Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Philippe Couillard Attacks Newly-elected Pq Leader's 'Closed Nationalism'

The Canadian Press, 08 Oct, 2016 04:42 PM
  • Philippe Couillard Attacks Newly-elected Pq Leader's 'Closed Nationalism'
REYKJAVIK, Iceland — Jean-Francois Lisee's election as Parti Quebecois leader represents a victory for "the nationalism of exclusion," Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard said Saturday.
 
Couillard made the comments during a trip to Iceland only hours after Lisee, 58, was elected PQ leader on Friday.
 
He said Lisee's campaign statements regarding limiting immigration made it clear he advocated for a "closed nationalism" that has some ideological parallels to European right-wing populist parties.
 
Lisee, a one-time adviser to former premiers Jacques Parizeau and Lucien Bouchard, ran a campaign focused on immigration and identity issues that raised the ire of opponents and younger voters who saw him playing on fears and divisions in society.
 
Lisee argued immigration has not been a great benefit to Quebec and that the province must reduce the number of immigrants it accepts every year in order to better integrate them.
 
On Saturday, Couillard said the PQ seemed to be moving closer to "a kind of nationalism of the besieged, nationalism of the fearful, of people who don't want to deal with diversity, who prefer Quebec remains folded in on itself. That's what we see elsewhere in world."
 
When questioned, he would not say which European parties he was referring to specifically.
 
Parti Quebecois MNA Pascal Berube, who supported Lisee in the race, denounced Couillard's comments as "ridiculous."
 
"It's panic on the part of the premier on the first day Jean-Francois Lisee arrives," he said, adding the premier should apologize.
 
Lisee, a member of the legislature since 2012 and international relations minister between 2012 and 2014, won more than 50 per cent of support on the second round of voting.
 
According to one political analyst, Lisee's campaign promise to not hold a referendum in his first mandate if he is elected premier could benefit his party in the short term. 
 
Universite de Sherbrooke professor Jean-Herman Guay said Lisee's opponents would not be able to cite the threat of a referendum as a reason not to vote for the Parti Quebecois in the next provincial election, set for the fall of 2018. 
 
"That has just changed the political landscape completely," Guay said.
 
The 2018 election date means there would be no referendum before 2022, if Lisee is elected premier and keeps his promise.

MORE National ARTICLES

Federal Intransigence Threatens Health Accord, B.C. Health Minister Warns

Terry Lake says he is troubled by recent signals from Health Minister Jane Philpott that the federal Liberals plan to limit annual increases to three per cent — half the six per cent increase set out in Canada's last health accord.

Federal Intransigence Threatens Health Accord, B.C. Health Minister Warns

Abbotsford Police Called In To Investigate Kelowna RCMP

Abbotsford Police Called In To Investigate Kelowna RCMP
  Abbotsford police Const. Ian MacDonald says the department was asked in early September to conduct the investigation.

Abbotsford Police Called In To Investigate Kelowna RCMP

B.C. Judge Instructs Jury In Trial Of Accused Vancouver Island Mill Shooter

B.C. Judge Instructs Jury In Trial Of Accused Vancouver Island Mill Shooter
B.C. Supreme Court Justice Robin Baird says jurors must follow their own interpretation of the evidence presented over the past three weeks to decide if Kevin Addison is guilty.

B.C. Judge Instructs Jury In Trial Of Accused Vancouver Island Mill Shooter

India To Set Up Nuclear Plants In Uttarakhand, Punjab, Haryana

India To Set Up Nuclear Plants In Uttarakhand, Punjab, Haryana
The central government is looking at possible sites in the northern states of Uttarakhand, Punjab and Haryana for setting up new atomic power plants, a minister said on Tuesday.

India To Set Up Nuclear Plants In Uttarakhand, Punjab, Haryana

Class Action Lawsuit Proposed On Air Canada And Westjet Baggage Fees

The proposed class action alleges that the two airlines colluded to impose the fees and have unjustly enriched themselves in the process.

Class Action Lawsuit Proposed On Air Canada And Westjet Baggage Fees

Woman Who Lost Kids, Dad To Drunk-driving Crash Marks Anniversary Of Deaths

Woman Who Lost Kids, Dad To Drunk-driving Crash Marks Anniversary Of Deaths
TORONTO — A year after a horrific drunk-driving crash killed her children and father, a grieving Toronto-area mother says she hopes the tragedy that decimated her family will make people think twice before they get behind the wheel.

Woman Who Lost Kids, Dad To Drunk-driving Crash Marks Anniversary Of Deaths