Cape Breton Post

Jean not giving up

Former governor general not abandoning candidacy despite Ottawa, Quebec pulling support

- BY MELANIE MARQUIS

Despite Ottawa and Quebec pulling their support, former governor general Michaelle Jean shows no sign of abandoning her candidacy for the top job at la Francophon­ie.

Jean, who has been secretary general since 2014, is seeking a second term and will be up against Rwandan Foreign Affairs Minister Louise Mushikiwab­o when members make their choice later this week.

But on Tuesday, the Canadian and Quebec government­s announced they were pulling support for Jean to remain as head of the internatio­nal organizati­on of French-speaking nations, electing to support the “consensus” candidate instead.

A spokesman for Jean said Wednesday he was surprised at the Canadian and Quebec government­s’ decision to back Mushikiwab­o before the summit even opens.

“A consensus implies a debate that is held according to the standards,” Bertin Leblanc said. “With the summit beginning (Thursday), no doubt this discussion will take place among the heads of state and of government­s behind closed doors.”

Leblanc had said on the weekend that Jean had no intention of dropping out.

Jean has been dogged by accusation­s of excessive spending during her time as head of la Francophon­ie. Quebecor media outlets reported she spent $500,000 renovating her rented Paris residence, as well as $20,000 on a piano.

Her principle rival Mushikiwab­o has support from France and the African Union countries, leaving Jean’s chances of retaining the top job extremely thin.

Without Canada and Quebec’s backing, those chances are further reduced on the eve of the two-day summit in the Armenian capital of Yerevan.

Traditiona­lly, the election of a secretary general is reached by consensus, not by vote.

With Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Quebec premier-designate Francois Legault set to arrive in Yerevan later Wednesday, there were fears within the Canadian government the battle for the job would overshadow the summit.

In recent days, several federal government sources suggested the re-election of Jean, who was chosen in 2014 in part due to the absence of a consensus African candidate, would be “difficult” and that Canada would join a consensus if there were one.

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? Secretary General of La Francophon­ie and former governor general of Canada Michaelle Jean walks to the podium to address a youth as peace builders working session at the 2017 United Nations Peacekeepi­ng Defence Ministeria­l conference in Vancouver, B.C.
CP FILE PHOTO Secretary General of La Francophon­ie and former governor general of Canada Michaelle Jean walks to the podium to address a youth as peace builders working session at the 2017 United Nations Peacekeepi­ng Defence Ministeria­l conference in Vancouver, B.C.

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