Duceppe, Marois will run for the PQ's top spot
Last Updated: Friday, May 11, 2007 | 5:21 PM ET
CBC News
Related
Internal Links
Video
- Nancy Wood reports for CBC-TV (Runs: 2:01)
- Play: Real Media »
- Play: QuickTime »
Bloc Québécois Leader Gilles Duceppe and former provincial cabinet minister Pauline Marois will run for the Parti Québécois leadership.
The two political heavyweights confirmed their intentions within minutes of each other Friday.
Bloc Leader Gilles Duceppe, shown in the House of Commons on Wednesday, will face at least one opponent, Pauline Marois, in a bid for the PQ leadership.
(Fred Chartrand/Canadian Press)
Duceppe, 59, issued a statement in which he said he made his decision after consulting with his family and sovereigntists in both the Bloc and the PQ.
"I think it's time to end the suspense," he wrote, putting an end to three days of feverish speculation about his political future, after PQ Leader André Boisclair resigned Tuesday.
He faces formidable opposition from former PQ cabinet minister Marois, who is ready to launch her third bid for the sovereignty movement's top job.
Marois, who said she made her final decision to run on Friday morning, told reporters in Montreal she hopes her third try is a charm.
"I'm doing this to win," she said.
"I hope we will be able to reconnect with the population of Quebec, because we had an important problem on March 26 [the Quebec election].
PQ MNA Pauline Marois gestures as she announces her resignation from politics in March 2006.
(Clément Allard/Canadian Press)
Marois, 58, resigned from politics in 2006 after losing her second leadership race in a drawn-out battle with Boisclair that lasted most of 2005.
A PQ member for more than 30 years, she is intimately linked to the party's history. Marois worked as a press attaché for then finance minister Jacques Parizeau in the 1970s before being elected as a member of the national assembly in 1981.
She made her first run for the leadership in 1985 after René Lévesque resigned. Marois was then defeated in the 1985 election, and re-elected in 1989, 1994, 1998 and 2003.
She held the province's most important portfolios, including finance, health and education while the PQ was in power in the 1990s.
Leadership race will be symbolic
Already members of the PQ caucus are choosing sides in what will be a hotly contested leadership race.
'Watch for the Ségolène Royal factor, the idea of the first female leader in Quebec.'—Michel C. Auger, Le Soleil columnist
Newly-elected Bernard Drainville is backing Marois, whom he calls a competent, experienced and open-minded politician. She has "never been the kind of woman to say, 'I'm the one who holds the truth,'" he told CBC.
Symbolism will play an important role in the PQ race, say Quebec political observers.
"Watch for the Ségolène Royal factor," said Michel C. Auger, a political columnist with Quebec City newspaper Le Soleil. "The idea of the first female leader in Quebec, the first woman premier if she got elected."
Duceppe and Marois hold similar centre-left ideological views, despite their separate paths in the sovereignty movement.
"They aren't so different," Auger said. "Both of them know you can't go around promising a referendum right after an election."
"Both of them are not the pur et dur [hard-liners]" who drive the PQ's referendum ambitions, he added.
The referendum question dogged Boisclair throughout his 18-month stint as leader. He irritated grassroots supporters who did not like his moderate approach to an eventual referendum and independence.
After the PQ was flattened in the March 2007 election, winning only 36 of Quebec's 125 seats, Boisclair was chastised by party members when he said he thought it was time to shelve the goal of a referendum for a while.
He finally stepped down May 8 after being hounded for weeks by the party's grassroots members, who blamed him for the PQ's poor performance in the last election.
Share Tools
Latest Montreal News Headlines
- Apartment fire leaves 3 children, father in critical condition
- Emergency crews responding to a fire in Sainte-Thérèse, Que., said they found five family members unconscious in their apartment on Saturday morning. more »
- Harper chief of staff resigns amid Senate expense scandal
- Nigel Wright has resigned as Prime Minister Stephen Harper's chief of staff, following revelations he wrote a $90,000 cheque to repay living expenses claimed by Senator Mike Duffy. more »
- Pierre's picks: 5 don't-miss events in Montreal this weekend
- Every Friday, CBC Montreal's Homerun arts reporter Pierre Landry brings you the top five things to see and do in Montreal this weekend. more »
- Behind the scenes: Community fights Hydro-Québec plan
- CBC reporter Willy Lowry takes us behind the scenes as he heads to a village in the Laurentians. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Senior Pakistani politician shot dead
- Gunmen in Pakistan have killed a senior member of Imran Khan's Movement for Justice (PTI) party outside her home in Karachi. more »
- Search continues for 2 missing New Brunswick fishermen
- A recovery effort has resumed for two missing fishermen off the coast of New Brunswick, after a distress call was issued from their boat early Saturday. more »
- Car drives into crowd at Virginia parade
- About 50 to 60 people were injured after a driver described by witnesses as an elderly man drove his car into a group of hikers marching in a parade in a small Virginia mountain town. more »
- Spectator killed at Edmonton Jeep event
- A 20-year-old woman died Saturday during an event for Jeep enthusiasts held in a parking lot just west of downtown Edmonton. more »
Most Viewed/Commented
- Apartment fire leaves 3 children, father in critical condition
- Behind the scenes: Community fights Hydro-Québec plan
- Construction hotspots to avoid on May long weekend
- Bomb defuser from FLQ crisis remembered by friends, family
- PQ's proposed changes to Bill 14 leave critics skeptical
- Pierre's picks: 5 don't-miss events in Montreal this weekend
- Woman accused of murder testifies that she was too drunk
- 2 earthquakes felt in Ontario and Quebec
- Body found in burning car in Laval park
Bloc Leader Gilles Duceppe, shown in the House of Commons on Wednesday, will face at least one opponent, Pauline Marois, in a bid for the PQ leadership.
PQ MNA Pauline Marois gestures as she announces her resignation from politics in March 2006.
