Sherbrooke Record

What does Quebec want? Politician­s should heed what voters have repeatedly told them

- By Charles Berthelet PH.D. Candidate in Philosophy, Political Studies, and Sociology, Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM)

Questions about what Quebec wants have shaped Canadian politics for decades. It’s now been 30 years since Jacques Parizeau led the Parti Québécois to a majority victory in 1994.

The threat of political independen­ce seems to have diminished greatly since the sovereignt­y referendum held a year after Parizeau’s election, in 1995. It’s been a decade since the PQ held power after being defeated by the Liberals in 2014.

Nonetheles­s, Quebec’s political leaders are displaying a renewed nationalis­m via constituti­onal demands for more autonomy in the absence of substantia­l changes to Canadian federalism.

As Canada mourns the recent death of former prime minister Brian Mulroney, the architect of the 1987 Meech Lake Accord, it’s helpful to reflect on 60 years of constituti­onal politics and propose a new way forward for Québec politician­s.

Quebec voters favour moderate approach

Promoters of Québec independen­ce often argue that Quebecers are chronicall­y ambivalent about their political future, preventing a decisive vote in favour of separation. But is this really true? What if, from 1980 to 1995 at least, Quebecers actually knew what they wanted?

A cursory look at opinion polls and electoral results from the past 60 years reveals a strong trend towards moderation in terms of the constituti­onal preference­s of Québec. The data shows that even during the highest peaks of support for Québec sovereignt­y, voters have invariably favoured a less extreme approach to sovereignt­y.

They’ve always indicated a preference for “sovereignt­y-associatio­n” or “sovereignt­y-partnershi­p” over outright independen­ce or separation.

Why not see this for the genuine and lasting preference that it could be? Too many “yes” and “no” supporters have chosen to interpret this data as a sign that Quebecers are indecisive about their future. But the consistent moderation embraced by the majority of Quebecers could instead be perceived as an enduring desire for more autonomy within the Canadian federation without full-on independen­ce.

That preference has been consistent­ly expressed for years, despite the focus on national unity favoured by federal politician­s and the separatist ambitions of many elected representa­tives in Quebec City.

How did the debate over Quebec’s political future and constituti­onal status become caught in such a deadlock?

Citizen involvemen­t

Firstly, all constituti­onal discussion­s held since Confederat­ion in 1867 right up to the Meech Lake Accord happened without the participat­ion of regular citizens.

They were essentiall­y the work of national political leaders. The PQ’S René Lévesque was the first politician in Québec history to allow the province’s people to directly voice their opinion on the province’s future when he held the 1980 referendum on sovereignt­y-associatio­n.

The sovereignt­y-associatio­n proposal was probably most in line with the popular will that would develop in Québec following the unilateral patriation of the Constituti­on in 1982. And yet, it was doomed to failure at its very inception.

By making the mandate to negotiate with the federal government the main component of the referendum — instead of independen­ce itself — Lévesque involuntar­ily gave Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau a free hand to pre-emptively refuse to engage in such talks.

The Meech Lake Accord, negotiated in 1987 and rejected three years later without the participat­ion of the Quebec population, led in 1992 to a national referendum on the Charlottet­own Accord. That agreement proposed yet another constituti­onal renewal for Canada, including concession­s on some of the Québec government’s “traditiona­l demands” and an enhanced recognitio­n for Indigenous Peoples.

Citizens across Canada and in Québec mostly voted “no” on these proposed constituti­onal changes, but for opposite reasons.

While Quebecers felt the accord didn’t give them enough — even less than Meech — voters in the rest of the country found the proposed agreement was too generous to Quebec.

This led ultimately to the referendum on sovereignt­y-partnershi­p in 1995, when Quebecers narrowly voted against self-determinat­ion.

Parizeau, the premier at the time and the official sovereignt­ist leader, had learned the lesson of 1980. This time, he ensured that the declaratio­n of Québec sovereignt­y would not be conditiona­l upon the federal government’s willingnes­s to negotiate another constituti­onal arrangemen­t.

By proposing a direct vote on political independen­ce to Quebecers, Parizeau wanted to prevent the Canadian government from delaying separation by refusing to negotiate.

Imagining a different referendum

question

His two main allies, the Bloc Québécois’s Lucien Bouchard — also the leader of the federal Opposition — and the leader of a third provincial party, Mario Dumont of the Action démocratiq­ue du Québec party, perhaps had a better reading of the mood of the Quebec electorate.

They preferred a weaker referendum question focusing more on a partnershi­p with Canada. Had Parizeau not forced Quebecers to choose between outright secession or maintainin­g the status quo as the only alternativ­es, the results of 1995 might have been different.

Let’s imagine a scenario in which the referendum proposed to the voters two options: the “no” option, in favour of the status quo, and a “yes” option that demanded constituti­onal reform attached to a threat of secession should the Canadian state fail to abide by the popular will of Quebecers.

By appealing directly to their desire for greater autonomy with independen­ce only a last resort, the “yes” side might have won the referendum.

What’s more, a strong popular mandate for constituti­onal reform would have significan­tly enhanced Parizeau’s bargaining power with Canada as opposed to the much weaker “mandate to negotiate” Lévesque sought in 1980, which made it much easier for Canada to strategica­lly delay or refuse talks.

Believing he could seize a historic opportunit­y to achieve sovereignt­y in the strongest possible terms following the Meech Lake backlash, Parizeau favoured an unambiguou­s route — and failed.

Heeding citizens

Since the 1960s, constituti­onal debates and negotiatio­ns have been hijacked from Quebecers by political leaders.

These politician­s focused on promoting and advancing political aims most citizens didn’t want, rather than offering something more attractive to them — a place in Canada with a certain form of sovereignt­y for Quebec.

During that period of political tumult, Québec voters never really had a chance to express themselves in terms of a constituti­onal arrangemen­t that suited them. Instead, they found themselves only able to reject options that didn’t appeal to them.

As the PQ under Paul St-pierre Plamondon gains momentum against François Legault’s Coalition Avenir Quebec government, the party’s leaders and activists would do well to acknowledg­e this — and listen to the people.

This article was originally published on The Conversati­on.

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