The Niagara Falls Review

Bloc Québécois in turmoil as 7 MPs quit

Embattled Martine Ouellet says ‘I am staying on as leader’ after mass walkout over her leadership style

- GIUSEPPE VALIANTE

MONTREAL — Seven of the 10 Bloc Québécois MPs quit Wednesday because of Martine Ouellet’s leadership style, leaving the once-powerful party in complete disarray and with the embattled leader refusing to step down.

“I am staying on as leader,” Ouellet defiantly told reporters after news broke she was losing 70 per cent of her caucus.

The seven, who will sit as Independen­ts, made the announceme­nt after a Bloc caucus meeting in Ottawa.

One of them is Louis Plamondon, who has been in the Commons since 1984, including the last 25 years as a Bloc MP.

He said he is “leaving the leader” but “is not leaving the Bloc Québécois.”

The exodus is a crushing blow to a party that formed the official opposition under Lucien Bouchard in 1993.

Gilles Duceppe then took over the reins of the Bloc and led it in five consecutiv­e elections in which it won at least half of the seats in Quebec.

Duceppe, in an interview with The Canadian Press, said Ouellet has to go.

“She can’t stay,” he said.

“When 70 per cent of your caucus has no confidence in you, it’s a major problem.”

Ouellet, an engineer who worked at Quebec’s hydro utility before entering politics, was first elected with the provincial Parti Québécois in 2010.

She was re-elected twice and remains a member of the provincial legislatur­e as an Independen­t.

Duceppe said Ouellet’s style was never appreciate­d, be it within the Bloc, the PQ or the Quebec Natural Resources Department she headed between 2012 and 2014.

“Everywhere where she went it was like that,” said Duceppe, adding he never worked with her directly.

“I haven’t seen, among people I talk to, and I speak to people on the left and the right, I haven’t seen anyone particular­ly happy with her leadership style.”

Aside from Plamondon, the six others who left the caucus Wednesday are Luc Theriault, Gabriel Ste-Marie, Rheal Fortin, Michel Boudrias, Simon Marcil and Monique Pauze.

“We were faced with two options: either Madame Ouellet stepped down, or we walked,” Theriault said.

Ouellet, who has been leader since last March, spoke to reporters later and said she addressed her personalit­y during Wednesday’s caucus meeting.

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