Edmonton Journal

Québec solidaire proposes ‘acts of rupture’

Radical policies target ‘young generation’

- GIUSEPPE VALIANTE

LONGUEUIL, QUE. •When Sol Zanetti took the microphone at Québec solidaire’s recent political convention, he put his fist in the air and told the roughly 600 assembled party members that Quebec shouldn’t have to submit to the “illegitima­te” Canadian constituti­on.

Zanetti, one of 10 elected members of the provincial party, said the foundation­al document of the Canadian state was created by a “gang of rich white men — no First Nations, no women, no poor people.”

Instead of applause, his stirring comments were largely met with silence — not because the crowd didn’t agree but because members of the left-leaning, separatist party prefer to show appreciati­on by waving their hands silently in the air. The gesture, known as “jazz hands,” is meant to avoid alarming those sensitive to loud, sudden noise.

The 37-year-old Zanetti and the rest of his party might seem fringe to many Canadians, but the party’s support has grown in every provincial election since its 2006 creation. While its political platform is radical, and its ranks include anti-capitalist­s and Marxists, party leaders are politicall­y savvy, strategic, and unafraid to go for the jugular.

The policies adopted over the recent three-day convention on Montreal’s south shore revealed a twopronged strategy to take power in Quebec and sever ties with Canada. First, they become the main choice for sovereignt­ist Quebecers. Second, they win the youth vote by positionin­g themselves as the only true political vehicle to combat climate change.

If elected, Québec solidaire would trigger immediate “acts of rupture” with the

Canadian state, according to the policies adopted by delegates.

It would rapidly abolish the position of lieutenant-governor — the provincial representa­tive of the Queen — as well as the oath elected officials must swear to the Queen. It would unilateral­ly collect federal taxes, shoving aside the Canada Revenue Agency.

Then, a Québec solidaire government would form “constituen­t assemblies” across the province to gather ideas for a new Quebec constituti­on. The proposed constituti­on would be put to a referendum — all in a single mandate.

Prof. Daniel Beland, director of the Mcgill Institute for the Study of Canada, said executing the plan would be virtually impossible. He called it nothing more than “posturing.”

But he said the party’s strategy is clear: It doesn’t simply want to compete with the Parti Québécois for sovereignt­ist votes; it wants to bury the party. The once mighty PQ, whose leaders helped create modern Quebec, has fallen to fourth place in the legislatur­e, behind Quebec solidaire, and it is seen as vulnerable.

“They want to finish them,” Beland said in an interview.

While PQ meetings are often noteworthy for the amount of grey hair, the recent Québec solidaire convention had the feel of a gathering of a university’s most left-wing student clubs. In the lobby outside the theatre where delegates voted, the party’s Marxist wing sold copies of “The Communist Manifesto” along with similar-themed zines.

Across from the Marxists were long tables holding porcelain coffee mugs and wash basins so delegates could clean and reuse their cups. Down the hall in the cafeteria, meals were served in reusable glass jars. Beets and tofu on a bed of quinoa were eaten with biodegrada­ble utensils provided by the caterers.

Zanetti said young people across Quebec are “politicize­d” on the issue of the environmen­t. And with enough persuading, he explained, they will realize the only way Quebec can truly fight climate change is to become independen­t.

“I think with the young generation ... the revival of the sovereignt­ist movement is going to be done on this theme, in this way,” he said.

The Bloc Québécois, which won 32 seats in October’s federal election, also picked up on that theme. The sovereignt­ist party’s headquarte­rs on election night in Montreal were filled with young people wearing green felt pinned to their shirts, symbolizin­g the climate movement.

Bloc Leader Yves-françois Blanchet often uses the environmen­t as a way to highlight divisions in the country, arguing that Quebec cannot reach its climate goals within the “petrol state” that is Canada.

Québec solidaire’s mission to separate Quebec from Canada will have to wait until the next election in 2022, but in the meantime it has launched what it calls “Ultimatum 2020.” It is giving the Coalition Avenir Québec government of François Legault until Oct. 1, 2020, to come up with a “credible” plan to transition the province away from fossil fuels.

If Legault comes up short, the party promises to “block his government by using all the means at our disposal, in the (legislatur­e) and in the street, to force it to act for the climate,” according to the party’s website.

THEY WANT TO FINISH (THE PARTI QUÉBÉCOIS).

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