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The Parti Québécois loses another leader: whats
behind the crisis?
By Richard Dufour
19 May 2007
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This article first appeared in French on May 14, 2007 (See
Le
Parti québécois perd un autre chef : les dessous
de sa crise)
André Boisclair resigned as leader of the pro-Quebec
independence Parti Québécois (PQ) May 8, seven weeks
after the PQ suffered a debacle in the Quebec elections, winning
its smallest share of the popular vote since 1970.
The election results came as a shock to the PQs leadership
and ranks, who had expected that their party, which has alternated
with the Liberals as Quebecs governing party for the past
30 years, would be the principal beneficiary of the immense popular
anger engendered by the attacks on social programs and workers
rights carried out by the Liberal government of Jean Charest.
Instead, a substantial number of the PQs traditional supporters
abandoned the party and voted for the Action démocratique
du Quebec (ADQ), a right populist party which until now had been
a marginal force.
With only 28 percent of the popular vote in the March 26 election,
the PQ has been relegated to third-party status. The Liberals,
whose vote sunk 13 percentage points from the 2003 elections,
have formed a minority government, with the ADQ, led by Mario
Dumont, constituting the official opposition.
The intense pressure the PQ establishment put upon Boisclair
to resign is a sign of the profound crisis shaking this big business
partya party to which the working class has been subordinated,
thanks to the support given it by the trade union bureaucracy
and the petty-bourgeois left, since the early 1970s.
In the days and weeks following the PQs election debacle,
Boisclair was the object of growing criticism, not only from the
Péquistes, but also from the editorial boards of
the corporate media. Much was made of Boisclairs lack of
charisma and poor judgment. The straw that broke the camels
back was an interview in which Boisclair crudely accused Gilles
Duceppe, leader of the Bloc Québécois, the PQs
sister party on the federal front, of plotting to replace him
as head of the PQ .
The appointment of a new leaderformer PQ cabinet minister
Pauline Marois now appears poised to succeed Boisclairwill
not resolve the internal tensions tearing apart the PQ, nor restore
its popular appeal.
The PQs crisis is rooted not in the leadership shortcomings
of Boisclair or of his predecessor as leader, Bernard Landry,
but rather in the erosion of the PQs popular support. The
past four decades have conclusively demonstrated that the pretense
that the PQ could, through the project of establishing a sovereign
or independent Quebec, serve as a vehicle of social progress,
even of emancipation, is a fraud. The PQ is now rightly seen by
large sections of the population as a party of the establishment,
as no less distant from the interests and aspirations of ordinary
people than the Liberal Party of Quebec, the provincial party
traditionally associated with big business.
The bitter, anti-working-class record of the PQ when in power
has been especially instructive in this regard. The PQ has formed
Quebecs provincial government in 18 of the past 30 years.
During its last two mandates, which stretched from September 1994
to April 2003, the PQ mounted an all-out assault on public services,
including shutting a dozen hospitals and cutting tens of thousands
of public sector jobs, all in the name of eliminating the provincial
budget deficit. The popular anger these policies provoked paved
the way for the election in 2003 of Jean Charests Liberals,
who then launched a new frontal attack on the social conquests
of the working class.
The election of Boisclair as head of the PQ in November 2005
marked a further shift rightward, a shift that reflected the Canadian
ruling elites repudiation of any policy of social compromise
in favor of unrelenting class war. Boisclair served as the spokesman
for those in the PQ who insisted on revising the partys
political platform to even more faithfully and directly articulate
the interests of big business. He promised to break the influence
of the trade unions within the PQ, stating that the party would
no longer be the hostage of pressure groups
and, before a group of prominent businessmen, promised to make
Quebec a paradise for capital.
Boisclair was a protégé of Lucien Bouchard, the
former PQ leader who, as Quebec premier in the late 1990s, insisted
that a drastic reduction of social spending was an essential winning
condition for any future referendum on Quebec independence.
Although now retired from active political life, Bouchard intervenes
regularly in public debates. He is one of the authors of the Manifesto
for a Clear-eyed Quebec (Manifeste pour un Québec
lucide), which denounces the immobilisme
(rigidity) of the Quebec populationthat is, its opposition
to the continuous assault on its wages, working conditions and
on social and public services.
The emphasis Bouchard placed, in the aftermath of 1995 Quebec
referendum, on fiscal responsibility as a necessary
condition for secession was a response to the fears of the most
powerful sections of Quebec business concerning the political
and economic instability that would accompany independence. These
fears were further stoked by the new, anti-secessionist hard line,
including the threat to partition a seceding Quebec, that the
federalist political elite adopted after defeating the PQs
separatist project by a mere 50,000 votes in the 1995 referendum.
Twelve years on, big business in Quebec continues to fear that
the PQs referendum obsession will turn its attention
away from what it deems to be the pivotal taskcreating the
best conditions for Quebec capital to prevail in the face of ever-ferocious
international competition through an intensification of the assault
on the working class.
As party leader, Boisclair distanced himself from the PQ programs
pledge to hold a referendum in the shortest time possible after
the PQs return to power. Like his mentor Bouchard, Boisclair
tailored his message to the needs of business, promising tax cuts
for the rich and tight control over government spending.
But in so doing, he alienated himself from what was left of
the PQs popular base, undermining at the same time the partys
ability to channelwith the crucial help of the trade union
bureaucracy and the left pressure groupsthe desire of ordinary
workers for change behind the capitalist PQ and its indépendantiste
project.
In other words, the rightward turn of the PQ also reduced its
ability to control the masses and therefore its usefulness for
the ruling class. This is the meaning of the numerous articles
that have appeared in the corporate press since the March elections
devoted to questioning the continued relevance of the PQ and speculating
as to its eventual marginalization or even disappearance from
the Quebec political scene.
A critical element in the decline of the PQ has been the emergence
of the ADQ, which profited from the electorates disaffection
with the two establishment parties by making right-wing appeals
cloaked in anti-establishment demagogy. Hiding his neo-liberal
program with populist rhetoric, ADQ head Mario Dumont spiced his
speeches with large doses of the PQs traditional nationalist
ideology about the preservation of Quebecs cultural
identity.
The rise of the ADQ is the bitter fruit of the trade union
bureaucracys smothering of the mass opposition that repeatedly
erupted against the anti-social measures of Charest, in particular
in December 2003, when there was a wave of anti-government strikes
and demonstrations, and in the spring of 2005, when post-secondary
students mounted a weeks-long strike.
In the 1995 referendum on Quebec sovereignty, Dumont joined
the yes camp led by the PQ. Today he rejects the idea
of another referendum on independence, proclaiming himself an
autonomist who seeks to limit the federal governments
power to spend in areas constitutionally defined as falling under
provincial jurisdiction. At the same time, Dumont advocates a
smaller government, the privatization of the health
system and the end of obligatory union dues.
During the recent election campaign, the ADQ made the denunciation
of reasonable accommodationa legal principle
which prevents discrimination based on physical handicap, sex,
race, religion or cultureits battle cry.
The reasonable accommodation principle stipulates
that a public institution or an employer is obliged to promote
the access of minorities to public services and to jobs, thus
furthering their integration into society, so long as the cost
is not excessive and the accommodation to the traditional practices
of a minority does not prejudice others.
Bolstered by the most retrograde sections of the corporate
media, especially the Journal de Montreal, Mario Dumont
has claimed that this principle of integration and of tolerance
is harmful to Quebec society. The majority is required to
hide its principles, its way of life, declaimed Dumont in
a solemn, dramatic tone repeatedly in the months preceding the
March 26 election.
The purpose of this fabricated image of a Quebec society under
siege from a horde of religious extremists is to channel in a
reactionary direction the anxiety people feel due to increasing
economic security and the rise of armed conflicts internationally.
In the name of secularism and the equality of the sexes, principles
purportedly threatened by the religious fundamentalism imported
by foreigners, this campaign seeks to stigmatize and to intimidate
entire communities of immigrants, especially Muslims.
Anti-immigrant chauvinism plays the same role in Quebec as
it does internationallyto stoke the prejudices of the most
backward sections of the population in order to develop a social
base for the most reactionary measures.
At the outset of the election campaign, Boisclair timidly criticized
Dumont for having turned in an irresponsible manner a nonetheless
important debate. But seeing his electoral support sag and
that of Dumont increase, the PQ leader bit the bullet and tried
to outdo the ADQ in the chauvinist game.
Several days before the election, Boisclair publicly supported
right-wing elements who threatened to mount provocations if the
election law were not changed to remove the right of veiled Muslim
women to vote. The intervention of the PQ leader heavily influenced
the subsequent capitulation of Quebecs director-general
of elections to this right-wing hysteria. Citing the threat of
violence, the director-general reversed his initial decision upholding
the existing rules, which he explained were designed to encourage
voting by allowing for different ways for a voter to identify
him or herself, other than the provincial government-issued photo
identity card.
The PQs adaptation to the ADQ and to its chauvinist appeals
did not stop when the election campaign ended. Following the election,
PQ Member of the National Assembly (MNA) Daniel Turp called on
his party to support the ADQs proposal that Quebec adopt
a constitution reasserting the Quebec governments areas
of sovereign jurisdiction. The constitutional project presented
by Turp included a clause intended to strictly define and limit
reasonable accommodations to minorities.
Turps proposal, which apparently was made with Boisclairs
approval, was met with opposition from the majority of the PQ
leadership, which fears that the PQ will find itself marginalized
by the ADQ if it is seen to be giving up its traditional constitutional
demands and to be advocating something less than full independence
for Quebec.
The PQ has a long history of chauvinism. In the late 1960s,
it mounted a campaign to force immigrants to send their children
to unilingual French schools. After its electoral victory in 1976,
the PQ passed Bill 101 which imposed French as Quebecs sole
official language, barred English from virtually all commercial
signs, and sharply limited language choice in education. After
the failed 1995 referendum, the then PQ leader Jacques Parizeau
blamed the defeat on money and ethnic votes, although
the majority of those who voted against Quebec separation were
Quebec-born francophones.
Important sections of the PQ not only want the party to perpetuate
this chauvinist tradition but to go even further. The Syndicalistes
et progressistes pour un Québec libre (Unionists and
Progressives for an Independent Quebec), a political club formed
inside the PQ by a section of the union bureaucracy, criticized
the PQ election campaign for having been out-done by Mario Dumont
in anti-immigrant diatribes and appeals to Quebec chauvinism.
Two days after the elections, SPQ Libre wrote that globalization
and the migratory wave accompanying it give birth in the worlds
populations to an insecurity of identity which translates into
a desire for national assertion and that, as opposed to
the PQ leader, Mario Dumont had seized on this.
As the above citation underscores, the union bureaucracy, which
regularly invokes globalization of production and increased foreign
competition to justify its intimate collaboration with business
to eliminate jobs and cut wages, tries in the same way to infect
workers with nationalism and anti-immigrant chauvinism.
Against these efforts to pit workers against each other on
national and ethno-linguistic lines, the working class must counterpose
a socialist internationalist perspectivea perspective that
gives conscious expression to the objective unity of the international
working class under conditions of a globally integrated economy
by spearheading the struggle to unite workers around the world
against the capitalist profit system and for social equality.
See Also:
Quebec elections: Right-wing
populist ADQ benefits from mass disaffection with establishment
[28 March 2007]
Quebec state yields to right-wing
provocation on eve of provincial election
[26 March 2007]
Parti Quebecois stumbles through
Quebec election campaign
[26 March 2007]
Quebec elections 2007: Quebec
Federation of Labour officially backs Parti Québécois
[14 March 2007]
The March 26 Quebec elections
and the Canadian elites turn to the right
[6 March 2007]
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