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A look at the Parti Qubcois campaign

The PQ said it needed a strong mandate from Quebecers to bring about its recipe for change, and work towards sovereignty.
PQ Leader Pauline Marois is Quebec's premier-elect, the first woman to hold the job. (CBC)

TheParti Qubcoissaid it needed a strong mandate from Quebecers todeliver its recipe for change, and work towards sovereignty.

Throughout the campaign, PQLeader Pauline Maroishammered away at that message.

Shepressed hersupporters for a majority she said was urgentto achieve her party goalsto bring in stricter language laws, a secular charter, and move the sovereignty agenda ahead.

On Tuesday night, Marois made history,becoming Quebec's first woman premier but she fell short of a majority.

Now facing two opposition parties at the national assembly, and leading a slim minority, Marois has her work cut out.

PQ rallies around hardline supporters

From day one in this campaign,the PQset out to positionitself as an agentof change for Quebec. The party hoped to capitalize on historically low voter satisfaction rates with the ruling Liberal Party.

But in the five weeks the Pquistesfaced off against the struggling Liberals, and the untested Coalition Avenir Qubec, it never got close to the 40 per cent of voter intentions needed to form a majority, polling insteadaround 32 or 33 per cent.

Maroisappealed to hardline Pquistesby promising to expand language Bill 101 and limit access to English CEGEP colleges.

She also championed the PQ'ssecular identity charter, that would bar religious symbols in public places except for the cross. The PQ also talked ofcitizenship tests for new immigrants to the province.

Theparty reached out to student voters, promising to repeal scheduled tuition increases and Quebec's emergency Bill 78.

But it alienatedallophone and anglophonevoters, despite Marois' assertion the party respects minority language rights. The PQ leader refused to grant English interviews toanglophone news stations (with the exception of CBC.)

Quebec sovereignty rises up

ThePQ's slim leadin the latterhalf of the campaign has raised the spectre ofa possible sovereignty referendum.

For years the sovereigntists' dream for a third vote on secession has been out of reachtwo past PQ premiers refused to midwife another referendum, after 1995's slim No victory.

Marois repeatedly raised the question of another sovereignty vote,while remaining vague on the when and how.

In her one-on-one televised campaign debate with Liberal Leader Jean Charest, she said a referendum would benecessary at the moment it is necessary.

She later said she'd only allow a referendum if the conditions were rightdespite supportingthe PQ-endorsed citizen referendum initiative (known as RIP), that would allow five per cent of the population to demand a vote.

A Marois-led PQ will try tolay the groundwork for a renewed sovereignty debate by taking on Ottawa on a case-by-case policy basis.

Marois has said she'llask the federal government for greater control in areas such as foreign policy, copyright law and insurance employment.

Any refusal, the PQ argues, is fodder in its slow pushtowards independence.

But how far Marois will get remains to be seen, as she prepares to lead a minority government.