We can repeat that the national question is dead and buried, François Legault stumbles over it.
Let’s follow the Prime Minister’s recent reasoning.
A week ago, during Face-a-Face TVA, he said that the PLQ no longer had a monopoly on opposing sovereignty. In other words, he was no longer satisfied with overturning the referendum. He said he was against independence.
The day before yesterday, during the Radio Canada debate, he refused to say whether he would vote yes or no in a possible referendum on independence. It’s not the same.
referendum
Then two options are possible.
He really doesn’t know which option he would vote for – but then he must retire, because a man in his position must be aware of this essential issue.
Or he knows but doesn’t want to tell us. Some would call it strategy, others duplicity. Let’s call him François the Mysterious.
However, the question is clear.
François Legault does not want a referendum. But if it did, how would he vote?
Let me get my question straight: there can be no referendum without a party in power to hold it. If that party holds it, it is assumed that they believe themselves capable of winning it.
In this scenario, would he prefer Quebec to have all the powers? That’s right with yes.
sovereignty
Or would he prefer Ottawa to control half of those powers? That’s vote no.
Knowing the demographics of Quebec, Canada, we can assume that this would be the last referendum, the last chance. François Legault really doesn’t know how he would vote?
I dream of seeing a journalist or moderator force him to answer these questions.
Guy A. Lepage will receive him on Sunday evening. Let me throw the idea to him.