Benoît Pelletier | |
Birth Date: | 10 January 1960 |
Birth Place: | Quebec City, Quebec, Canada |
Death Place: | Mexico |
Profession: | Lawyer, professor |
Party: | Liberal |
Residence: | Gatineau, Quebec |
Office1: | Minister of Canadian Intergovernmental Affairs |
Term Start1: | 29 April 2003 |
Term End1: | 18 December 2008 |
Predecessor1: | Jean-Pierre Charbonneau |
Successor1: | Jacques Dupuis |
Office2: | Minister of Aboriginal Affairs |
Term Start2: | 29 April 2003 |
Term End2: | 18 February 2005 |
Predecessor2: | Rémy Trudel and Michel Létourneau[1] |
Successor2: | Geoffrey Kelley |
Term Start3: | 18 April 2007 |
Term End3: | 18 December 2008 |
Predecessor3: | Geoffrey Kelley |
Successor3: | Pierre Corbeil |
Office4: | Leader of the Government in Parliament |
Term Start4: | 18 April 2007 |
Term End4: | 5 November 2008 |
Predecessor4: | Jacques Dupuis |
Successor4: | Jacques Dupuis |
Office5: | Minister responsible for the reform of democratic institutions |
Term Start5: | 18 February 2005 |
Term End5: | 18 December 2008 |
Predecessor5: | Jacques Dupuis |
Successor5: | Jacques Dupuis |
Office6: | Minister responsible for the Outaouais |
Term Start6: | 29 April 2003 |
Term End6: | 18 December 2008 |
Predecessor6: | Sylvain Simard |
Successor6: | Norman MacMillan |
Office7: | Member of the National Assembly of Quebec for Chapleau |
Term Start7: | 30 November 1998 |
Term End7: | 5 November 2008 |
Predecessor7: | Claire Vaive |
Successor7: | Marc Carrière |
Benoît Pelletier (10 January 1960 – 30 March 2024) was a Canadian lawyer, academic, and politician in the province of Quebec.
He was a Liberal member of the National Assembly of Quebec from 1998 to 2008 and was a prominent cabinet minister in the government of Jean Charest. He was best known for promoting the concept of "asymmetric federalism" to incorporate Quebec nationalism into a decentralized Canadian federal structure.
Pelletier was born in Quebec City, Quebec on 10 January 1960. His father, Jean-Paul Pelletier, was an administrator and municipal councillor.
Pelletier received a law degree from Université Laval in 1981 and was admitted to the Barreau du Québec the following year. He later earned a Master's Degree in law from the University of Ottawa (1989) and doctorates in law from the (1996) and the Aix-Marseille University (2000).
Pelletier was a legal adviser at the Canadian Department of Justice from 1983 to 1990, when he received a faculty position at the University of Ottawa. He taught there for several years and was recognized as professor of the year in 1998. He also authored several works on constitutional law and was often interviewed as an expert on the subject in the 1990s.[2] He has been a guest professor at the Universities of Nantes (1993), Corsica (1997), Paris II (1998), Paris V (1998) and Lyon III (1998), as well as at Queens and Cornell Universities (both 2016). He has also twice been a visiting scholar at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars in Washington, D.C.
From 2009 to 2011, he was a lawyer with the firm Noël et associés. He was the Government of Canada’s chief negotiator on the Huron-Wendat (2011–2013) and Cree (2013–2016) dossiers. In 2014–2015, he was Special Representative to the Minister of Indigenous and Northern Affairs Canada in relation to the five-year review of the Specific Claims Tribunal Act.
Pelletier was one of three members of an external panel established in 2015 by the federal government to study the issues surrounding medically assisted dying.
Pelletier was first elected to the National Assembly of Quebec in the 1998 provincial election, winning the safe Liberal seat of Chapleau in the Outaouais region. The Parti Québécois (PQ) won a majority government in this election, and Pelletier entered the legislature as an opposition member. In January 1999, Liberal leader Jean Charest appointed him to the high-profile post of critic for Intergovernmental Affairs.[3] As a member of Quebec’s Official Opposition (1998–2003), at the outset of his political career, Benoît Pelletier was appointed Quebec Liberal Party critic on Intergovernmental Affairs. From 1999 to 2001, he was also Chairman of the Liberal Party’s Special Committee on the political and constitutional future of Quebec society. In this role, he developed the Party’s position on intergovernmental relations.
After his appointment, Pelletier was commissioned to lead a comprehensive review of the Liberal Party's constitutional platform. Two years later, he brought forward a policy document entitled, Quebec's Choice: Affirmation, Autonomy and Leadership. Its highlights included a call for the Canadian Constitution to recognize the "specificity" of Quebec; a requirement that judges consider this "specificity" when ruling on charter rights cases that affect Quebec government policy; a provincial veto over constitutional changes; greater provincial autonomy over international affairs, telecommunications, and the environment; and the creation of a new council for overseeing federal-provincial issues.[4] This document marked a shift away from former Liberal premier Robert Bourassa's definition of Quebec as a "distinct society," and Pelletier acknowledged that his party was taking a more "pro-Canada" stance than in past years.[5] He said, "what [Quebecers] want above all is to say [...] that they want to be Canadians, but in their own way."[6] Quebec's Choice helped launch Jean Charest's drive to create the Council of the Federation, and Pelletier has sometimes been recognized as the council's chief architect.[7]
Pelletier was very critical of the approach taken by Jean Chrétien's federal government in fighting the Quebec sovereignty movement. During the period of the Gomery inquiry, he remarked that the sponsorship scandal was caused by figures in the Canadian government who believed that "with money you could change the view of the population."[8]
When the Chrétien government introduced the Clarity Act in 2000, the PQ government in Quebec responded with a bill proclaiming Quebec's right to self-determination. While Pelletier opposed the Clarity Act, he also led the Liberal Party's opposition to the latter bill, which he argued was the prelude to a new referendum on sovereignty.[9] He instead introduced a motion in the national assembly recognizing Quebec's right to declare independence if the Canadian government did not negotiate in good faith after a sovereigntist victory in a hypothetical future referendum.[10] (The motion itself was not an endorsement of independence.)
The Liberal Party won a majority government in the 2003 Quebec general election, and Pelletier was returned by an increased margin in Chapleau. On 29 April 2003, he was appointed to the Charest cabinet as minister of Canadian Intergovernmental Affairs and minister of Aboriginal Affairs as well as minister responsible for the Outaouais.[11]
On 18 February 2005, he was relieved of his responsibilities for Aboriginal Affairs and given new responsibilities for Francophone Canadians and the reform of democratic institutions. From 17 March 2005, he was also styled as the minister responsible for the Agreement on Internal Trade and the minister responsible for Access to Information.[12] Pelletier was President of the Federal-Provincial-Territorial Committee of Ministers on Internal Trade from December 2004 to December 2005. He was also a member of the Special Committee on Electoral Reform from June 2005 to May 2006.
Pelletier was returned by a reduced margin in the 2007 provincial election, as a surge in support for the Action démocratique du Québec reduced the Liberals to a minority government. Following a cabinet shuffle on 17 April 2007, Pelletier kept his existing ministerial designations (except for responsibility for the Agreement on Internal Trade) and was once again assigned to Aboriginal Affairs. He also became leader of the government in parliament.[13]
Pelletier often defended Quebec's political jurisdiction against what he regarded as encroachments from the Canadian government. He spoke against Employment Insurance reforms introduced by the Martin government in 2004 and later criticized Martin's attempt to create a national child care plan with funds targeted to guidelines determined by federal government.[14] (Quebec has had a provincial child care plan for several years.) Pelletier argued that provinces should be allowed to opt out of these and related federal plans and to set up alternative models with federal funding.[15] Notwithstanding their disagreements, Pelletier and his counterparts in the Canadian government completed a four-year deal on child care funding just before the Martin administration fell in late 2005.[16]
Pelletier also supported Quebec's autonomy in the management of health care.[17] In early 2005, he announced that the province would undertake a controversial experiment with some private health providers. While stressing that he supported the five principles of Canadian medicare and favoured the public system, he nonetheless called for "some adjustments that would allow participation for the private partners."[18]
Pelletier also negotiated with the Martin government for Quebec to have a more autonomous role in international forums such as UNESCO, and for changes to the system of federal–provincial transfers (known to some as the fiscal imbalance).[19] In late 2004, he wrote guest columns for the English-language The Globe and Mail and National Post newspapers defending the principle of asymmetric federalism.[20]
In late 2006, Pelletier endorsed Harper's parliamentary motion to recognize that "the Québécois form a nation within a united Canada."[23] He was more critical of Harper's efforts to reform the Senate of Canada, arguing that any significant changes would require negotiations with the provinces.[24] Pelletier opposed Harper's efforts to reduce Quebec's percentage of seats in the House of Commons of Canada, saying that the proposed change would go to "the heart of balance in the federation."[25]
Pelletier also supported efforts to have Alberta's oil wealth included in a new federal–provincial funding formula. The Alberta government strongly opposed this suggestion.[26]
After the Quebec Liberals were reduced to a minority government in 2007, Pelletier called for the Canadian government to recognize Quebec's distinctiveness in a "charter of open federalism" and to clarify its division of powers with the provinces.[27] He later welcomed Harper's pledge for the federal government to end direct spending in areas of provincial jurisdiction.[28]
Pelletier's approach to federal-provincial relations was often compared to former prime minister Brian Mulroney's failed Meech Lake Accord on constitutional reform. During most of his time in office, Pelletier said that the time was not right to reopen constitutional debates.[29]
Pelletier took part in negotiations with several indigenous communities during his time in government. He brought forward an agreement with Quebec's Inuit leaders in June 2003, to negotiate a new form of self-government.[30] Four year later, he concluded an agreement in principle to create an Inuit-controlled government in the northernmost third of Quebec, answerable to the Quebec National Assembly.[31]
Pelletier considered reopening a 2002 settlement with the Innu on the grounds that the agreement did not properly address concerns about Quebec's land and laws. He ultimately chose to accept the accord and said that he would seek to balance the rights of the Innu and non-indigenous people under its framework.[32] He also took part in negotiations to resolve a 2004 crisis in the Mohawk community of Kanesatake, after violent confrontations that forced Grand Chief James Gabriel to leave the area.[33]
Pelletier supported the replacement of Quebec's first past the post electoral model with mixed member proportional representation.[34] In 2006, he wrote an article in the Montreal Gazette defending the proposed new system.[35] Three months later, he promised a bill on proportional representation before the next provincial election.[36] In the same period, he also proposed financial incentives to political parties as a means of encouraging more female candidates and candidates from "ethnocultural minorities.".[37]
In late 2007, Quebec's chief electoral officer issued a 400-page document that was seen as endorsing the mixed-member proportional system.[38] Notwithstanding Pelletier's efforts, no significant changes have been introduced to Quebec's electoral system as of 2012.
In a departure from previous Quebec policy, Pelletier also sought to assist francophone minority communities in the rest of Canada.[39] In August 2003, he announced $1.7 million for community projects across the country.[40] In late 2006, he argued that continued support was necessary to prevent the assimilation of these communities into the English-speaking majority.[41]
Pelletier opposed Parti Québécois leader Pauline Marois's 2007 proposal that all new immigrants to Quebec be required to have a working knowledge of French before becoming citizens of the province. He described the suggestion as dangerous, saying it would create a new tier of second-class citizens.[42]
Also in 2007, Pelletier contributed to a book entitled, Reconquerir le Canada: un nouveau projet pour la nation québécoise (English: Reconquering Canada: A New Project for the Quebec Nation). The volume was intended to promote and revitalize the federalist cause in Quebec.[43]
Pelletier served as the acting minister of Justice and Public Security in autumn 2007, when Jacques P. Dupuis underwent surgery.[44]
Pelletier did not seek re-election in 2008 and instead returned to his position at the University of Ottawa as a constitutional professor.[45] He was frequently sought for commentary on Canadian constitutional matters.[46] In June 2010, he called for Canadians to be more willing to discuss the constitution.[47]
In October 2010, Pelletier published an extended essay titled, Une certaine idée du Québec. Parcours d'un fédéraliste. De la réflexion à l'action.[48]
Benoît Pelletier lived in Gatineau, Quebec. He was married to Danièle Goulet (daughter of Marcel Goulet and Agathe Villeneuve) from June 30, 1990. Together, they had four children: Florence, Françoise, Jean-Christophe and Mathilde.
Pelletier died in Mexico on 30 March 2024, at the age of 64, from post COVID-19 complications.[49] [50]
Pelletier's many accomplishments have been recognized throughout his career, with numerous titles, awards and other forms of recognition: