CBCnews
Quebec Votes 2008  
Quebec Votes 2008
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share

Is Ottawa in the cards for Dumont?

Last Updated: Tuesday, December 9, 2008 | 6:22 PM ET

Just one day after Mario Dumont announced his plan to quit Quebec politics, federal Conservatives were envisioning the prospect of luring the one-time right-wing wunderkind to Ottawa.

A household name in Quebec since the early 1990s, Dumont almost singlehandedly built the small-c conservative Action Démocratique du Québec, but announced he would resign after a disastrous election result Monday.

Several prominent Conservatives quickly indicated that the door to Ottawa remains resolutely open — should he be interested in entering.

"Mario Dumont is a principled leader who over the last 14 years advanced the small-c conservative cause in Quebec," one well-known federal Tory organizer said Tuesday.

"He would be an asset to the Conservative government in Ottawa."

Another senior federal Tory chose his words carefully when asked whether the party would approach Dumont: "I get the impression people will let him know there's room for him in Ottawa."

Dumont, 38, would offer the party its first bona-fide Quebec star in more than a decade, with infinitely more organizational experience and name recognition than the largely anonymous cast of candidates who currently fill the Conservative ranks there.

Their weakness in Quebec was underscored in the recent federal election when the Tories took a beating over relatively minor cuts to arts funding and so badly lost the public-relations war to the Bloc Québécois that it might have cost them a majority government.

While their interest in Dumont is clear, it's far from certain the man who has led the ADQ since 1994 would want to make the jump.

Over the years he has consistently shrugged off similar entreaties from Ottawa while he focused on building his own provincial party.

Move to federal politics would be a surprise

People who know Dumont say past attempts to discuss the possibility with him have met with stiff resistance.

One ally of the ADQ leader said he is far more likely to take a corporate job or teach at university than make a move to the federal level.

"As far as I can tell, he's never been interested in federal politics," a federal government source said.

"It would really be a surprise, I've never seen him express the slightest interest in federal politics."

Dumont became well-known in the province when he was head of the provincial Liberals' youth wing.

He had a spectacular rupture with the party over his preference for a drastically scaled-back federalism, under which Ottawa would relinquish a number of constitutional powers to the provinces.

Dumont campaigned for Quebec independence in the 1995 referendum but has long turned his back on sovereignty, saying Quebecers should move on to deal with more pressing matters like the economy and health-care reform.

For years he was the ADQ's only legislature member but the party mushroomed a few years ago and came within just a few seats of governing when it won 41 seats in the 2007 provincial vote.

Dumont rode a wave of right-wing populist sentiment in that election, where he exploited the debate over the so-called reasonable accommodation of immigrants to maximum political advantage.

For weeks, Quebec newspapers were awash in stories about a sugar shack that took the pork out of its pea soup to accommodate a group of visiting Muslims; about a YMCA that covered its windows to accommodate a Jewish synagogue next door; and about a small town named Hérouxville that created a Quebec values charter for immigrants.

Dumont mused that perhaps Quebec had gone too far in being accommodating — and he found a receptive audience for his message.

But the party's star quickly fizzled.

His crop of rookie members underwhelmed in its role as official Opposition, and Dumont issued a personal apology for his party's performance, calling it a growing experience.

The ADQ was reduced to seven seats in Monday's election, and Dumont tearfully declared he would not lead the party into the next campaign.

  •  
Story Tools: EMAIL | PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK | Bookmark and Share

Overall Results

Overall Election Results
Party Elected Leading Total
Updated: Dec. 9, 2008, 1:11 AM EST
LIB 66 0 66
PQ 51 0 51
ADQ 7 0 7
QS 1 0 1
GRN 0 0 0
OTH 0 0 0

Choose a format to view results for all ridings and parties:

All results are unofficial until final ballot counts are verified by Elections Quebec.

In depth: Quebec Votes 2008

Results

Interactive map
Click your region or riding, create a short list of your favourites
Riding results
See the vote count for individual ridings, geographic regions and communities
Find a specific riding or region
Locate a region or riding from our list

Video

Jean Charest
"...a magnificent page of history" for Liberals and Quebec
Pauline Marois
Parti Québécois leader becomes province's first woman Opposition chief
Mario Dumont
Action Démocratique leader resigns

Your view

Join the discussion
Share your view to be read on the air on CBC Radio or Television

Results in more detail

Cabinet ministers
How the former cabinet members fared in their home ridings
Language influence
Election results comparing allophone, francophone and anglophone ridings

Quebec Votes Headlines

Separatist-bashing in Ottawa may have helped PQ
While Stephen Harper toasted a federalist victory in the Quebec election, some sovereigntists suggested Tuesday they might have him to thank for their higher-than-expected score.
Charest says he's here to stay after majority win
Quebec Premier Jean Charest had barely finished lunch the day after his third straight election win and he already found himself defending his appetite to see the term through.
Is Ottawa in the cards for Dumont?
Just one day after Mario Dumont announced his plan to quit Quebec politics, federal Conservatives were envisioning the prospect of luring the one-time right-wing wonderkid to Ottawa.
Charest wins 3rd mandate in Quebec Video
Jean Charest's political gamble has paid off: Quebecers handed his Liberal party a majority Monday night.
PQ gains help Marois rebuild party from disastrous 2007 election
Less than two years removed from being reduced to the province's third party, Parti Québécois Leader Pauline Marois guided her troops back to Official Opposition status Monday.

My Riding & Riding Talk

Have your say about what's important in your own riding. Read profiles about your candidates, get riding-related information and join the debate.

Find My Riding

List All Ridings

Quebec Votes Features

Party Leaders
DEBATELeaders face-off
Watch French language debate live, only on Radio-Canada
Party Leaders
Campaign BytesFeature
Quirky, colourful and sometimes funny underside of Quebec's election race
Party Leaders
Leaders & PartiesProfiles
Biographies and platforms of the main parties
Voters Toolkit
Voters ToolkitNeed-to-know?
Links and resources to help you vote
CBC Archives
CBC ArchivesQuebec Elections, 1960-2007
Quebec elections are full of colourful characters

Top CBCNews.ca Headlines

Headlines

Drummond report on Ontario calls for cutbacks video
The Ontario government must curtail its spending with the kind of cuts not seen since the Mike Harris years, according to a report by former TD Bank chief economist Don Drummond.
new Tories move to curb 'bogus' refugees
The Conservative government is poised to change the refugee system yet again in an attempt to deter what it considers "bogus" claimants, CBC News has learned.
photos Children of immigrants challenged at school, home video
By 2016, foreign-born youth and Canadian-born youth from immigrant families will make up a quarter of the country's population, according to predictions by the Canadian Council on Social Development. As their numbers grow, more attention is being paid to their successes and failures.
updated 2 NDP MPs back final Commons vote to kill gun registry
Two NDP MPs broke party ranks to vote with the government in the final House of Commons vote on scrapping the long-gun registry.
updated B.C. house party trial hears from tearful teens video
Two teenagers cried as they testified at the trial of a B.C. woman who was charged after a teen died while her son was hosting a party at her house in 2008.