Parti Québécois leader Paul St-Pierre Plamondon speaking loudly and often after party win over Coalition Avenir Québec
Parti Québécois leader Paul St-Pierre Plamondon speaking loudly and often after party win over Coalition Avenir Québec
Quebec separation is back among the living.
Years after many considered it dead, the prospect of removing Canada’s second-most populous province from the federation has re-entered the political debate. And though Quebecers aren’t exactly marching in the streets in its support as they once did, they are certainly taking another look at the Parti Québécois.
The PQ, formed in 1968 expressly to make a country out of the province, is by far the most popular political party in the land, with a bevy of polls suggesting it could form a majority government were an election held today.
In October, the party won a byelection in the Quebec City-area riding of Jean-Talon, long a stronghold of the governing Coalition Avenir Québec, or CAQ. More recently, the PQ released its “year one” budget, essentially an advertisement for the alleged economic benefits of a sovereign Quebec.
I don't think secession would be a great idea but considering the vast cultural difference between quebec and the rest of canada it could feasibly be run as an autonomous region while still having ties to the state. I doubt this will happen tho lol
That may be, but I was talking about a different thing- I don't know how resource-dependent Quebec is on the rest of Canada. The U.S. South, as much as they love to make noise about secession, depends way too much on commerce from the rest of the U.S. to actually do that and survive. Is Quebec the same way or would this be more like Brexit, where things suck a lot more but they keep limping along?