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‘Full and complete support’

Bloc Quebecois national office rallies behind leader after wave of resignatio­ns

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The national office of the Bloc Quebecois threw its support behind its leader on Saturday, days after seven of the party’s 10 members of Parliament quit the caucus over Martine Ouellet’s leadership style.

The party’s administra­tion made it clear Ouellet had their support, despite an open letter published Friday in which more than 20 former Bloc Quebecois MPS called for her resignatio­n.

“It is unanimousl­y resolved that the national office renews its full and complete support of Martine Ouellet and relaunches the invitation she made to each of the resigning MPS to participat­e in a process to allow them to reintegrat­e the Bloc Quebecois caucus,” Bloc member Benoit Lemieux said on behalf of the group.

Ouellet announced that the MPS who resigned will be able to keep their party membership­s and are welcome to discuss returning to caucus.

“It was never a question of exclusion,” she said at a news conference, flanked by the remaining party members. “The resigning More than 20 former Bloc Quebecois MPS called on Bloc Quebecois leader Martine Ouellet to step down Friday in a letter published in a Montreal newspaper accusing her of being intransige­nt and weakening Quebec’s voice in Ottawa.

deputies can remain members of the Bloc Quebecois if they wish.”

The seven MPS wrote a letter in Saturday’s Journal de Montreal saying that excluding them from the party would contribute to its death.

The letter reiterated criticisms of Ouellet’s leadership and said

her choice to focus only on independen­ce does not serve Quebec’s interests.

“(Ouellet) adds, almost incidental­ly, that it is also necessary to defend the interests of Quebec, but that this is not the foundation of our presence in Ottawa,” the letter read. “On the contrary, we believe that to serve independen­ce, the interests of Quebecers must be given priority. Without compromise. First and all the time.”

But Ouellet remained steadfast in her commitment to independen­ce Saturday, adding that all the remaining members are on the same page regarding the party’s future.

“A Bloc Quebecois that will work towards the promotion and preparatio­n of independen­ce, but also defending the rights of the Quebec nation,” she said. “For us, one doesn’t go without the other.”

The seven MPS who resigned stood by their position.

“We will meet in the next few days to evaluate all our options and to see how we can continue to serve Quebecers to the best of our capacity,” the statement read.

On Friday, more than 20 former Bloc Quebecois MPS published an open letter in Le Devoir calling for Ouellet’s resignatio­n.

The letter, co-signed by ex-bloc leader Gilles Duceppe, says Quebec’s status is feeble within the Canadian federation, with a pro-Canada premier in Quebec City and an “intransige­nt” and divisive Bloc leader in Ottawa.

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CP PHOTO

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