Close X
Friday, November 1, 2024
ADVT 
National

Lucien Bouchard says there's no way to repair friendship with Mulroney

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 20 Aug, 2014 03:06 PM
    MONTREAL - Although they were once close friends, Lucien Bouchard says there's no way to repair his ruptured relationship with Brian Mulroney.
     
    "We run into each other occasionally in Montreal or elsewhere and I think we have an agreement to not embarrass each other," Bouchard said Wednesday.
     
    "We'll shake hands, but to sit down and have a coffee — no. I don't think that's possible. It's not a matter of honour. There are wounds."
     
    Bouchard made the comments after the screening of a new documentary on his political career which will be broadcast Monday evening on the public Tele-Quebec network.
     
    Mulroney, who became prime minister in 1984, named Bouchard as Canada's ambassador to Paris in 1985 and then brought him into his cabinet as environment minister in 1988. They had known each other since law school.
     
    But they fell out in 1990 when Mulroney was trying to salvage the floundering Meech Lake constitutional accord. It was during that time that Bouchard sent a telegram of support to the Parti Quebecois and declared he was a sovereigntist. An outraged Mulroney fired him from cabinet and the two men have never spoken again.
     
    "Friends should not be in politics together when they disagree over principles," Bouchard said Wednesday.
     
    Bouchard went on to found the Bloc Quebecois with a handful of disgruntled Conservative and Liberal Quebec MPs in 1991. He would become leader of the Official Opposition when the Bloc took 54 seats in the 1993 election.
     
    Bouchard said Wednesday he never saw the Bloc as anything more than something to prepare the ground for the 1995 election, seeing it as a "one-shot" deal.
     
    While the Bloc remained a strong political presence for most of its existence, it was crushed in the 2011 federal election by a surging New Democratic Party and now has only three members in Parliament. Bouchard would not comment on his old party's current woes.
     
    Bouchard said he was convinced that his political career was over on the night the sovereigntists narrowly lost the Oct. 30, 1995, referendum.
     
    "When we came home...I was going to finish the session in Ottawa and that was going to be it," he said. "I was going to come back to Montreal and resume practising law."
     
    Instead, he was drafted by the PQ to take over from Jacques Parizeau, who stepped down after the referendum.
     
    Bouchard said he believes the results of the 1995 referendum might have been different if it had been presented to Quebecers in a two-pronged format — one referendum to negotiate Quebec sovereignty from Canada with a political and economic partnership and then another to approve the results of the bargaining.
     
    Bouchard hopes he won't see a third referendum in his lifetime because he says he thinks it will be unsuccessful.
     
    "It's clear. I hope I won't see it because we'll lose a third one. There's no way we can expose ourselves to losing a third one.
     
    "Later on, I don't know."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Jobs and the economy the top issues of New Brunswick election, premier says

    Jobs and the economy the top issues of New Brunswick election, premier says
    FREDERICTON - Jobs and the economy will be the top issues of New Brunswick's election, Premier David Alward said Monday after the province's lieutenant-governor agreed to dissolve the legislative assembly Thursday ahead of next month's vote.

    Jobs and the economy the top issues of New Brunswick election, premier says

    Drug used to control dementia symptoms carries risk of kidney injury:

    Drug used to control dementia symptoms carries risk of kidney injury:
    TORONTO - A new study says that a class of drugs sometimes used to control symptoms of dementia appears to increase the risk of acute kidney injury in people who take it.

    Drug used to control dementia symptoms carries risk of kidney injury:

    How the locomotive from the Lac-Megantic disaster ended up at a United States

    How the locomotive from the Lac-Megantic disaster ended up at a United States
    MONTREAL - Canada's Transportation Safety Board is shedding light on how the locomotive from the Lac-Megantic disaster ended up at a United States rail yard where it nearly went to auction.

    How the locomotive from the Lac-Megantic disaster ended up at a United States

    Manitoba Border Guards Who Left Post To Help RCMP Are Suspended

    Manitoba Border Guards Who Left Post To Help RCMP Are Suspended
    EMERSON, Man. - The union representing Canada's border guards says three Manitoba staff members have been suspended for helping the RCMP arrest a suspect.

    Manitoba Border Guards Who Left Post To Help RCMP Are Suspended

    Seamus O'Regan seeks federal Liberal nomination in St. John's South-Mount Pearl

    Seamus O'Regan seeks federal Liberal nomination in St. John's South-Mount Pearl
    Broadcast journalist Seamus O'Regan is seeking the federal Liberal nomination in the Newfoundland riding of St. John's South-Mount Pearl.

    Seamus O'Regan seeks federal Liberal nomination in St. John's South-Mount Pearl

    Alberta RCMP: It Appears That Three Teens Have Drowned; One Body Recovered

    Alberta RCMP: It Appears That Three Teens Have Drowned; One Body Recovered
    FORT VERMILION, Alta. - It appears that three teens have drowned in northern Alberta.

    Alberta RCMP: It Appears That Three Teens Have Drowned; One Body Recovered