National Post (National Edition)

New divide pits Montreal versus rest of province

Priorities shift from secession in run-up to vote

- GIUSEPPE VALIANTE

MONTREAL • For half a century Quebec politics have been dominated by the split between those who wanted to stay inside the Canadian federation and those who wanted out.

But the 10 months leading up to October’s provincial election will be different.

There is a new division in Quebec, between those living in Montreal and citizens elsewhere in the province.

The consistent and sustained rise in the polls of the legislatur­e’s third-largest party, the federalist Coalition Avenir Québec, reflects this new reality.

Polling indicates the sixyear-old party has a serious shot at government — including a majority — without needing to win a single seat on the island of Montreal, a breakdown that hasn’t happened in Quebec’s modern political history.

“Whether or not it’s possible to win without Montreal, I hope to — and I will — have a certain number of ridings on the island,” Coalition Leader François Legault said during an end-of-year interview with The Canadian Press.

Quebec has 125 ridings, including 27 on the island of Montreal. A party needs to win 63 seats to form a majority government.

Philippe Fournier, an astrophysi­cist who runs the poll-aggregatin­g blog Qc125. com, said it’s “absolutely” possible for the (Coalition) to win without the metropolis.

“There are 98 seats outside Montreal,” said Fournier, whose statistica­l skills have attracted serious attention across the province. “Can the (Coalition) win 63 of them? The answer is absolutely they can. We are in uncharted territory.”

This new territory was created in part by Parti Québécois Leader Jean-François Lisée, who has promised not to hold a referendum if his party wins in October.

“Mr. Lisée has taken away the scarecrow of the Liberal party,” Legault said. “Quebecers are now free of this question that has divided them for the past 50 years.”

Fournier said he initially thought Lisée’s strategy was good politics when the PQ leader introduced the noreferend­um idea 12 months ago.

“But in hindsight, (PQ voters) are saying, if there is no referendum then we’ll just vote elsewhere,” Fournier said, referring to the Coalition and to a lesser extent, Québec solidaire, a far-left sovereignt­ist party popular in parts of Montreal but that has little support elsewhere.

Aside from a PQ minority government between 2012 and 2014, the Liberals have been in power since 2003. The anti-Liberal vote, according to the polls, seems to be crystalliz­ing behind the Coalition — at the expense of Lisée’s party.

A recent poll by Leger put Coalition support at 36 per cent, four percentage points ahead of the Liberals and 17 points ahead of the third-placed PQ. Another poll released Thursday by Mainstreet Research had the Coalition at 31 per cent, the Liberals at 29 per cent and the PQ at 24 per cent.

During his end-of-year news conference, Lisée was asked if his decision to steer clear of a referendum until at least 2022 has unshackled sovereignt­ists from his party.

“There is good news and bad news,” Lisée replied. “The good news is that people want to get rid of the Liberals. The bad news is that for now, they are looking at the (Coalition).”

Quebec is enjoying its lowest unemployme­nt rate since the 1970s and Premier Philippe Couillard is expected to table a fourth consecutiv­e balanced budget in the spring.

The final budget of Couillard’s first mandate is also expected to include pre-election goodies for Quebecers tempted to vote elsewhere.

Finance Minister Carlos Leitao already announced in November’s economic update a series of income tax cuts and a $100 per child subsidy for families.

The Coalition’s political power was revealed in October’s byelection victory in a long-held Liberal riding in Quebec City. More than 50 per cent of voters chose Legault’s party, compared with 19 per cent for the Liberals.

Meanwhile, Legault’s party believes the Liberals’ religious neutrality law is tepid.

Bill 62 requires all people to remove a face covering while receiving or giving a state service — a position widely criticized as targeting Quebec’s Muslims, the majority of whom live in Montreal.

If the Coalition wins in 2018, Legault promises his party will table legislatio­n banning all public employees “in positions of authority” such as police officers and judges from wearing religious symbols.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada