Home | WebMail |

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

MontrealAnalysis

Jean-Franois Lise's leadership review tests reason vs. passion for Parti Qubcois

The first order of business at this weekend's PQ policy convention is a confidence vote in the party leader. As Nancy Wood sees it, whether they like Jean-Franois Lise's go-slow approach to sovereignty or not, Pquistes would be crazy to eject him.

PQ grassroots to hold confidence vote at weekend policy convention in Montreal

Jean-Franois Lise speaks to supporters after he was elected on Oct. 7, 2016 in Lvis, Que. (Jacques Boissinot/The Canadian Press)

On Saturday, Jean-Franois Lise will face a leadership review at the Parti Qubcois policy convention.

There is no reason to think he will lose the vote.

The PQ would be out of its mind to eject him and think a new leader (who would be their fourth since 2014) would be a better plan, heading into next year's provincial election.

That said, the PQ is a party made up of members with dreams, goals and fervent political passion and logic doesn't always win the day.

Soparty organizers, and Lise himself, are at this moment probably trying to practise mindful meditation, breathing slowly andvisualizing a successful voteon Saturday.

The PQis, after all, the party that is known for devouring its leaders.

Even the emblematic Ren Lvesque was eventually driven from the party he founded.

Chance to chide the leader

This weekend's policy convention is meant to be a PQ family gathering of sorts: the leader, top party organizers, members of the National Assembly and ordinary Pquistesfrom riding associations across the province will all be there.

Parties have policy conventions for a couple of reasonsmainly, toallow grassroots members, through their riding associations,to put forward proposals that could become part of the party's electoral platform.

The other reason for a policy convention is to bringdissension out into the opento allow the rank and fileto enjoy a moment of real power, where they can stand at a microphone and berate the leader, if they so choose.

Saturday's leadership review is happening because a significant number of ridings around 30 of 125demanded one.

It is their way of calling Lise onto the carpet, admonishing him publicly for what they see as his failings.

Referendum still years away

Lise's principalfailing, in the eyes of many, is hisinsistencethathe will not hold a referendum in his first term as premier, if the PQ wins the election next year.

Instead, Lise has argued, he will talk up sovereignty and get Quebecers mentally prepared for a referendumin 2022.

That is a long time to wait for an ageingmembership.

A 2016study fortheMcGill-basedCentre for the Study of Democratic Citizenshipsuggested the PQ will dieout as political force in Quebec within 20 years.

Younger sovereignists appear to have more affinity with either Option Nationale, an upstart nationalist party, or Qubec Solidaire, the small, social democratic party with three sitting MNAs.

Thosetwo parties are currently in talks to merge, which the PQ has to see as a threat of some kind.

Lise would not be the first leader to be dressed down by the party faithful.

Lucien Bouchard, the man who swooped in from Ottawa and nearly pulled off a referendum win for them in 1995, got a mere 76 per cent confidence vote the followingyear. He considered quitting.

Four years later, in 2000, the party voted 91 per cent in favour of his leadership.
Former Parti Qubcois leader Bernard Landry resigned on June 4, 2005, his wife Chantal Renaud at his side. (Clement Allard/Canadian Press)

In 2005, Bernard Landry made the mistake of setting thelevel of support that he expected from PQ members at 80 per cent.

The vote came in at 76 per cent. There were enough other candidates waiting in the wings notably Andr Boisclairthat Landry felt the pressure to bow out.

Both Boisclair and his successor, Pauline Marois, resigned as leader after losing an election.
Pauline Marois faced pressure to resign throughout the year before her 2012 electoral victory, even after scoring 93 per cent in a leadership review in early 2011.

Marois did survive one leadership review during her tenure, with a stellar score of 93 per cent.

But party organizers worked hard to achieve that, carefully polling members before the confidence voteto try to defuse any pockets of dissent or anger.

Leadership races take time and money

This time, by all accounts, the party has not had the resources to seek out those who would jettison Lise and start afresh.

Instead, organizers haveput the word out that this policy convention has to be based on realism: policies need to be economically viable and politically palatable to the middle class,and the party has neither the time nor the money to engage in another leadership race.

Leadership races do take money and time. Sometimes lots of time.

Look at the federal NDP: after their2015 trouncing, New Democrats held a leadership review and handed Tom Mulcair a brutal 48 per cent vote of confidence. He announced he would step down.

It is now 2017, and the NDP still doesn't have a new leader.

With Quebec's next provincial election just a year away, the PQ does not have that kind of time.

PQ leader Jean-Franois Lise responds to questions prior to a caucus meeting on Aug. 30. (Paul Chiasson/Canadian Press)

Lise has been carefully strategic, wisely not setting any bar for the vote. In fact, he has told reporters he'sseen the PQovercome great divisions at policy conventions and pull together admirably to fight an election.

Still, in politics, any vote below 66 per cent would likely seriously undermine his leadership.

Party members may want to use the vote to show they are angry about Lise's temporary shift away from sovereignty, but they likely don't want an actual leadership vacuum at this time.

The final vote resultwill determine whether reason or passion prevailed. And whether Lise can breathe easily, at least until next year's election.