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As Quebec election looms, Legault steps away from pandemic spotlight

Quebec's premier has been mostly absent from the province's regular COVID-19 news conferences. Political scientists say that's because an election is looming.

Coalition Avenir Qubec premier wants next election to be about more than pandemic, say experts

Quebec Premier Franois Legault has not attended a COVID-19 news conference since Feb. 8. That day, he told Quebecers it was time to live to learn with the virus. (Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press)

After nearly two years as the public face of the province's COVID-19 response, Franois Legault has pulled a U-turn.

Since Feb. 1,the Quebec government has held a total of 15 news conferences about COVID-19. The premier has attended only two of them.

His last appearance at a standard COVID-19 news briefing was on Feb. 8, nearly three months ago. That's when he told Quebecers it was time to learn to live with the virus.

"The population is fed up. I'm fed up. We're all fed up," the premier said that day. "Right now, we can take a calculated risk and finally turn the page."

Since then, not only has he turned the page on strict public health restrictions, he's also relinquished the province's pandemic spotlight, after months of having it pretty much to himself.

Experts CBC News spoke to agree on one of the major reasons why.

"We have elections coming in Quebec in early October," said Prof. Daniel Bland, a political scientist and director of the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada.

"They don't want this coming election in Quebec to be about the pandemic."

WATCH | Legault has plenty to gain from staying away from COVID-19 topic, says Daniel Bland:

'Politically savvy' for Legault to distance himself from pandemic, expert says

2 years ago
Duration 1:04
Daniel Bland, the director of the McGill Institute for the Study of Canada, says being the the public face of the province's COVID-19 response can be detrimental to Franois Legault.

Shielded from blame

Nowyou're morelikely to find the premier discussing wind and renewable-energy projects and Quebec City's future tramway thanthe pandemic.

But the virus hasn't disappeared. At least 3,000 Quebecers have died from COVID-19 so far, this year alone.

There are nearly 2,300 people in Quebec hospitals with the virus, and the daily case count clocks in at about 2,000, although the actual number is likely much higher: since so few people have access to PCR tests now, the province's ability to track the spread isn't nearly what it once was.

So even though COVID-19 is still very much present, two years into the pandemic, the once-daily briefings have a different feel now.

It is an unelected official, Dr. Luc Boileau, the interim public health director, who meetsreporters, either alone or flanked by other unelected health experts.

That setup is a throwback to the earliest days of the pandemic, when Boileau's predecessor, Dr. Horacio Arruda, was the main public face in the province's fight against the virus. Legault then stepped in and began addressing Quebecers on a daily basis.

Even if Legault is no longerthe public face of the province's fight against COVID-19, he is the person who has final say on pandemic restrictions. The public health director can only make recommendations.

But the way Bland sees it, casting Boileau as the province's sole pandemic spokesperson does have the effect of shielding Legault and the ruling Coalition Avenir Qubec from blame and freeing up the premier to use his public appearances for other purposes.

"They want to talk about other things, about the economy and about some of their policies that they have introduced," Bland said.

Franois Legault and newly sworn-in CAQ MNA Shirley Dorismond, left, celebrate last month's byelection victory in Marie-Victorin. (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

They don't want to risk any political capital, Bland says, "like they did a bit temporarily during the Omicron wave, by making mistakes that will be tied directly toFranois Legault. That's why he is creating a distance between himself and the management of the pandemic."

That distance became even more apparent in March.

Radio-Canada revealed emails, showing that Arruda, then the public health director, had had to scramble to find a scientific basis to justify the province's second pandemic curfew at the end of last year.

The day following thepublication of Radio-Canada's story, there was a COVID-19 news briefing. Only Boileau showed up. He was forced to answer questions about a controversy he had nothing to do with.

Legault waited another five days to make a public appearance, and that was to launch the byelection campaign in Marie-Victorin, a longtime Parti Qubcois stronghold on Montreal's South Shore whichCAQ candidate Shirley Dorismond ultimately won.

The premier is still not talking about his absence from regular COVID-19 briefings. A request for comment was not returned.

Montreal police detain a man who ran from them at the start of the second curfew imposed by Quebec, on Dec. 31, 2021. In March, Radio-Canada revealed emails that showed then-public health director Dr. Horacio Arruda had been hard-pressed to justify that curfew scientifically. (Peter McCabe/The Canadian Press)

Sending wrong message

Legault's approach isn't much different from that of other premiers, according to University of Ottawa Prof. Patrick Fafard, an expert in the politics of public health, who says it's appropriate for the premier to "step back a bit."

In recent months, Ontario Premier Doug Ford's public appearances have also had a lot less to do with COVID-19. Voters in Ontario are headed to the polls next month.

Provincial governments "are trying to shift the framing of COVID away from one of crisis to oneof challenge, continued vigilance," Fafard said.

UQAM Prof. Kim Lavoie, a specialist in behavioural medicine, says the premier is sending the wrong message, telling Quebecers to learn to live with the virus and no longer attending COVID-19 news briefings. (Jean-Claude Taliana/CBC)

"The only problem is that many in the public health community, and indeed, a large swath of the general public do not think now is the time to make the shift," he said.

Universit de Qubec Montral Prof. Kim Lavoie, who holds the Canadian research chair in behavioural medicine, is among those who generally prefer to have politicians play the background on scientific and public health matters.

But after 20 months of being omnipresent, Legault telling Quebecers to learn to live with the virus right before disappearing from COVID-19 news conferences sends the wrong message, even if it benefits him politically, she said.

"I think the message people are getting is there'snothing we can do, andwe're all doomed to get infected," said Lavoie.

She saidthere's still a lot we don't know about the virus, including the effects of long COVID and repeat infections from Omicron and its subvariants.

"I don't think the pandemic itself is better," said Lavoie. "I think the dialogue around it is less dramatic."