Everything about Bloc Qu B Cois totally explained
The
Bloc Québécois (BQ) is a federal political party in
Canada that defines itself as devoted to the promotion of
sovereignty for
Quebec. It holds as its goal the "defence of the interests of all
Québécois in
Ottawa" (notably by promoting, in the
federal parliament, the consensus of the
National Assembly of Quebec). As such, it contests elections only in constituencies in Quebec.
The Bloc Québécois has very close relations with the
Parti Québécois (PQ, whose members are known as "Péquistes"), the provincial party that advocates the secession or separation of Quebec from Canadian Confederation, but the two are not linked organizationally. Members and supporters of the Bloc Québécois are known as "Bloquistes" [blɑˈkist(s)]. The party itself is sometimes known as the "BQ". English-speaking Canadians commonly refer to the BQ as "the Bloc".
The Bloc Québécois is supported by a wide range of voters in Quebec, from large sections of
organized labour to more conservative rural voters.
History
Origins
The Bloc Québécois was started in 1990 as an informal coalition of
Progressive Conservative and
Liberal Members of Parliament from Quebec, who left their original parties around the time of the defeat of the
Meech Lake Accord. The party was initially intended to be temporary and was given the goal of the promotion of sovereignty at the federal level. The party aimed to disband following a successful
referendum on sovereignty. The term "temporary ad hoc rainbow coalition" is now used by the Liberal Party of Canada to refer to the group of MPs who founded the Bloc Québécois, primarily in reference to
Jean Lapierre, who was once part of that group but had since renounced separatism and rejoined the Liberals under the leadership of
Paul Martin.
The initial coalition that led to the Bloc was led by
Lucien Bouchard, who had been federal
Minister of the Environment until he was fired by then
Prime Minister Brian Mulroney (as pointed out in
The Secret Mulroney Tapes). He was joined by several of his fellow Tories, such as
Nic Leblanc,
Louis Plamondon,
Benoît Tremblay,
Gilbert Chartrand, and
François Gérin, along with several Liberals, notably
Gilles Rocheleau and
Jean Lapierre. The first Bloquiste candidate to be elected was
Gilles Duceppe, then a union organizer, in a
by-election for the
Montreal riding of
Laurier-Sainte-Marie on
August 13,
1990. He ran as an independent, since the Bloc hadn't been registered as a federal party yet.
First election
In the
1993 federal election, the Bloc won 54 seats in Quebec. Because the opposition vote in the rest of Canada was split between the
Reform Party, the Progressive Conservative Party, and the
New Democratic Party, the Bloc narrowly won the second largest number of seats in the House of Commons, and therefore became the
official opposition. The election of such a relatively large number of Bloquistes was the first of
The Three Periods, a plan intended to lay out the way to sovereignty created by PQ leader
Jacques Parizeau. Parizeau became
Premier of Quebec in the
Quebec election of 1994 (the second of the
Three Periods).
1995 Quebec referendum
In 1995, the PQ government called the second
referendum on independence in
Quebec history. The Bloc entered the campaign for the
Oui (Yes) side (in favour of sovereignty). The
Oui side's campaign had a difficult beginning, so the leadership of the campaign was shifted from Jacques Parizeau to Bloc leader Lucien Bouchard. Bouchard was seen as more charismatic and more moderate, and therefore more likely to attract voters.
A "tripartite agreement" mapping out the plan for accession to independence was written and signed by the leaders of the Parti Québécois, the Bloc Québécois and the
Action démocratique du Québec on
June 12 1995. It revived
René Lévesque's notion that the referendum should be followed by the negotiating of an association agreement between an independent Quebec and the rest of Canada. This provision was inspired by Bouchard. Parizeau had previously wanted a vote simply on independence. The difference became moot when 50.6% of voters taking part in the referendum rejected the sovereignty plan. An overwhelming "Non" vote in Montreal tipped the balance.
The day after the referendum, Parizeau stepped down as PQ leader and premier of Quebec. Bouchard left federal politics and succeeded Parizeau in both posts on
January 29 1996.
New leaders for the Bloc
Following Bouchard's departure from Ottawa,
Michel Gauthier became
leader of the Bloc. In the wake of the referendum defeat, Gauthier proved unable to hold the fractious caucus together and resigned as leader just one year later. Gilles Duceppe, who had served as interim leader after Bouchard stepped down, became leader of the Bloc in 1997 and remains leader today, making him the longest-tenured current party leader among the four major Canadian federal parties (
as of 2007).
Gilles Duceppe announced on
May 11 2007 that he'd run in the Parti Québécois leadership race to replace
André Boisclair, who resigned on
May 8 2007 after the poor performance in the March election in Quebec and internal dissent forced him to step down. However, in a surprise move, Duceppe announced the next day that he was withdrawing from the race, and that he'd support
Pauline Marois who had also announced her intention to run. All this action has led to some speculation regarding the leadership of the party.
Declining fortunes
In the
1997 federal election, the Bloc Québécois dropped to 44 seats, losing official opposition status to the Reform Party. The 1997–2000 term was marked by the Bloc's fight against the passage of the
Clarity Act, the attempt by Canadian Prime Minister
Jean Chrétien (himself a Quebecer who represented a strongly nationalist riding) and
Stéphane Dion, a Quebec minister in Chrétien's cabinet, to codify the
Supreme Court of Canada's
1998 decision that Quebec couldn't secede unilaterally.
In the
2000 election, the Bloc dropped further to 38 seats, despite polling a larger percentage of the vote than at the previous election. One factor was the forced merger of several major Quebec cities, such as
Montreal,
Quebec City and
Hull/
Gatineau. The merger was very unpopular in those areas, resulting in Liberal wins in several of the merged areas. This was still more than the number of seats the Liberals had won in Quebec. However, the Liberals went on to win several subsequent by-elections during the life of the resulting Parliament, until the Liberals had held the majority of Quebec's seats in the Commons for the first time since
1984. From then to the subsequent election, the Bloc continued to denounce the federal government's interventions in what the Bloc saw as exclusively provincial jurisdictions. The Bloc credits its actions for the uncovering of what has since become the
sponsorship scandal. Among other things, the Bloc supported the
Kyoto Accord,
gay marriage and, and opposed Canadian participation in the War in
Iraq in 2003.
Comeback
The Bloc continued to slide in most of the 2003 opinion polls following the
2003 Quebec election which was won by the federalist
Quebec Liberal Party led by
Jean Charest. However, things changed during the winter of 2003, partly because of the unpopularity of Charest's government and the rise in support for independence in Quebec (49 per cent in March). However, in February 2004, the Auditor General of Canada uncovered the sponsorship scandal.
For the
2004 election the Bloc adopted the slogan
Un parti propre au Québec, a play on words that can be translated either as "A party belonging to Quebec" (or simply, "a party proper to Quebec") or as "A clean party in Quebec". The Bloc won 54 seats in the House of Commons, tying its previous record from the 1993 campaign. For the
2006 election, the Bloc used the slogan
Heureusement, ici, c'est le Bloc! ("Thankfully, here, it's the Bloc!"). The Bloc were expected to easily win more than 60 seats at the start of the campaign, and they did in fact take six seats from the Liberals. However, the unexpected resurgence of the
Conservatives in parts of Quebec, particularly in and around Quebec City, led to the Bloc losing eight seats to the Tories. Coupled with an additional loss to an
independent candidate, the Bloc recorded a net loss of three seats compared to the last campaign.
Speculation has been ongoing about the possibility of the Bloc forming alliances with other opposition parties or with an eventual
minority government. Duceppe, whose leadership was confirmed after the election, has stated that the Bloc will continue to co-operate with other opposition parties or with the government when interests are found to be in common, but insists that the Bloc will never participate in a federal government.
On
May 2 2006, a poll revealed that for the first time, the Conservatives were ahead of the Bloc in the Quebec's vote intention (34% against 31%). Duceppe announced the Bloc would support
Stephen Harper's budget the very same day. But in October polls showed that the Bloc was up to mid forties whereas the Conservatives fell into the teens behind Liberals in their poll numbers in Quebec.
Present situation
On
September 18,
2007 the Bloc Québécois lost the strategic stronghold of
Roberval-Lac-St-Jean to the
Conservative Party of Canada in a
by-election, while at the
same time the left-wing
New Democratic Party managed to win a Liberal riding, leading many to speculate that the Conservatives have replaced the Liberals as the main federalist alternative to the Bloc.
Although the Bloc Québécois was able to maintain a plurality of support, their support base has been declining and their earlier momentum gained against Paul Martin's Liberals in the aftermath of the
Sponsorship Scandal seems to have disappeared.
Relationship to Parti Québécois
The Parti Québécois has close ties to the Bloc and shares its principal objective of independence for Quebec. The two parties have backed each other during election campaigns, and prominent members of each party often attend and speak at the other's public events. In addition, the majority of each party's membership holds membership in both parties. However, on an organizational level the parties are separate entities – the Bloc isn't simply the federal wing of the Parti Québécois, nor the PQ simply the provincial wing of the Bloc.
Party leaders
Criticisms
The Bloc Québécois has been criticized as only superficially secessionist. In and by the acts of engaging in federal caucus, assuming their seats as MPs in the Canadian House of Commons, engaging in debate, entering questions during Question Period, and voting, the party's true essence may more correctly be constituted by an implicit recognition by the Bloc Québécois of Quebec's place
within Canada and as a participant in Canadian federalism, through the party's active participation in and furtherance of Canada's federal government. Nevertheless, some assert that the existence of the Bloc Québécois, its place as a federal party, and in pursuing a Quebec-centred agenda, means that an overall longitudinal decentralist trend is certain to continue as a defining feature of Canadian federalism.
Many federalists in Quebec and Canadians from the other provinces and territories in general dislike the Bloc Québécois exactly for its Quebec-centred agenda. A common criticism of the
first-past-the-post electoral system from people who support
electoral reform in Canada is that it allows regional parties like the Bloc that have little support nation-wide to hold the balance of power and dominate the agenda of minority parliaments. Since its first federal election in 1993 the Bloc Québécois (and the western centred
Reform Party and
Canadian Alliance during their existence) held a disproportionately high number of seats in contrast to a fairly low percentage of the popular vote nation-wide.
Election results
| Election |
# of candidates nominated |
# of seats won |
# of total votes |
% of popular vote (Canada) |
% of popular vote (Quebec) |
| 1993 | 75 |
54 |
1,835,784 |
13.5% |
49.3%
|
| 1997 | 75 |
44 |
1,385,821 |
10.7% |
37.9%
|
| 2000 | 75 |
38 |
1,377,727 |
10.7% |
39.9%
|
| 2004 | 75 |
54 |
1,680,109 |
12.4% |
48.9%
|
| 2006 | 75 |
51 |
1,553,201 |
10.5% |
42.1%
|
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