Montreal Gazette

PICARD’S MESSAGE

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With support for independen­ce on the wane, Parti Québécois members are no doubt happy for whatever backing comes their way. So when First Nations leader Ghislain Picard declared at the party’s policy convention on Saturday, “I am Innu; I am sovereigni­st,” the crowd gave him a standing ovation.

Turns out there was a bit of a misunderst­anding, as Picard made clear once the applause subsided. The Assembly of First Nations’ regional chief for Quebec and Labrador was not referring to Quebec sovereignt­y; he was talking about the status of indigenous peoples. He was not seeking to reopen independen­ce debates of the past; he was declaring his position for the debates of the future.

If Picard had intended to get the attention of the 350 PQ delegates in attendance, he certainly succeeded. The bigger question is whether his parallel will translate into greater understand­ing of and sympathy for aboriginal peoples.

Picard’s words might have been welcomed with a measure of hubris by federalist­s, but that, too, would be to misinterpr­et them. Nothing he said suggested he was siding with federalist­s any more than with sovereigni­sts.

Federalist­s will remember that during the 1995 referendum, some aboriginal nations, most notably the Cree, stuck a spoke in the wheels of the Yes side by declaring that if Quebec were to separate from Canada, it should not presume to take their lands with it. This opened the prospect that Quebec might be partitione­d if it separated from the rest of Canada.

On that point, PQ Leader Pierre Karl Péladeau on the weekend indicated he was “open for dialogue,” a surprising remark given the positions of Quebec government­s of all stripes. Later the party issued a clarificat­ion, reiteratin­g its stance that Quebec territory cannot be carved up. Senior members stressed that an independen­t Quebec would find ways to work with First Nations.

Picard’s position on Quebec independen­ce is not to take one. He says he did not vote in the previous referendum­s and will not vote if there is ever another one. His message is that indigenous peoples are not to be taken for granted, and that they are the ones who have the right to decide the future of their territorie­s.

With any luck, a third referendum that serves to divide the province and the nation will never happen. More and more, Quebec independen­ce is looking like yesterday’s issue, with polls suggesting a significan­t majority of Quebecers would vote No if a referendum were held today.

Aboriginal­s’ assertions of sovereignt­y, on the other hand, are the issues of today and tomorrow, and they deserve much greater public attention.

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