Close X
Friday, September 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Parti Quebecois Leadership Front-runner Says Referendum Will Be Decided In 2018

The Canadian Press, 08 Feb, 2015 01:35 PM
  • Parti Quebecois Leadership Front-runner Says Referendum Will Be Decided In 2018
LAVAL, Que. — Pierre Karl Peladeau has announced he will wait until the next Quebec provincial election in 2018 to decide whether a Parti Quebecois government will hold a referendum on sovereignty in its first term.
 
The Quebec media mogul turned politician said Saturday his priority is to promote Quebec sovereignty between now and 2018 if elected head of the Parti Quebecois.
 
Speaking during a two-day PQ national council meeting in Laval, Que., Peladeau said the party's opponents are reducing the independence project to the accession process and the right moment for a referendum.
 
"I think that when we present ourselves in 2018, we will have a very good idea of the approach," Peladeau said.
 
Bernard Drainville, a member of the Quebec legislature who is also seeking to head up the party, urged Peladeau to use the leadership race to detail his intentions.
 
"Up until now, Pierre Karl has asserted his will to gain independence, I don't doubt it," Drainville said. "I don't doubt his sincerity. Now, I'm looking forward to seeing his plan. I'm looking forward to seeing how he's proposing to bring us there and I think that the (leadership) race should be used to do it."
 
Drainville, who also says he will wait until 2018 to decide on holding a referendum during the first term, said the ambiguity surrounding the question of sovereignty led to the PQ's last electoral loss.
 
Former PQ head Pauline Marois stepped down after the party was defeated at the polls last year.
 
Considered the front-runner in the ongoing leadership race, Peladeau is the controlling shareholder of Quebecor Inc., one of the main players in the province's media market.
 
Two other candidates for the party leadership urged Peladeau on Saturday to make a decision on his work with Quebecor to avoid a conflict of interest.
 
"He will have decisions to make to ensure he doesn't put himself in a situation of a conflict of interest," said former Quebec cabinet minister and fellow leadership candidate, Martine Ouellet.
 
Pierre Cere, another contender to head up the PQ, accused Peladeau of attempting to buy the party and compared him to "Citizen Kane," the U.S. film that depicts a media mogul's quest for power.
 
Peladeau rejected the accusation, saying: "The PQ has never been for sale."
 
Five aspiring PQ leaders spoke to about 450 party delegates during the PQ council meeting over the weekend.

MORE National ARTICLES

Child pornography charges laid after search of Saskatchewan Mountie's home

Child pornography charges laid after search of Saskatchewan Mountie's home
FOND DU LAC, Sask. — A Mountie in Saskatchewan is facing charges of accessing and possessing child pornography.

Child pornography charges laid after search of Saskatchewan Mountie's home

Former Manitoba cabinet minister launches bid to become next premier

Former Manitoba cabinet minister launches bid to become next premier
WINNIPEG — Another candidate is launching a bid to become Manitoba's next premier.

Former Manitoba cabinet minister launches bid to become next premier

Man charged with kidnapping, attempted murder of six-year-old on Alberta reserve

Man charged with kidnapping, attempted murder of six-year-old on Alberta reserve
EDMONTON — A few days before a six-year-old girl was found battered and near death on an Alberta reserve, she was singing and smiling at her school Christmas concert.

Man charged with kidnapping, attempted murder of six-year-old on Alberta reserve

Avian Flu Spreads To First Non-commercial Backyard Coop In Langley

Avian Flu Spreads To First Non-commercial Backyard Coop In Langley
VANCOUVER — The avian flu outbreak that has resulted in the deaths of thousands of birds in British Columbia's Fraser Valley has struck its first backyard coop.

Avian Flu Spreads To First Non-commercial Backyard Coop In Langley

Canada's Q4 could be brighter than forecast, but clouds over 2015: economists

Canada's Q4 could be brighter than forecast, but clouds over 2015: economists
OTTAWA — Canada's gross domestic product rose by an unexpectedly strong 0.3 per cent in October, which led several economists to consider revising their estimates for the final quarter of 2014 — although they also warned that they're less bullish about 2015 due to a drop in commodity prices, especially for oil.

Canada's Q4 could be brighter than forecast, but clouds over 2015: economists

Manning sorry for not encouraging consultation before Wildrose defections

Manning sorry for not encouraging consultation before Wildrose defections
EDMONTON — The former leader of the Reform Party says he made a mistake when he encouraged members of Alberta's Wildrose to unite with the governing Progressive Conservatives.

Manning sorry for not encouraging consultation before Wildrose defections