Close X
Sunday, November 24, 2024
ADVT 
National

Parti Quebecois Leader Turns His Attention To Running The Parti Quebecois

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 16 May, 2015 02:14 PM
  • Parti Quebecois Leader Turns His Attention To Running The Parti Quebecois
MONTREAL — Pierre Karl Peladeau, who for years guided the fortunes of a sprawling media empire, will now be running a political party whose ultimate objective is Quebec independence.
 
Peladeau, 53, was elected leader of the Parti Quebecois on Friday with 57.6 per cent of the ballots cast in the first round of voting.
 
Since entering politics in March 2014, the man who remains Quebecor Inc.'s controlling shareholder has made it clear that his overriding goal is to achieve independence.
 
On Friday, he emphasized that nothing has changed.
 
"You have given me a strong and clear mandate — to make Quebec a country," he said to loud applause after he had been declared the winner.
 
That day is still far off, however, because the next provincial election will be held only in the fall of 2018.
 
A relative neophyte in the political world, Peladeau was in large part responsible for transforming his father's paper-based company into a digital and telecommunications powerhouse.
 
In 1991, Peladeau was named president of the publishing, distribution and retail sales arm of Quebecor (TSX:QBR.B). He moved to Paris in 1994 to beef up the European section of the firm and within three years the company was the continent's main printer.
 
He returned to Canada at the end of 1997 after his father's death and, by the end of 1998, Quebecor had become a major player in the country's media industry with the acquisition of Sun Media Corp.
 
By 2000, and by then president and CEO of Quebecor, Peladeau began the company's transformation from print to digital with the acquisition of the TVA television network and Videotron, a major cable provider.
 
While becoming PQ leader is one thing, Peladeau's chances of being elected premier in a province where the labour movement still carries considerable clout could well depend on his approach over the next three years.
 
When the PQ announced he would be running for the party last year, one of Quebec's largest labour federations said Peladeau was a "catastrophe for the workers of the province" and stated he was responsible for 14 lockouts during his tenure at Quebecor.
 
Peladeau's influence in Quebec is undeniable. Besides TVA, Videotron and the hugely popular Le Journal de Montreal, his media empire includes several star-driven magazines that are gobbled up on a weekly basis.
 
He is engaged to Julie Snyder, a household name in Quebec and a media darling in her role as a talk-show host and producer of various shows geared for TV.
 
Peladeau resigned from Quebecor in March 2013 and was quickly named as chairman of Hydro-Quebec by then-premier Pauline Marois.
 
He remained with the utility for less than a year before Marois said he would run for the party in the 2014 election. 
 
During his political coming-out, Peladeau raised his fist in the air and declared his goal to make Quebec a country in what became one of the defining moments of the campaign.
 
One high-profile Peladeau supporter remembers the gesture with pride, even though some observers believe it turned the campaign in favour of Philippe Couillard's Liberals.
 
"When I saw Peladeau raise his fist in the air I thought, better to raise your fist than to lower your arms," former premier Bernard Landry told a crowd of supporters when Peladeau first announced his candidacy.
 
"Now we have someone who will take up the fight and is doing so in a clear and brilliant way and we will follow him."
 
Peladeau's followers hope that with his prominence and his public championing of the province's culture, language and history, he can unite the province's separatist forces and become the first leader of an independent Quebec.

MORE National ARTICLES

Omar Khadr: Youth Or Adult? Question Goes To Canada's Top Court Thursday

TORONTO — The case of former Guantanamo Bay prisoner Omar Khadr returns to Canada's top court for a third time on Thursday, as the federal government fights to have him declared an adult offender for crimes he committed as a 15-year-old.

Omar Khadr: Youth Or Adult? Question Goes To Canada's Top Court Thursday

Canadian Air Task Force In Iraq Gets Female Commander, Former Sea King Pilot

Canadian Air Task Force In Iraq Gets Female Commander, Former Sea King Pilot
  Brig.-Gen. Lise Bourgon, has taken over responsibility for the country's air task force in a ceremony at the air base where Canadian aircraft conducting strikes against the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant are based.

Canadian Air Task Force In Iraq Gets Female Commander, Former Sea King Pilot

Canadians Join Campaigners Calling For End To UN Peacekeeper Sex Abuse

Canadians Join Campaigners Calling For End To UN Peacekeeper Sex Abuse
The coalition, which calls itself Code Blue, wants UN Secretary Ban Ki-moon to lift the diplomatic immunity that protects UN employees from being held to account when abuse complaints arise.

Canadians Join Campaigners Calling For End To UN Peacekeeper Sex Abuse

Quebec Says School Officials Will No Longer Strip-Search Students

Quebec Says School Officials Will No Longer Strip-Search Students
QUEBEC — School officials in Quebec will no longer be permitted to strip search students as the provincial government moved to act on a report recommending that only police officers conduct such examinations.

Quebec Says School Officials Will No Longer Strip-Search Students

Officials Seek Info After Attack At Kabul Hotel, Site Of Party Honouring Canadian

OTTAWA — Foreign Affairs says Canadian officials in Kabul and Ottawa are working to get more information after a guesthouse in the Afghan capital was stormed by armed gunmen.

Officials Seek Info After Attack At Kabul Hotel, Site Of Party Honouring Canadian

Total Policing Expenses Pegged At $9 Million For Moncton RCMP Shootings

MONCTON, N.B. — The cost of additional policing in the aftermath of last June's murder of three RCMP officers has been estimated at $9 million.

Total Policing Expenses Pegged At $9 Million For Moncton RCMP Shootings