Close X
Tuesday, November 19, 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

Winnipeg Man Guido Amsel Accused Of Sending Letter Bombs To Hear Friday If He Gets Bail

Winnipeg Man Guido Amsel Accused Of Sending Letter Bombs To Hear Friday If He Gets Bail
Guido Amsel was back in front of a Winnipeg judge Wednesday for the second part of his bail hearing.

Winnipeg Man Guido Amsel Accused Of Sending Letter Bombs To Hear Friday If He Gets Bail

Personal Items Found Near Yellowknife Belonged To Missing Japanese Woman: RCMP

Personal Items Found Near Yellowknife Belonged To Missing Japanese Woman: RCMP
Atsumi Yoshikubo, who was 45, was last seen Oct. 22, 2014, as she walked along a highway north of the city.

Personal Items Found Near Yellowknife Belonged To Missing Japanese Woman: RCMP

Europe Migrant And Refugee Crisis Hits Election, Minister Chris Alexander Heads Back To Ottawa

 Conservative Leader Stephen Harper put off a campaign announcement and cancelled a photo op Thursday as Europe's migrant and refugee crisis washed over the federal election.

Europe Migrant And Refugee Crisis Hits Election, Minister Chris Alexander Heads Back To Ottawa

Whether To Split Up Twins, Triplets In Tsawwassen School Can Pit Parents Against Educators

Whether To Split Up Twins, Triplets In Tsawwassen School Can Pit Parents Against Educators
Since her identical twins Riley and Taylor were in kindergarten, Sharisse Dalby says she's had to fight to keep her boys in the same classroom at their Tsawwassen, B.C., school, where the eight-year-olds are about to enter Grade 3.

Whether To Split Up Twins, Triplets In Tsawwassen School Can Pit Parents Against Educators

NDP Riding President Tossed For Urging Voters To Back Green Candidate

NDP Riding President Tossed For Urging Voters To Back Green Candidate
OTTAWA — The president of the NDP riding association in Ontario's Parry Sound-Muskoka has been turfed for urging voters to support the Green candidate.

NDP Riding President Tossed For Urging Voters To Back Green Candidate

Residential School Wounds 'Ripped Open' As CFS Workers Take Newborn: Grandmother

Residential School Wounds 'Ripped Open' As CFS Workers Take Newborn: Grandmother
WINNIPEG — A mother was breast-feeding her newborn in a hospital bed Saturday when the baby's grandmother says social workers came in and handed over an envelope.

Residential School Wounds 'Ripped Open' As CFS Workers Take Newborn: Grandmother