Some Quebec voters do not support the idea of the François Legault-led CAQ winning unstoppably on the evening of October 3.
This is the main explanation for the other four party leaders’ relentlessness in shooting red bullets at the outgoing Prime Minister. However, it was François Legault who managed to calm traumatized Quebecers for many months. The word isn’t too strong when we look at the number of cases of mental illness that have emerged in the past two years.
François Legault is neither a prominent speaker nor a debater. Nor is he a patient man. Obviously he doesn’t have an easy answer. His sensitivity, on the other hand, makes him uncomfortable, even hurt by something unspoken that inhabits his opponents. To be clear, he is told that he was old (65 years old) and that he was imprisoned for the past century, so too helpless to understand current problems, for example those of the environment.
By making Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois, 32, his Turkish boss, François Legault is taking revenge in a way for the Quebec Solidaire boss’s lack of courtesy and consideration for the outgoing prime minister.
activist
Because GND, who grew up in a middle-class environment with militant, unionized parents, attended a private school in high school. The young man who became Maple Spring’s leading star during the 2012 strike subsequently established himself. It’s an understatement to say that then-Education Secretary Line Beauchamp tasted her medicine to the point where she left her post. Apparently the young chef didn’t hide his contempt for her.
No wonder that the QS boss was so aggressive and arrogant in front of the CAQ boss during the first TVA debate and couldn’t stand his insults. The prime minister’s facial expression betrayed very clearly what he thought of his young adversary.
Paul St-Pierre Plamondon (45) showed a positive attitude towards his opponents and combined courtesy, courtesy and respect. That explains why he is the revelation of these debates. His culture, intelligence, and charm work in his favor. He counters his young colleague, who often cannot control his anger.
Thursday’s debate on Radio-Canada showed that party leaders had made amends as popular reactions to the TVA debate were far from positive. Except for a young electorate, for whom the solidarity leader is a star and a role model.
radical youth
But elders know youth is afoot and that some of QS’s constituents, drawn to radicalism, will risk moderating their transport when family responsibilities are their lot.
Quebec is isolated in North America. Its French and secular culture is rejected by English Canada. Even two of their political parties, the PLQ and Québec solidaire, oppose their law on secularism.
The head of the CAQ is like many Quebecers. Moderation, compromise and accommodation are virtues in his eyes. But has he renounced sovereignty in his soul and conscience?
One thing is undeniable. Paul St-Pierre Plamondon, who describes himself as a class politician who respects his opponents and is obsessed with the dream of sovereignty, does not appear to be the outgoing prime minister’s number one enemy with ten days before his re-election.