and generally
more chauvinist hard-line cadre, as well as to capitalize on the
fact that opinion polls show separation to be more popular than
the government. This finding, however, points to the crisis of
the PQ, for the same polls show little support for another referendum
on Quebecs secession from the Canadian federal state. In
January 2001, Lucien Bouchard resigned as Quebec premier and PQ
leader, citing his inability to increase support for Quebec sovereignty,
which has fallen from almost 50 percent in the October 1995 referendum
to about 40 percent.
The unions and the PQ
The Quebec trade union bureaucracy remains a principal pillar
of the PQ. Last winter, when Landry was toying with the possibility
of a spring or fall 2002 election, unions representing 400,000
Quebec public sector workers engineered a one-year extension of
contracts set to expire in June 2002, so that the PQ could be
spared labor disruptions and troubling evidence of the deterioration
of public services during an election campaign.
It is only with the active assistance of the leaders of the
Quebec Federation of Labor (FTQ), Confederation of National Trade
Unions (CSN) and the Quebec Trade Union Federation (CSQ) that
the PQ has been able to survive in office while dismantling public
and social services.
In the name of building the Quebec nation, the union leaders
endorsed the program of budget cutsthe making of a zero
deficit the principal government objectiveduring a
series of tripartite summits in 1996. Then in 1997, they themselves
proposed to the government an early retirement plan that enabled
it to permanently eliminate tens of thousands of public sector
jobs. In the summer of 1999, when nurses rebelled against their
increased workload and the deterioration of patient care, mounting
a militant strike in spite of a draconian anti-strike law, the
unions suppressed it.
No small part of the PQs crisis is the increasing rank-and-file
disaffection with the unions cozy relationship with the
government. Fearing that their own position is increasingly compromised,
a small section of union bureaucrats have joined with middle-class
groups like the Parti de la Démocratie Socialiste and the
Parti Communiste du Québec to form a new electoral front,
the Union des Forces Progressistes (UFP). Although the UFP employs
socialist rhetoric, its orientation is to pressure the PQ not
to further marginalize the trade union officialdom
Popular disaffection and the crisis of working
class perspective
The recent by-elections were a shock not only for the PQ, but
also for the Quebec Liberal Party (PLQ), its principal competitor
for office for the past three decades. As in the France, Canadas
establishment and its media outlets were caught unawares by the
deep sentiment of alienation that has developed among the population,
as all governments, federal and provincial, have pursued the same
right-wing, big business agenda. Thus they were flabbergasted
when the plummet in support for the PQ did not translate into
a like rise in the fortunes of the Opposition Liberals.
Four of this springs seven by-elections were won by the
Action Démocratique du Québec (ADQ), which prior
to April had only ever succeeded in electing its leader, Mario
Dumont.
A right-wing breakaway from the Liberals, the ADQ advocates
free market policies, patterned after those of the
Ontario Tories and the Canadian Alliance. The surge in ADQ support
cannot, however, be interpreted as signifying a major increase
in support for such a program amongst the working class and broad
sections of professional and small business people. In the absence
of any serious working class opposition to the PQ and the PLQthe
result of the unions systematic suppression of the class
strugglethe ADQ has become a means for Quebec voters to
express their anger and disgust with the traditional parties.
Whilst big business is keen to use the ADQ in order to pressure
the PQ and the PLQ further right, just as they have made use of
the Reform Party/Canadian Alliance to press for tax and spending
cuts at the federal level, the more astute recognize that this
situation is highly contradictory and potentially explosive.
The loss of popular support for the traditional parties and
institutions bespeaks an extremely volatile political situation,
which, under conditions of deepening economic crisis, could quickly
find expression in sharp social conflict and the eruption of working
class struggles. What is urgently required is that workers in
Quebec and across Canada repudiate the unions program of
subordinating the working class to capital, by circumscribing
its struggles to collective bargaining and politically harnessing
it to the social-democratic NDP and the petty-bourgeois nationalist
Parti Québécois. Workers will only be able to put
an end to the past two decades of reversals and defeats when they
make a socialist internationalist program that challenges the
subordination of economic life to the profits of the capitalists
and is based on the common objective interests of all workers,
whatever their nationality, the axis of their struggles.
See Also:
Sacking of Finance Minister
splits government
Will Canadas Prime Minister survive?
[6 June 2002]
Quebec premiers
resignation intensifies crisis within separatist movement
[5 February 2001]
Unions strangle Quebec
nurses strike
[27 July 1999]
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