2005 Parti Québécois leadership election explained

Election Name:2005 Parti Québécois leadership election
Country:Quebec
Type:presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:2001 Parti Québécois leadership election
Previous Year:2001
Next Election:2007 Parti Québécois leadership election
Next Year:2007
Election Date:13–15 November 2005
Turnout:76.69%
4Blank:First Ballot
3Blank:Second Ballot
2Blank:Percentage
1Blank:Popular Vote
Candidate1:André Boisclair
1Data1:56,503
2Data1:53.7%
Candidate2:Pauline Marois
1Data2:32,166
2Data2:30.6%
Candidate3:Richard Legendre
1Data3:7,877
2Data3:7.5%
1Data4:5,775
2Data4:5.5%
1Data5:1,282
2Data5:1.2%
1Data6:951
2Data6:0.9%
Candidate7:Ghislain Lebel
1Data7:458
2Data7:0.4%
1Data8:247
2Data8:0.2%
Candidate9:Gilbert Paquette
1Data9:Withdrew
Leader
After Election:André Boisclair

The Parti Québécois leadership election of 2005 was held from November 13 to November 15, 2005 to elect the new leader of the Parti Québécois, the main sovereigntist and social democratic political party in Quebec, Canada.

It was the second race of its kind in the history of the party, following the leadership election of 1985. It was conducted in two rounds, under a preferential voting system. Former Minister André Boisclair was elected at the first round ballot with 53.7% of votes from party members, making him the first openly gay leader of a major political party in North America, and one of the first in the world.

Unfolding

Background

On June 4, 2005, party leader Bernard Landry announced his intention to resign as leader of the PQ after getting 76.2% in a vote of confidence in his leadership from delegates to the party National Council. The party appointed Louise Harel as its interim leader. Gilles Duceppe, leader of the federal-level sovereigntist political party, the Bloc Québécois, was expected to be a strong candidate if he had decided to run. On June 11, he however announced that he would remain leader of the Bloc despite pressure to make a bid for the leadership of the PQ.

Campaign

After months of pre-campaign, the race officially began on September 15, 2005, the official deadline for entering the race. Soon, Boisclair emerged as a favorite in the polls, with Pauline Marois second, Richard Legendre a close third and Louis Bernard fourth. The validity of these polls, much touted by the media, was however challenged by some candidate organizations since they were conducted on the whole population of Quebec, rather than the actual voter pool, the legal members of the Parti Québécois. Also criticized was the intense media focus on the four candidates leading in these said polls, leaving the ideas of the other candidates in the dark. The later were much less discussed and their opening monologues were even cut for pundit commentary in LCN live broadcastings of the official candidates' debates.

An early, albeit brief issue in the campaign was the so-called Affaire Boisclair. On September 10, 2005, Le Devoir columnist Michel David referred in his column to a relatively unnoticed past article of Le Droit alluding to rumours of André Boisclair having lived a wild younger life and taken cocaine. Boisclair initially recognized a youth of partying and mistakes. Days later, after much media pressure, he admitted to having "consumed". Ironically, this only made his popularity stronger in polling, something credited by pundits to popular sympathy in the face of the weight of the media scrutiny. The fact that Boisclair came out in 2000 on the subject of his homosexuality did not hampered his campaign either. Polls showed that more than 90% of Quebecers were not opposed to a gay Premier of Quebec. On public perceptions, Pauline Marois also raised the theory that her campaign was hurt by the fact that she was female.

Boisclair, being the frontrunner, became the target of many other candidates and their supporters. Adding to the problematic "wild past" reputation the candidate had gained from the Affaire Boisclair, some progressive militants put into question Boisclair's left-wing values. A group of most progressive candidates, Pierre Dubuc, Jean Ouimet, Gilbert Paquette and Jean-Claude St-André, soon grew closer to Marois, not only because of her experience and her safer known past, but also because of perceived stronger progressive values. Shortly before the vote, Paquette withdrew, announcing his support for Marois. The left-wing SPQ-Libre faction of the party asked the Dubuc supporters to vote for Marois as second choice, as did Ouimet. Ghislain Lebel asked his supporters to vote for Boisclair on the second ballot.

Ideas

A number of ideas were put forward by the candidates, especially during the official candidates' debates held across Quebec. Amongst others, André Boisclair expounded a debt reduction plan and spoke of free higher education provided by the state. Richard Legendre talked much of more autonomy for Quebec regions. Pauline Marois spoke of water nationalization in an eventual Eau-Québec, like what was created with Hydro-Québec for electricity during the Quiet Revolution. As part of the struggle against poverty, Dubuc, Marois, Ouimet and Paquette supported a guaranteed minimum income system.

Many candidates focused on public transportation and wind power. Lebel was noted for the humour he brought to the debates. However, his more conservative political beliefs made him a black sheep in the midst of the largely progressive slate of candidates. St-André defended the ideas of the pur et dur party stream, notably that of making gestures of rupture with the rest of Canada, which were sovereign state actions before sovereignty contrary to the Canadian constitution. The strongest consensus between all candidates was that most of these projects were possible only through national independence.

Vote

The voting was conducted by phone from November 13 to November 15, 2005 through a system used for popular votes for the Star Académie television show. The winner of the party leadership election was declared on November 15, 2005. The date was chosen in honour of the anniversary of the first electoral victory of the Parti Québécois on November 15, 1976. The election took place under a system of preferential voting in two rounds.

Public debates

The seven public debates were orchestrated by election president Lyne Marcoux. They were broadcast live via the Parti Québécois official website, pq.org, and the LCN television news channel. In order to allow substantial and orderly exchanges with such a number of people, every occasion was divided into a series of three discussions, amongst three candidates each. Candidate groupings were set at random. Additionally, for every debate, opening and closing speeches were addressed, and selected questions from the audience and the internet were debated. This selection was executed by an impartial panel led by Monique Richard, the party president.

Solidarity and public finances

The debate on solidarity and public finances took place on September 21, 2005 in Sherbrooke. On solidarity, the project of a guaranteed minimum income gathered Dubuc, Marois, Paquette and Ouimet. Boisclair said himself open to a debate on free higher education covered by the state and declared education his priority. He presented a public debt reduction plan. A fierce confrontation occurred between St-André and Boisclair when the former repeatedly challenged the latter to engage himself in fighting corporate tax evasion, which he finally did. Boisclair also defended the Zero Deficit policy of the previous Parti Québécois government of Lucien Bouchard, of which Boisclair was part.

Sustainable development and economy

The debate on sustainable development and economy took place on September 28, 2005 in Montreal. Most candidates focused on public transportation and wind power, with Marois promising water nationalization in the form of an "Eau-Québec" Crown corporation. Richard Legendre clashed with Boisclair over the latter's alleged slowness to trigger a referendum, with Boisclair supporting a referendum launched "as soon as possible during the next mandate" in line with the party's 2005 platform and Legendre advocating one within his first year in power. Legendre also criticized the way Boisclair adopted his moratorium on pigsties while being Minister of the Environment.

Culture

The debate on culture took place on October 12, 2005 in Trois-Rivières. Ouimet underlined that making sure artists never fall into the poverty gap is the way to have a healthy culture in Quebec. Candidates also discussion on the Charter of the French Language.

Sovereignty and leadership

The debate on sovereignty and leadership took place on October 19, 2005 in Quebec City. Since the method and pace of attaining independence was usually hotly debated in the party, media commentators predicted that it would be the most tumultuous of the seven. The debate was ultimately described as surprisingly non-confrontational.[1]

Territory

The debate on territory took place on October 26, 2005 in Rimouski.

Education

The debate on education took place on November 2, 2005 in Saguenay.

Health

The debate on health took place on November 9, 2005 in Gatineau.

Candidates

Official

Candidates listed have collected at least 1000 signatures from 40 different ridings, with a minimum of 10 signatures per riding. In order of official candidacy, they were:

Withdrawals

Declined

Timeline

Slogans

Results

Former Minister André Boisclair was elected leader of the Parti Québécois at the first round ballot. The turnout was around 76% of party members.

CandidateVotesPercentage
André Boisclair56,50353.7%
Pauline Marois32,16630.6%
Richard Legendre7,8777.5%
Louis Bernard5,7755.5%
Pierre Dubuc1,2821.2%
Jean-Claude St-André9510.9%
Ghislain Lebel4580.4%
Jean Ouimet2470.2%
Gilbert Paquetten/a *n/a *
Totals105,259100%

*: Gilbert Paquette withdrew and endorsed Pauline Marois on November 10, 2005.
The results are shown as announced by election officials on PQ website.

See also

External links

Election

Notes and References

  1. News: Séguin. Rhéal. 2005-10-20. PQ leadership debate a non-confrontational affair. en-CA. The Globe and Mail. 2021-10-11.
  2. Web site: Course à la direction du Parti québécois - La perspective de l'urgence désigne Landry . Ledevoir.com . 2012-02-11.
  3. Web site: Serge Ménard appuie Louis Bernard . Radio-canada.ca . 2012-02-11.
  4. Web site: Hugues Cormier n'est plus candidat . Radio-canada.ca . 2012-02-11.
  5. Web site: Maka Kotto appuie Pauline Marois . Radio-canada.ca . 2012-02-11.
  6. Web site: Louise Harel lance un appel au calme. Zone Aucun thème sélectionné-. ICI.Radio-Canada.ca. Radio-Canada.ca.
  7. Web site: Gibert Paquette demeure dans la course . Radio-canada.ca . 2012-02-11.
  8. Web site: PQ: lancement officiel de la course. Zone Aucun thème sélectionné-. ICI.Radio-Canada.ca. Radio-Canada.ca.
  9. Web site: Gazette . The . Boisclair loses cool over rumours of wild past . https://web.archive.org/web/20120204150256/http://www.canada.com/montreal/montrealgazette/news/story.html?id=690cde50-aded-4759-86e6-ca4d372111fc . dead . 2012-02-04 . Canada.com . 2005-09-17 . 2012-02-11 .
  10. Web site: PQ: Lebel choisit Boisclair. Zone Aucun thème sélectionné-. ICI.Radio-Canada.ca. Radio-Canada.ca.
  11. Web site: PQ: 60 % plus de membres en deux mois. Zone Aucun thème sélectionné-. ICI.Radio-Canada.ca. Radio-Canada.ca.
  12. Web site: André Boisclair et la cocaïne: Lucien Bouchard réagit . https://archive.today/20120711063114/http://lcn.canoe.com/lcn/infos/national/archives/2005/10/20051021-195548.html . dead . July 11, 2012 . Lcn.canoe.com . 2009-04-23 . 2012-02-11.
  13. Web site: Krauss . Clifford . Campaign Rule 1: Be No More Virtuous Than the Voters . Quebec Province (Canada) . Nytimes.com . 2005-10-25 . 2012-02-11.
  14. News: Don Macpherson: The failure of the Parti Québécois leadership campaign. May 16, 2015. The Gazette. May 16, 2015.