National Post

Charest makes plea for civility in politics

FORMER PREMIER

- Caroline Plante

QUEBEC • Former Quebec Premier Jean Charest is concerned about what he says has been a rise in incivility across Canada.

In an open letter he cosigned with former mayors, senators, artists and business people, he calls on the political class to take concrete action to clean up public debate.

The letter published Tuesday in The Globe and Mail caused a stir on social media, Charest said in a telephone interview with The Canadian Press.

“The reaction is very strong. It stunned us. It surprised me a lot,” he said. “Some people are reacting poorly, seeing this call as a kind of call to silence, when that’s not the case at all.”

The letter authors contend Canadians are less tolerant of divergent points of view and are increasing­ly belligeren­t, particular­ly when it comes to the ongoing conflict in the Middle East between Israel and Hamas.

They point to what they describe as a broad and “worrisome” trend that leads some people with “strident ideologies” and a lack of nuance to act out in “intimidati­ng and violent ways.”

Charest and his co-signatorie­s warn that if nothing is done to “address urgently the rise of incivility,” Canada’s social fabric will be “torn apart, perhaps irreparabl­y.”

“We are calling upon you, the senior political leadership of Canada, to ... demonstrat­e your shared commitment to fostering a safer, more cohesive and respectful Canada, where hatred has no home,” they wrote.

Charest blames social media for “setting free” people’s speech. He said he is particular­ly outraged by a recent wave of resignatio­ns in Quebec municipali­ties. Around 800 local politician­s have quit their posts since the last elections in 2021.

Former Gatineau mayor France Belisle became one of the most high-profile officials to resign, saying in February she had been the victim of intimidati­on.

“(Incivility) affects the ability of elected officials to do their job, to the point where there are people, like the mayor of Gatineau, who give up,” Charest lamented.

“There are women who, unfortunat­ely, experience rather difficult situations when people allow themselves to make remarks on social media that are frankly hurtful and intended to wound.”

He also referred to recent death threats targeting Parti Québécois Leader Paul Stpierre Plamondon and an instance in which Foreign Affairs Minister Melanie Joly was confronted in the street about the war in Gaza.

 ?? ?? Jean Charest
Jean Charest

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