CAQ's Legault denies promising star candidate super powers - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 12:39 PM | Calgary | 7.1°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Montreal

CAQ's Legault denies promising star candidate super powers

A claim by Coalition Avenir Qubec's star candidate that he would have the power to choose key ministers in a CAQ cabinet left his party leader scrambling to clarify who's in charge Monday.

Jacques Duchesneau backs away from claim he'd name key ministers to CAQ cabinet

Duchesneau said he'd be a kind of CAQ "super minister" with the power to name cabinet colleagues to the ministries of transport, natural resources, municipal affairs and public security. (CBC)

A claim by Coalition Avenir Qubec's star candidate Jacques Duchesneau that he wouldhave the power to choose key ministers in a CAQ cabinet left his leader, Franois Legault, scrambling to clarify who's in charge.

Day 6 Highlights:

The Liberal party rolled out more plans for education, this time highlighting a pledgeto support parents of school-aged children. The plan includes:

  • $100 per child per year for the purchase of school supplies. Children enrolled in public school up to Grade 6 are eligible.
  • Doubling funding to $40 million for the homework help program, to provide greater access and flexibility around parents' schedules.

Qubec Solidaire focused its platform on Day 6 on renewable energy and public transportation. The plan includes:

  • $1 billion a year in additional funding for the development of electric transport, including the creation of a high-speed rail link between Montreal and Quebec. The commitment would span five years.
  • Expansion of the Montreal metro system and the establishment of an electric tram service.
  • The creation of nergie-Qubec with a mandate to develop a renewable fuel energy policy.

The CAQ highlighted its plan for natural resource development. The plan includes:

  • The creation of a $5 billion fund administered by the Caisse de dpt to invest in Quebec mining projects.
  • All royalties from the exploitation of natural resources would be applied to debt repayment.

In a French-language radio interview with broadcaster PaulArcand Monday morning, Duschesneau said Legault has promised to name him deputy premier and that he'd be no ordinary deputy, but one mandated with the power to choose key cabinet ministers.

"I wouldn't be thekind of deputy premier that we've known over the past 30 years," the former Montreal police chief told Arcand. "In other words, anhonorary one."

The former head of Quebec's anti-collusion squad,who Legault called his "Elliot Ness" in announcing his candidacy Sunday,said his role would be much larger than just ensuringthe integrity of key government departments.

Ness was a U.S. federal agent famous for his efforts to enforce Prohibition in Chicago in the late 1920s and early 1930s.

Duchesneausaid he'd be a kind of CAQ "super minister" with the power to name cabinet colleagues to the ministries of transport, natural resources, municipal affairs and public security.

'There will be only one boss,' Legault says

Duchesneau's claim drew a barrage of questions from reporters atthe first opportunity of the day to questiona ruffled-looking Franois Legault.

The CAQ leadersaid he has indeed promised Duchesneau's thedeputy premier's job, but he denies that would come with extra powers to namekey ministers.

"I told him that I will consult him to choose the four ministers, but the final decision will remain [the premier's]," Legault said. "I think that all people talking to journalists can sometimes be not very clear."

Legault said he would talk to his star candidate, and by Monday afternoon, Duchesneau had backed away from his earlier statement.

"I think Mr. Legault's message is very clear, and in any case, the law is clear on this point: It's the premier who names his cabinet," Duchesneau said in an interview on Radio-Canada.

'Everything that I say from now on, I know that I'm going to be scrutinized,' CAQ candidate Jacques Duchesneau

"I wanted to take a short cut this morning and I learned that, now that I'm in politics, one can't take shortcuts to explain something quickly in an interview...Yes we will come to an understanding on the choice of ministers who are going to work with me, but the choice belongs to him."

"We knew from the get-go that we would be targets," he added, in an English interview on CBC Radio. "Everything that I say from now on, I know that I'm going to be scrutinized. But the essence of the message is still the same: I'm focusing on corruption."

Naming ministersthe premier's job, says Charest

In Ste-Marie in the Chaudire-Appalaches region to announce his plan to improve academic performance, Charest was quick to take a jab at the CAQ's star candidate's pronouncement.

"If I understand correctly, Mr. Legault will do the financing of the party, and he'll do the Tweeter [sic] account," Charest quipped. "Jacques Duchesneau will run the rest of the government."

For his part, Charest said he would never give a minister any say in choosing a cabinet colleague.

"It's the prerogative of the premier," the Liberal leader said. "It has always been that way. I have never seen, anywhere, in Canada or elsewhere in the world, and certainly not in the history of Quebec, a situation like that."