Friday, October 21, 2011

Quebec Politicians Give Montreal the Shaft

With the sovereignty movement deflating like a tire with a slow but determined leak, it's only a matter of time before the movement runs out of air and goes flat, destined to an ignominious end, tossed in the landfill of failed political movements.

While separatist diehards cling to the illusion that the independence option can be revived over time, they fail to acknowledge that time is their greatest enemy.

Ever since the last referendum almost 800,000 immigrants came to Quebec, upwards of 95% who will vote for Canada in any future referendum.
The great hope of sovereigntists, that given time, the children of these immigrants, forced into the French school system, would ultimately adopt sovereigntist tendencies commiserate with that of the general francophone population.

That premise has proved devastatingly false.
Second and now third generation descendants of immigrants, despite a French education, remain fiercely federalist, a fact that effectively  hammers home the last nail into the separatist coffin.

Add to that, the general collapse in support for sovereignty from traditional supporters, fatigued and disillusioned, it means that things haven't exactly worked out well for the sovereignists.

And so, as the Canada versus Quebec debate fades to black from the political spectrum, a new battle arises, one that also augers poorly for Quebec nationalists, who are now forced to fight an unexpected rearguard action..

It is the battle between the two solitudes that have been forming over the last thirty years, with Quebec being split rather neatly between the island of Montreal which is moving, linguistically and culturally, farther and farther away from the Rest of Quebec (RoQ.)

It is a phenomenon that is so frightening to Liberals and Peekists, that they are banding together to thwart any change to the electoral map that would favour Montreal.

In the eyes of those from the RoQ and the majority of politicians who populate the halls of power in Quebec city, Montreal is developing into nothing less than a modern Sodom and Gomorrah, a den of social and linguistic depravity that is threatening to rip the social fabric of Quebec.

Visitors coming to Montreal from the hinterlands of Quebec can be excused for concluding that they are in another country. For many of them, it is the first time that they confront the new reality that is Montreal, an urban, heterogeneous melting pot of language, religion, customs and dress, similar to Vancouver or Toronto.
But for those born and raised in communities where 95% of the people are white francophone Catholics, its a shock to the system.

Most don't like what they see and many are frightened by what it portends.

The linguistic situation for those on the island of Montreal whose mother tongue is French is deteriorating, no different then the demographic upheaval in Vancouver and Toronto. There's nothing special or different going on in Montreal, it is a question of immigration policy that affects the whole country, where newcomers overwhelmingly establish themselves in the big cities.

Each year Quebec welcomes about 55,000 immigrants, 10,000 of which eventually flee to the greener pastures of Ontario and parts beyond.
Of the 45,000 who remain in Quebec, 40,000 settle in Montreal, half assimilating to the English side of the linguistic equations, half to the French.
Coupled with the fact that about 10,000 francophones flee to the suburbs each year, it means that Montreal is getting more and more, English and ethnic, while the rest of Quebec remains lily-white and French.
The unintended consequence of this influx of immigrants, who were meant to close the demographic shortfall caused by our low birthrate, is the effect of growth in the population of Montreal with an opposing decline in the RoQ.

There seems no way to reverse this trend. The new metro line to Laval and a soon to be built commuter line to the East, will hasten the flight of francophones to the burbs, leaving the island to Anglos and Ethnics who remain stubbornly attached to their ethnic and English neighbourhoods. 

Although greater Montreal represents about half the population of the province, it doesn't enjoy half the representation in Quebec's Parliament, the National Assembly.
In fact, there are only about ten anglophones and ethnics in the National Assembly, when demographics dictate that there should be over twenty.

Electoral Extremes - Two ridings, urban English vs. rural French
I wrote a post on this inequality, which if you haven't read, I'm sure you'll find it interesting.
Read: Quebec Politicans Take an Axe to Democracy

All of this is not news to regular readers of this blog, but there is a disturbing development that remains largely unreported in the mainstream Anglophone press.
That is, the deliberate attempt by politicians to limit the influence and check the the rising power of this upstart Montreal, in favour of traditional, white-Catholic francophones who represent the majority in the regions.

A 'deal' has recently been struck between the Liberal Party and the Parti Quebecois to limit the political power of Montreal, or rather, as they say euphemistically, to 'safeguard regional representation,' a fancy way of saying protecting regional 'over-representation'

The responsibility of drawing up the electoral map is the independent agency, the Commission de la représentation électorale (CRE,) created by Rene Levesque back in 1979 and charged with impartially and fairly drawing up the electoral map, making changes every few years to reflect demographic changes.
The commission doesn't have the power to create new ridings, but may move them around to better reflect population shifts.

In 2001 the commission, cognizant of the fact that Quebec had the most mis-representative electoral boundaries in any state or province in North America, asked the government to consider remedial action. After another six years of inaction the CRE proposed that three rural ridings be eliminated and be transferred to the greater Montreal area.
The government failed to act on its recommendation and stalled for two years. After a fierce lobbying effort to save the three ridings, the government with the help of the opposition PQ, passed a law, Bill 132, that suspended the CRE and its power to determine boundaries for seven months, just enough time for another provincial election.
The three ridings were saved while none were added to Montreal.

Now with the suspension over and the commission announcing that it will indeed chop the three rural ridings, the Liberal government and the PQ are planning once again to interfere with the democratic process of redistribution. LINK{FR}
Next week, Bill 19 will be debated in the National Assembly, proposed by the Liberals and which will be supported by the PQ. In the spirit of the 'Judgement of Soloman,' three seats will be added to Montreal, while preserving the three rural seats.
This will raise the number of seats in Parliament to 108, one more than Ontario's Parliament which serves one and a half times more people.

The English press has been largely silent on this issue and the only decent report on this 'deal' struck between the Liberals and the PQ appeared in La Presse. It's a wonderful expose that you shouldn't miss if you read French.

The paranoid fear of our elected officials that Montreal must be held at bay is highlighted by the preposterous proposition by Pauline Marois that an upper chamber to Parliament (like the Senate) be re-created that would represent the regions only.
I'm not kidding.
"Pauline Marois, the PQ leader  is in favour of creating a "Chamber of Regions" to ensure better representation of the regions in the National Assembly....

...Regional representatives would be elected and carry out certain responsibilities that remain to be defined, said the leader of the Parti Quebecois....

More and more voices outside the big cities are rising against the redrawing of the electoral map that favours urban areas at the expense of victims of a declining population
"  LINK {FR}.

Francois Legault, leader of Quebec's soon to be newest political party, was not impressed with the shenanigans;
"When I see  the Liberal Party and the Parti Quebecois interfere with the reform of the electoral map, I do not think this is what democracy is about. In a democracy, the weight of votes should be comparable between citizens," he saidLINK({FR}

Wednesday, October 19, 2011

OCCUPY WHAAAT?.......

Canada's cadre of professional demonstrators couldn't resist the call to bring the Occupy Wall Street project to a city near you, but what exactly they were protesting is not particularly clear, even to them.

Canada had nothing to do with the conditions of manifest greed and stupidity that brought down the once mighty US economy. The mortgage debacle, the housing collapse and the related liquidity crisis passed us by, but not without collateral damage.  Of all the western economies, Canada weathered the storm the best.

With all our complaining, our country seems to be run pretty well.

Interestingly, Anglo Montrealers participating in the OCCUPY MONTREAL demonstrations were vastly over-represented as compared to francophones. I don't really have an explanation for that.

At any rate, I downloaded a bunch of pictures of the protesters in Montreal to see what was on their mind.

It seems that the protesters were divided by several different agendas, the largest was the anti-capitalist set, those who wish to re-write the rules of economic order.....
These are the nasties, who had some pretty aggressive signs. Amir Khadir, dressed very appropriately as Lenin's kid brother, let lose a rant in television interview, reminding viewers that capitalism doesn't work anymore.


Then there were the unions, who took advantage of a demonstration to push for a greedy agenda that wasn't entirely in sync with the spirit of the event. Front and center were the Air Canada stewardesses, postal workers and the striking McGill University support staff.


Then there were various immigrant and workers groups, most of the organizations of which I had never heard of.
Dignidad Migrante and the International Migrants' Alliance are two militant groups organizing to improve the situation of refugees, immigrants, migrants and illegal immigrants people without status in Canada.

The International League of Peoples' Struggle is "an international formation of more than 350 organizations from 40 countries promoting, supporting and developing the anti-imperialist struggles of the peoples of the world."


Of course no demonstration would be complete without the perenial whiners, the Palestinians, the Separatists and the Indians.





And then there is this unfortunate wedding party who after planning their wedding for months, ran smack dab into the demonstration on a rainy and dreary afternoon.

Oh well, they'll have quite a story to tell their grand kids!




As with any radical new movement (Tea Party?)  the 'Occupy Wall Street" movement is generating a lot of pushback.

Protesters are now being derisively referred to as 'Fleabaggers,' and are getting a rough ride in Twittersphere.

Here's a sampling of what is being said on  #YouMightBeAFleabagger


YOU MIGHT BE A FLEABAGGER IF;
  • If you think wealth is so evil you're going to protest until you get more of it. 
  • If you say our system is broken and want to replace it with the perennial totalitarian failure that is Marxism, 
  • If you're raging against capitalism from your iPhone, 
  • If you think the immigrant guy who owns the convenience store should pay for your interpretive dance classes
  • If you believe getting your third PhD is a basic human right... 
  • don't accept god because lack of evidence but accept global warming despite lack of evidence
  • If your entire political philosophy fits on the front of a T-shirt - which you don't wash... 
  • if you're a conscientious objector to being a productive member of society. 
  • If you think stinking up parks and crapping on cop cars will persuade the populace to give you the levers of power 
  • If you feel you deserve the material benefits of work without actually ever having worked. 
  • If you think you're entitled to someone else's money without working for it, 
  • If you're still a student and you're over 30 
  • If your dog secretly hates you for giving him vegan dog food,
  • If you believe paying taxes is patriotic especially if you don't have to do it 
  • If you think a few thousand protesters in a city of millions equals "ninety-nine percent." 
  • If you think you should be paid to protest since it is the only steady "job" you ever had. 
  • If nothing is ever your fault 
  • If you feel markets fail because there is no market for PhD in Library Science who specializes in lesbian poetry
  • if you feel superior when people accept your position of victimhood 
  • If you think you should still get an allowance 
  • If you thought a masters in "minority womens studies" was an economically viable degree, 
  • if you think your incompetence and worthlessness should be subsidized 
  • if you despise money but love spending other peoples 
  • If you chant "Eat the Rich!" but think meat is murder, 
  • if you think mimicking the homeless makes you feel better inside. 
  • If the last thing you heard before you left the house was your mom asking if you cleaned your room. 
  • If you think "common sense" means you have rights to other peoples wallets 
  • If you hate Bank of America, which employs 285,000 Americans, but love Apple, which makes its products in China
  •  If you think that men are bigger, stronger and faster than women because our society is sexist 
  • If you hate pollution but turn a park into a landfill, 
  • If you rail against "greed" while demanding government take more money from others. 
  • if you think wealth is so evil you're going to protest until you get more of it. 
  • If you believe the world (or your country) owes you anything merely because you take up space in it

Monday, October 17, 2011

Wading in on Don Cherry

Everybody's got an opinion about Don Cherry, with the lunch pail crowd firmly in his corner and we 'sophisticates' grinding our teeth every time he comes on the tube.

Even his most loyal fans admit that he's the very definition of a garish blowhard.

I pay him no mind, because generally I watch the RDS French broadcast with Pierre Houde who is better and more exciting than any commentator on the English side, TSN or the CBC.
I gave up on the CBC after listening to Bob Cole, the CBC's number two commentator (and I say that tongue in cheek,) who is assigned the few Habs games that are still on the CBC. While once a decent commentator, Cole has lost it these last few years. He is so dreadful that if you played a drinking game and had to down a shot of whisky every time he made a mistake, you'd be falling down drunk by the first intermission.
My favourite Bob Cole line.....
"The referee has stopped the play, something is happening!"

While Cherry is not exactly public enemy number one in Quebec, he is widely despised for his comments over the years disparaging Francophone players. Link
Most of these comments were tinged with a pretty obvious undertone of scorn and as such Quebecers just hate him, even Anglo Quebecers.

But the truth is that I've heard worse on the RDS post game show l'Antichambre where Anglophones are routinely given a rough ride.  I wrote a blog piece about it.
"Alain Chantelois couldn't contain his disgust at the fact that all four of the Canadiens' coaches, behind the bench during the Canadiens/Oilers game on Monday, were anglophones. His tirade on the talk show L'ANTICHAMBRE that followed the game was unacceptable
....Although the instigator, he was not alone, ex-Nordiques coach Michel Bergeron joined in the fun and listening to these two, was like watching two old southern racists sitting on the porch dissing blacks."
The latest Cherry controversy centers around comments he made October 6th, where he lashed into three retired NHL enforcers for advocating less violence in Hockey. Here's a YouTube video of that rant and you can skip forward to the 5:40 mark to hear the controversial remarks.

Cherry called Stu Grimson, Chris Nilan and Jim Thompson 'pukes,' 'turncoats' and 'hypocrites' for claiming that the substance abuse problems they had was attributed to fighting in the NHL.


I don't know any of the three personally, but Chris Nilan lives in the Montreal area and does a little radio work for the local TSN affiliate.
I ran into him shopping in Pointe Claire and he seemed like a regular guy, trying to save a few bucks in the local Costco.

'Knuckles' Nilan (is there a better hockey nickname?) looks and sounds like he should be in Hollywood, he'd be perfect playing the part of a tough Southie,  like in the film 'The Fighter.'
Watch this interview, I'm sure you'll agree, he just oozes character. Link
Obviously he's no hockey billionaire, just a guy trying to make it after a rough couple of years since retirement.

Nilan claims to be flabbergasted after being singled out by Cherry and says he never said the things Cherry attributed to him.
“I’ve never, ever attributed my problem, drugs and alcohol, with the fact that I played the role of enforcer for all those years,” Nilan said
If that is true, Nilan's reputation was damaged unfairly and he was defamed in front of millions of people.

The lawyers over at the CBC were having palpitations and delivered a message to Cherry that he had better apologize or face a legal and public relations nightmare.

On Saturday night he did a mea culpa and apologized. Not a namby-pamby apology but one that was probably written for him by lawyers in which he stated categorically that he was wrong. It must have been a bitter pill to swallow for the pompous fool.

Notwithstanding, I don't think an apology is enough. I hope Nilan sues the ass off of Cherry and his enabler the CBC.
In fact, Cherry's admission and apology strengthens the case against him.

It somehow seems grossly unfair to pick on someone like Nilan, a regular guy who truly didn't deserve this.

In a Twitter response to the apology, Nilan let Cherry off the hook, he shouldn't. Cherry only apologized because he was forced to.
An apology isn't enough to undo the harm.

The whole incident hurts Nilan's ability to be a more successful broadcaster, forever tainted by Cherry's harsh words, notwithstanding the apology.

Nilan lives in Montreal and the CBC broadcast was seen locally and so.....Nilan can sue Cherry right here in Quebec, before a Quebec judge. HA! HA!!!!

Hey, Don......GET OUT THE CHEQUEBOOK!!!!

By the way, in the blog piece I wrote about Alain Chantelois, I called on his bosses in Toronto to fire him for his anti-English remarks and call it a coincidence, he disappeared shortly thereafter.

Now if only I could get rid of Don Cherry.

Friday, October 14, 2011

Weekend Roundup Volume 37

French language militants turn back the clock 
Writing this story made me think of those religious police in Saudi Arabia and other fundamentalist countries that patrol the streets and arrest women who dare to wear western attire or walk unaccompanied by a man. It is without a doubt a regressive and sad tale of society going backwards.

Both the City of Gatineau and the city of Sherbrooke offered white collar employees a 45¢ an hour bilingual bonus if they were able to communicate in English.  LINK
This outraged language militants who felt that this discriminated against those who spoke only French.
Follow that logic and you can say that employers offering higher starting salaries to university graduates as opposed to those with only a high school graduates also discriminate. Hmm......
City manager of Gatineau outraged

After extreme pressure from the militant French language lobby group Impératif français, the city of Gatineau caved and revoked the bonus. LINK

Even the Office québécois de la langue française (OQLF)  is coming down on Gatineau for being altogether too accommodating to its English minority. LINK{FR}

The City manager, Robert Weemaes, was so outraged by the tactics used to poison city council in relation to the bonus, that he wrote a stinging letter to LE DROIT, an Ottawa newspaper. Read it HERE in French.

SAQ under fire for English advertisements.
Of all the government run services, the liquor monolpy does a pretty good job of serving customers in English. In stores in western Montreal, employees are highly bilingual and many Anglos are employed.
One of the things I like is that much of the advertising and literature is available in high-quality English, not the Google inspired icky translations. The catalogues printed in English are clearly written and produced by English speakers. The SAQ website provides a mirror in English.
So of course it comes as no surprise that this irks certain language militants.

A francophone reader complained on the web site of the militant French language group Impératif français, that the SAQ had the temerity to produce a colour brochure in English only and deliver it to his home. LINK

The fact that the brochure was an enclosure, delivered within an English newspaper which is delivered free to the households in the overwhelmingly English neighbourhood of NDG, was of course, beside the point.

Francophones doing just fine in the NHL
Readers might remember the blog piece I wrote entitled NHL Francophone Conspiracy Theory, which discussed Bob Sirois, an ex-NHLer who wrote a book claiming that francophones were consistently discriminated against in the NHL.
That book along with an article written in the same vein by the dean of Quebec's sportswriters, Rejean Tremblay underlines a certain paranoia among a minority of Quebecers who suffer from a unhealthy persecution complex.

You can read the original story by Mr. Tremblay HERE in French.

I mention these past stories in relation to a piece written on a sports website that claims that 10.4% of NHL players are francophone. LINK

Considering that the number of Canadians (including francophones) playing in the NHL is a little over 50%, Francophones make up a little over 20% of that total, completely in line with Canadian demographics.

One place where francophone representation is distorted is in the head coaching job. There are five francophone head coaches in the league out of the thirty positions available, making for an interesting over-representation!

Survey confirms anti-sovereignty trend
A survey conducted by an admittedly fedarlist organization had some interesting statistics.

Perhaps Pauline Marois and all those hardliners who are demanding more public discussion of the independence issue should pay attention to these numbers.
  • 77% believe the sovereignty debate should be put aside
  • 71% believe that the sovereignty debate is over
  • 25% would choose Quebec independence.
There's a lot of other interesting stats which you can find by consulting the complete survey results HERE in French, or a story about the survey in the Montreal Gazette

Something in the Gazette article caught my attention, the author MAX HARROLD repeats a common myth that the Canadian Parliament recognized Quebec as a distinct nation. 
"69 per cent believe talks should be started to allow the National Assembly to sign the Constitution; 73 per cent want Quebec formally recognized as a nation in the Constitution (it has already been recognized as such by Parliament);"
The motion put forward by Stephen Harper in November 2006 was this;
"That this House recognizes that the Québécois form a nation within a united Canada"
It refers to the people of Quebec, not the province, an important distinction which is lost on most Quebecers as well as journalists. The distinction between the two is clearer in the French version;
"Que cette Chambre reconnaisse que les Québécoises et les Québécois forment une nation au sein d'un Canada uni." LINK
Rich Quebec francophones lag RoC badly
"Per capita, there are far fewer rich people in the French-speaking province than in Ontario. Barely 3.9% of taxpayers earn more than $100,000 a year in Quebec compared to 6.3% in Ontario, according to 2008 revenue department statistics, which are the most recent available. The ranks of the truly monied are even thinner."  Read: Wealth in Quebec: a different view  by  Nicolas Van Praet
Mario Dumont and my favourite Anglo-basher Martin Pelletier (who once proposed a $2,000 fine for speaking English in public- Link) were discussing the lamentable performance of Quebecers on the newly published list of the 100 richest Canadians as published by Canadian Business.
Mr. Pelletier whined that only 15 of the 100 richest Canadians were Quebecers and blamed it on the fact that Quebecers lacked entrepreneurship.

I found his discourse strange as he mentioned Quebecers, not Francophones, and so I checked out the list myself. See the List HERE
 Although Mr. Pelletier mentioned that there were 15 from Quebec, there are actually 16. Charles Bronfman is on the list as a Canadian who lives in New York, but rightfully, if he's on the list, he deserves a Quebec affiliation.
   


What Mr. Pelltier tapped danced around is the fact is that of the sixteen on the list, only seven are Quebecois francophones, making it a lamentable seven out of the one hundred richest Canadians, when demographically we would expect 23.
Incredibly, nine out of the sixteen richest Quebecers are minorities or English.

I'm not even going to get into how many Jews are on the list, lest I trigger another pogrom in Hampstead.

French universities serve up English
I found this advertisement in the Montreal Gazette over a morning cup of coffee. I scanned the ad because it wasn't available online, so please excuse the quality.
It seems that the University of Montreal's elite business shcool, the HEC is offering MBA courses in ENGLISH.

Oh,Oh! What do you think the Société Saint-Jean-Baptiste will have to say about that!

By the way, when I googled the HEC MBA program to find a link, the first thing that popped up was this page in English describing the program. While looking over the page I realized that this is the HEC in Paris, France which also offers a completely English MBA program. Whodathunk!
"The program is taught in English but participants also have the option of choosing the bilingual option(French/English). Participants who do not speak French will study the language, and those already billingual [sic] will study a third language; an increasingly prized asset within today’s multicultural business environment." LINK 
Here's the link to the HEC in Montreal describing the English MBA program.





Deputy Mayor upset over French sign
It wouldn't be fair not to report on language intolerance elsewhere in the country so here's a story about a bilingual sign upsetting locals in southeastern Ontario.
"South Stormont Deputy Mayor Tammy Hart is drawing flack and praise for voicing out about new Bilingual signs at St. Lawrence Parks that are appearing; in particular the one in Long Sault Ontario at the Parkway entrance"

Wow, if you think the comments are nasty on this blog, see what readers had to say about the story Here

The Cost of bilingualism 
"The cost of French translation in the capital of Canada’s only officially bilingual province is under scrutiny as councillors question the need for two translators who are paid to provide translation at each city council meeting even though they have only been called on once in eight years."
"In July, citing the need to protect minority-language rights, Yukon Supreme Court Justice Vital Ouellette ordered the territory government to build a $15-million high school to house the board’s 41 French high school students."   LINK

Odds'n Ends  
Here's two items  that will make the  Mouvement Québec français of the  Société Saint-Jean-Baptiste ill. This week the Quebec government announced that it is giving the Jewish General Hospital $300 million for an expansion project.
and to add insult to injury, the Shriners finally broke ground on their new hospital which will be located adjacent to the new English super hospital.
 *************
Here's a French phrase that I came across while skimming my favourite fan hockey site. I hadn't seen it before;
 "… Je vous entends déjà vous poser la question « Ouate de Phoque? »"
  *************
Readers, here's a story that appeared on vigile.net that I actually liked, so I translated it for you.


Let's analyze what this picture means to different groups of people;
  • The most informed observers will define this as a woman crossing the street.
  • For young men ... it's a nice ass.
  • Connoisseurs will notice the g-string ...
  • For older men, it is a respectable woman with a nice ass, crossing the street.
  • The wicked will imagine her naked
  • The wise will consider the presence of mind of the photographer to share this photo with the world.
  • For half the women, it is an ordinary girl who shouldn't go out dressed like that.
  • The other half are wondering where she bought the outfit.
  • Mature women imagine the misery that she will endure when she turns 50 ........
...and finally
  • only children, pedos and monks will notice that a dog is driving the taxi ... !

 Have a wonderful weekend!

Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Harper Undoing Trudeau's Canadian Dream

You'd be hard-pressed to find any similarities between Stephen Harper and Pierre-Eliot Trudeau. They were born and bred at opposite ends of the country, in two different cultures and their politics are diametrically opposed.
But they share one thing in common, Trudeau was, and Harper is, determined to change the fundamental makeup of our country.

In this respect the two men stand apart from the other Prime Ministers of the modern era, who were basic caretakers, determined to govern what Canada was rather than attempt to re-shape the country into something else.

Trudeau entered the Prime Ministers office, as head of state of a British Commonwealth country that was basically English with a French minority. He left office having reshaped Canada into a country dedicated to bilingualism and the principle of equality and shared power between the founding French and English nations.

Although Stephen Harper, has been head of state for several years, because of his minority situation, he has had to put aside his grand plans. Now that he's got that hitherto elusive majority, he is rushing ahead with his plan to return the country to its pre-Trudeau version.

What Trudeau gave to Francophones and Quebec, Harper is determined to take away.
There's no other way to describe it.

Those who've read this blog for a while, know that I warned readers that Quebecers would have Hell to pay if Harper ever got a majority without Quebec support.

This is what I wrote last year.
Oct. 9, 2009 - Payback's a Bitch For Bloc Quebecois
"If a majority government can be achieved without Quebec, it will mean the end of the Bloc Quebecois as a force."
Link
Oct. 29, 2009 - Stephen Harper Set to Deliver Another Painful Dose of Payback to Quebec
"No matter how accommodating, no matter how much money Ottawa ships to Quebec, no matter how many political concessions are made, Quebeckers will continue to thumb their noses at federalist parties.
It's a lesson that took both the Liberals and the Conservatives many years to comprehend, but the penny has finally dropped, at least on the Conservative side. Mr. Harper and the Conservative party have written off Quebec politically.
Link
Most Quebecers pooh-pooh this notion, blithely believing that the pandering that had been going on for the last forty years would continue unabated and the coy little scam of offering support pre-election to the government of the day, while withdrawing it at the polls come election day, would be successful eternally......It is wishful thinking.

In fact, many Quebecers remain shocked that this isn't the case and are patiently waiting for Harper to cave.
They shouldn't hold their breath.

The majority government, the demise of the Bloc Quebecois and the separatist movement, coupled with the sparse representation in cabinet and back benches of francophone Conservatives, represents a confluence of circumstances that is allowing Harper a free hand to reshape Canada to the detriment of the Francophone element of this country.

Like a kid in the candy store, Harper's majority government is a dream come true. There'll be no more pussyfooting around over issues and  groveling before the opposition.

Meet the real Stephen Harper, he's a scary fellow.

And so it is that all those militant separatists, liberal politicians, journalists and pundits, who warned us that Harper had a secret agenda, turned out to be right after all!

The speed and scope at which Harper is engineering the emasculation of Quebec and Francophone influence in Canada is breathtaking.

It is as if Harper is determined to do it all in this mandate, just in case he doesn't get re-elected.

The Queen RCAF and RCN
Perhaps the most blatant disregard of Quebec sentiments was the re-emphasis of the Queen as a national symbol. It's puzzling because the issue is long settled, with most Anglo Canadians relatively satisfied with the subdued level of inclusion of the Royals as Canadian symbols.
Starting with the removal of two paintings by a Quebec artist in the National defence department, replaced by a large portrait of the Queen, one could only wonder if this was a signal to Quebec of things to come. The government also promised that the Queen's portrait will return to the foyer of all Canadian foreign missions.
All this, for what good reason?
Changing the name of the Air Force and the Navy back to its historical roots with references to the monarchy best illustrates how much the Conservatives are intent on winding back time.

30 New Parliamentary Seats
It's easy to do the right thing, when by doing so, one benefits and so Harper is going ahead with his promise to add thirty new seats to the federal Parliament. Eighteen seats will go to Ontario, seven in B.C. and five in Alberta and of course none to Quebec.
While the redistribution will address real under-representation issues, it will have the side effect of weakening Quebec's weight in Parliament, something not lost on the PM.
Better still, the seats will go to ridings that should split between the Liberal and Conservative parties. If the Liberals, down in the dumps now, are unable to recover by the next election, the Conservatives will win the majority of those new seats.

The Champlain Bridge
I'm really quite surprised that neither Quebec politicians or journalists are complaining about the rat move the Conservatives pulled on Quebec vis-a-vis the Champlain bridge.
Why the bridge falls in the federal domain of competence is a mystery of the strange division of power and jurisdictions between Ottawa and the provinces, but somehow it falls on Ottawa to maintain the most important and busiest bridge in Quebec Canada.
After refusing to make any promises in the last election, the Conservatives announced that a new bridge would in fact be built, but then downloaded the responsibility to pay for it on users, via tolls.
It was a neat trick, like a grandfather visiting his grandchildren laden with Christmas presents and then offloading the VISA bill to the parents.
Since the kids are already enjoying the presents, there's nothing the parents can do! Well-played.

To add insult to injury, nobody from the provincial government was invited to attend the ceremony announcing the project, which was held, quite deliberately, while Premier Jean Charest was in Europe.
The message can't be clearer, cooperation between the Conservatives and the Charest government is out of the question. Harper still bears a grudge over Charest's grandstanding at an environmental  conference in Copenhagen in 2009 where he lambasted Ottawa over policy and humiliated Harper. Link 
Having the Prime Minister and the Premier of Quebec not talking and not cooperating cannot be a good thing for the country.

The Supreme Court 
Are things lining up for Harper?...you bet!
It just so happens  that many of the Supreme Court judges are set to retire, giving Harper a chance to rebuild the court in his conservative image.
New Brunswick MP Yvon Godin has been advocating for a bill that would require Supreme Court judges be bilingual as a condition for consideration. Link
Mr. Harper would probably eat his children before allowing that.
Perhaps Mr. Godin should be more concerned as to which judges Harper will place on the bench. The PM is known to be furious over the latest decision by the supremos which ordered the government to keep its hands off the safe injection (for druggies) site in British Columbia. The only 'activist' type of judge Harper wants on his court are those who 'act' on his conservative positions.


Removal of taxpayer subsidy for political parties 
Harper's removal of the direct subsidy of political parties is again a case of doing the right thing when it conveniences him.
The move will cripple the re-emergence of the Bloc Québécois, who are mightily dependent on federal largess.
But what Harper didn't take away is the 75% tax deduction that taxpayers get when they do donate directly to political parties. That's because the Conservatives are the champion fund-raisers. Clever....

The Prime Minister isn't even going through the pretense of respecting French. By hiring a non-French speaker, Angelo Persichilli, as his national communications director he is sending a dangerous message that he just doesn't give a damn. The Conservative snub to Francophones runs deeper than the English only business cards of John Baird.
"An estimated $35 billion worth of contracts are up for grabs as part of a strategy to cover Canada's needs for the next three decades. Two shipyards could be picked for the work from among the three bidders: Irving Shipbuilding in Halifax, Seaspan Marine in Vancouver, and the Davie Shipyard in Lévis, Quebec." LINK
Guess who is going to be odd man out....

We are only six months into the Conservative majority government and already the country is shifting dramatically. What will happen over the next four years remains to be seen, but if we look at the government's behaviour these last few months, francophones and Quebecers are in for a rough ride.

Readers know that I generally support Mr. Harper and the Conservative party agenda, but that being said, I cannot accept his project of returning Canada into an English country with a French minority.

It is not only unfair, but regressive.
With support for sovereignty at its nadir, it isn't time to kick Quebec just because the threat of separation is gone, it is a time to engage.

Shame on Mr. Harper.