'The real campaign begins': Quebec's 43rd general election starts - Action News
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'The real campaign begins': Quebec's 43rd general election starts

Quebec's 43rd general election has officially kicked off. Coalition Avenir Qubec Leader Franois Legault made the announcement Sunday morning after asking Lt.-Gov. Michel Doyon to dissolve the legislature.

CAQ Leader Franois Legault ahead in the polls, but could face fierce competition

Party leaders, clockwise from top left, Franois Legault, Dominique Anglade, Paul St-Pierre Plamondon, Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois and ric Duhaime are facing off in Quebec's election campaign. (The Canadian Press)

Quebec's 43rd general election has officially kicked off.

Coalition Avenir Qubec(CAQ) LeaderFranois Legault made the announcement Sunday morning after asking Lt.-Gov. Michel Doyon to dissolve the legislature.

"The real campaign begins," Legault said while making his way to his campaign bus.

Election signs are already up in cities across the province. The campaign will last about five weeks before Quebecers head to the polls on Oct. 3.

Party leaders are swinging into full gear,making appearances in several ridingsthroughout the day.

The Quebec Liberals and Legault's CAQwere the first parties to hold news conferences, launching their campaigns Sunday morning.

Parti Qubcois(PQ)Leader Paul St-Pierre Plamondonthen spoke in theMontreal riding of Camille-Laurin, followed by Conservative Party of Quebec Leader ric Duhaime in the riding ofChauveau, northeast of Quebec City, wherehe is running.

QubecSolidaire(QS)is launching its campaignin the riding of Saint-Franois in the Eastern Townships, where it hopes to make gains this election.

All the major party leaders have namedcandidates and made election promises in recent weeks.

Polls suggest the CAQholdsa commanding lead asthe campaign kicks off, andis widely expected to cruise to a second majority.

The economy was one of the main topics addressed by the party leaders as they launched their campaigns.

Liberal Leader Dominique Angladesaid the economywould be the ballot-box question and suggested the subject of Quebec's economic growth had been neglected by the CAQ.

"Ask any Quebecer if they are better off today than they were four years ago, and they'll answer the question by no," Anglade said.

"The reality is people don't have as much money in their pockets. We need a long-term plan, and those are the proposals that we have."

Economy top of mind

At a news conference in front of the Montmorency Fallsoutside Quebec City soon afterward, Legaultsaid he's proud ofthe state of Quebec's economy, but acknowledged inflation was the number one concern voters had shared with him in his travels throughout the province recently.

"The salaries in Quebec have never increased more quickly, so can we agree that there's something good for our workers right now?" he said."Who do you really trust to manage your wallet?"

He also mentioned more than once that in his time as premier, Quebec had reduced its wealth gap with Ontario.

He addressed Anglade's charge about the economy, saying in French, "How could thismadamesay Quebec's economy isn't doing well? We never saw Quebec's economy outgrow Ontario's under the Liberals."

Legault went on to saythat, "The labour shortage wasn't caused by the CAQ."

WATCH | Quebec heads to the polls in October:

Quebecs 43rd general election officially kicks off

2 years ago
Duration 2:12
Coalition Avenir Qubec leader Franois Legault is heading into the Quebec election campaign with a sizeable lead in the polls as he fights to keep his job as premier. Still, not everyone wants him back.

Anglade soon tweeted in response that, "My name is Dominique."

Legault said the CAQ would share its four measures to address the cost of livingin the coming days,and that it would include concrete ways to turn the province's economy green,includingmeasures to fight climate change and reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Legault's launch in the capital city suggests his party wants to shore up its base in the region, where the Conservatives under Duhaime appear to be gaining popularity.

A man with thick rimmed glasses stands in front of a crowd of supporters.
Conservative Party of Quebec Leader ric Duhaime said his campaign began a week ago. (Radio-Canada)

In response to whether Duhaime threatened CAQ strongholds in Quebec City and the Beauce area, Legault said the pandemic had taught him the importance of remaining humble and that he told his team every day, "Don't take anything for granted."

He said he believed the Conservatives' growing popularity could be attributed in part to backlash to pandemic restrictions, but that he felt it had been his duty to implement at times strict measures to protect vulnerable people.

A Lger poll published earlier this month found support for Legault's party at 44 per cent, compared to 18 per cent for the second-place Quebec Liberals. QubecSolidaire and the Conservative Party of Quebec polled at 15 per cent and 13 per cent, respectively.

Growing Conservative popularity

Duhaimeheld his news conference in front of a small crowd of supporters, saying his campaign had started a week ago without waiting for Legault to give the go-ahead.

Legault standing in front of party candidates with a huge waterfall in the backdrop.
Coalition Avenir Qubec Leader Franois Legault launched his campaign in front of the popular Chutes Montmorency. (Mathieu Potvin/Radio-Canada)

He said the fact that his party had already amassed 125 candidates for the first time in a Quebec election was a win.

"I can sense a lot of enthusiasm and a very strong mobilization on the part of our base and we have 36 days to convince hundreds of thousands of other Quebecers," Duhaime said.

Health, housing and climate change

Qubec Solidaire(QS)is positioning itself as the main opposition to the CAQ, trying to take advantage of the Liberals' drop in the polls.

Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois, QSco-spokesperson, said the upcoming mandate is Quebec's "last chance"to combat climate change.

"We have a responsibility to act now,"he said."The first priority should be people's health and the environment's health."

Qubec Solidaire co-spokespersons Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois, centre, and Manon Mass, left, launched their party's campaign in Sherbrooke Sunday. (Matt D'Amours/CBC)

He said his party would present an ambitious platform that would solve the housing crisis, "revolutionize"transportation and make Quebec "one of the greenest countries in the world,"referring to QS's support for sovereignty.

"We'll put an end to the biggest polluters getting a free pass."

In Montreal, Plamondonsaid his partycould be the election's Cinderella story "The team that will have gotten a lot further than what everyone predicted."

Despite the PQ's bleak polling results, Plamondon said the party would be relying on a platform based on the authenticity of its convictions.

Paul St-Pierre Plamondon said he hopes the Parti Qubcois will be a 'Cinderalla team' this election, fairing better than predictions. (Radio-Canada)

"Before the decline Canada has chosen for us, we do not accept the CAQ's invitation to resign ourselves. We choose hope and rigour," Plamondon said, alluding to the CAQ's position that Quebec doesn't need to separate from the rest of Canada to assert its sovereignty.

"Simply put, to be a sovereigntist is to be a realist,"Plamondon said."We want to make sure that everybody understands that this idea is also and primarily about our future as a nation and the future of the French language."

As the legislature broke for the summer, Legault's party had 76 seats, while the Quebec Liberals had 27, Qubec Solidaire had 10 and the Parti Qubcois had seven. The Conservative Party of Quebec held one seat and there were four Independents.

With files from The Canadian Press