Close X
Thursday, November 14, 2024
ADVT 
National

Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard Says Federal Liberal Win Means Questions For Sovereignty Movement

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 20 Oct, 2015 06:10 PM
  • Quebec Premier Philippe Couillard Says Federal Liberal Win Means Questions For Sovereignty Movement
MONTREAL — Premier Phillipe Couillard says the Quebec sovereignty movement's leadership needs to ask itself some tough questions after the election of a majority of federal Liberals in the province.
 
The staunchly federalist premier says the separatist movement will have to deal with the fact the Bloc Quebecois' share of the popular vote dropped again as Justin Trudeau's Liberals swept to power.
 
Couillard says four out of five Quebecers opted for parties committed to working within the Canadian federation, something the premier believes should give sovereigntists pause for thought.
 
But Parti Quebecois Leader Pierre Karl Peladeau says parking their vote with Liberals doesn't signal a decline in the desire of Quebecers to create a nation.
 
When the federal election began, Peladeau cautioned against using the Bloc's results to cast any aspersions on the provincial party's fortunes.  
 
He congratulated Bloc Leader Gilles Duceppe on the campaign, but admitted they'd hoped for a better result than the 10 seats and the 19.3 per cent of the popular vote the party obtained.
 
The 10 seats fell two short of the 12 needed for official party status.
 
The Bloc leader, who lost his own seat, is to address reporters later today.

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver Indigenous History Exhibition Wins Governor General's Award

Vancouver Indigenous History Exhibition Wins Governor General's Award
The exhibit combines artifacts and new technologies such as 3-D printing at three different locations to tell the story of the ancient Musqueam villages and burial sites that Vancouver was built on.

Vancouver Indigenous History Exhibition Wins Governor General's Award

Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin Suggests Using Electronic Media To Help End Aboriginal Stereotypes

Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin Suggests Using Electronic Media To Help End Aboriginal Stereotypes
Beverley McLachlin told an administration of justice conference in Saskatoon that media have been used to shape a certain perception of indigenous people, sometimes in very negative ways.

Chief Justice Beverley McLachlin Suggests Using Electronic Media To Help End Aboriginal Stereotypes

Umbrella Identified As Suspected Firearm That Prompted Fredericton School Lockdowns

Umbrella Identified As Suspected Firearm That Prompted Fredericton School Lockdowns
Police in Fredericton say a suspected firearm being carried by a man in the city this morning turned out to be an umbrella.

Umbrella Identified As Suspected Firearm That Prompted Fredericton School Lockdowns

Saskatoon Police Clearing Path To Solution Of Big Snowblower Theft

Saskatoon Police Clearing Path To Solution Of Big Snowblower Theft
Police in Saskatoon are swept up in an investigation into the theft early Wednesday morning of $25,000 worth of new snowblowers.

Saskatoon Police Clearing Path To Solution Of Big Snowblower Theft

Lockdown Lifted At Wilfrid Laurier University After Online Threat

Lockdown Lifted At Wilfrid Laurier University After Online Threat
The university's Waterloo, Ont., campus was closed early Friday morning and students and faculty were told to stay away.

Lockdown Lifted At Wilfrid Laurier University After Online Threat

Crown Wants 4-5 Years Prison For Man, Found Guilty In Deadly Toronto Scaffolding Collapse

Crown Wants 4-5 Years Prison For Man, Found Guilty In Deadly Toronto Scaffolding Collapse
Vadim Kazenelson was found guilty in June on four counts of criminal negligence causing death and one count of criminal negligence causing bodily harm.

Crown Wants 4-5 Years Prison For Man, Found Guilty In Deadly Toronto Scaffolding Collapse