"The Quebec advantage and
the Canadian advantage: a winning combination for Quebecers"
The Honourable Stéphane Dion
President of the Privy Council and
Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs
Discussion paper distributed at a meeting of the
Quebec Round Table of the Council for Canadian Unity
Sainte-Foy, Quebec
May 27, 1999
"Winning conditions". Rarely have
two words more effectively encapsulated a strategy. Because everyone knows that
the current Quebec government is absolutely obsessed with creating the winning
conditions for a third referendum. Winning conditions from their viewpoint, of
course, which from our viewpoint are the losing conditions for Quebecers and all
Canadians.
The fact that the Parti québécois came in second in terms of the number of
votes, behind Jean Charest's Liberals, might have been seen by most people as a
moral obligation not to hold a referendum during the current mandate. But it
seems that the PQ government just can't stop itself from pushing ever onward
with its referendum plans, which dictate all of its actions as a government.
So how is it going about trying to create those winning conditions? And how
do we react to those efforts, we who believe in a united Canada regardless of
where our political loyalties lie? I would like to thank our non-partisan forum,
the Council for Canadian Unity, for giving me the opportunity to try to answer
those two questions.
1. The strategy of exclusive nationalism: getting Quebecers to
renounce Canada
The strategy of the PQ government consists of presenting our Canadian
dimension as something foreign to ourselves as Quebecers. Something foreign and
unnecessary, and worse: something harmful and threatening.
This strategy consists in convincing us that we are not Canadians. We are
Quebecers, but not Canadians. Canada is not us. Canada is another nation. And
our being subjected to this other nation is more of a danger to us than ever.
I hasten to add that such arguments are not only a matter of strategy. First
and foremost, they are a matter of sincerity and conviction. The proponents of
independence are generally every bit as sincere and convinced as the proponents
of Canadian unity. Indeed, we are facing a very strong ideology, which invites
people to look at their lives in society only through a nationalist lens.
According to this ideology, in essence, only nations exist. Citizens are
atoms within the organic body of the nation. To be truly free, a nation must
form its own independent state, and not be included within a state or another
larger nation, as Quebecers are within Canada. Otherwise, it is not free: it is
dominated by the other nation, as Quebecers are dominated by Canadians.
When Bernard Landry stated publicly on October 27, 1997, that Lucien Bouchard
was a "liberator of a people", in the same manner as Gandhi or
Bolivar, he really believed it, no matter how incredible it may seem to us. It's
not a matter of linguistic hyperbole, it is the very basis of this ideology: we
Quebecers are not free, can you believe it? The fact that Canada is one of the
oldest democracies in the world, that Canadian citizens have enjoyed civil
liberties for longer than almost any other country on earth, that Canada is
ranked as one of the best countries in terms of respecting civil liberties,
according to international studies, that Canada is a good global citizen, always
taking it upon itself to promote greater freedom, democracy and peace in the
world, all of this is barely relevant to the debate. Because the only thing that
really matters is that Quebec is not an independent state, it is a province of a
state in which Quebecers are a minority. Thus, Quebec is not free, and needs to
be liberated.
Oh, of course, this liberation must be effected through democracy. We are
among democrats, after all. But here again, it is nations that are the key
players. That is why Quebec is not divisible, because it is made up of one
nation, whereas Canada is divisible because it is made up of two nations. Canada
is not a real country, Lucien Bouchard has told us. And so it is divisible. But
an independent Quebec would be a real country, made up of a single nation, and
would thus be indivisible. This is the only thing that really matters, even if
populations concentrated in a given territory were to democratically and clearly
express their preference for their region to remain in Canada. Those regions,
the separatist leaders and their loyal intellectuals tell us, are not nations.
There is a pecking order for democratic rights, depending on whether or not you
form a nation.
Within this universe, citizens are nationalists. There is no other collective
identity than the national identity. And this national collective identity is
exclusive: you can be a member of only one nation. It is impossible to be a
Quebecer and a Canadian at the same time. Not because being Canadian is a bad
thing. But because being a Canadian is not us. We are Quebecers. Canadians,
Bernard Landry explained on May 15th, think only of their own nation, and
sacrifice our interests, the interests of us Quebecers, who form another nation.
Being a Quebecer means more than just living within Quebec's territory. Being
a Quebecer means ceasing to be a Canadian in your head and in your heart, while
you await ceasing to be a Canadian in point of fact. This is what has been left
unsaid in the debate on identity that the Bloc has felt obliged to undertake,
and what Ms. Tremblay, in reference to Céline Dion, and Mr. Landry,
in reference to Mr. Monty, have expressed in their own way, as have so many
others: Mr. Lévesque in reference to Mr. Trudeau's Scottish ancestry,
Mr. Bouchard's comments on the white race, or Mr. Parizeau on the
ethnic vote.
Some people see these statements as signs of a latent xenophobia. But looking
at the problem in this manner misses the main point. The ideology we are
confronting is not mainly an ideology of xenophobia. It is mainly an ideology of
secession. It is based on an exclusive conception of the nation: you can't be a
Quebecer unless you are only a Quebecer. If you feel Canadian, it is because in
some way you don't love Quebec. Jean Charest doesn't love Quebec, he feels
Canadian as well.
While belonging to Quebec and to Canada is an impossible combination, there
is a perfect equivalency between Quebec and the independence movement. This is
why the two pro-independence parties are called the Parti québécois and the
Bloc québécois.
Such is the ideology that the separatist leaders believe in. But they have a
problem, the same problem they've had for thirty years, which is that the vast
majority of Quebecers don't share that belief. Quebecers in general do not have
an exclusive conception of the nation. They feel that they are both Quebecers
and Canadians, and live these two identities as a wonderful complementarity, not
as a contradiction or some sort of visit to the dentist. They don't have a
problem admitting that Quebecers form a people. They don't have a problem
admitting that there can be more than one people within Quebec. They don't have
a problem admitting that Canadians form a people. And they are generally very
happy to be part of all of these peoples at the same time.
Since Quebecers can't convince themselves that they would be happier if they
ceased to be Canadians as well, the separatist leaders have to use some
strategy. In fact, they are deploying a number of different strategies
simultaneously.
The first of these strategies consists in convincing Quebecers that they will
keep Canada in some way, even if they vote Yes. Hence, the strategy of
partnership, which used to be called "association". Partnership
is clearly a strategy, a vote-getter designed to artificially inflate support
for the Yes. The proof is that Mr. Bouchard himself described that
partnership as "bare bones" on June 19, 1997, and that the
independence parties are faring no better now than they have in the past in
fleshing out those bare bones. The latest documents by the Bloc practically
out-and-out admit that it doesn't know what to make of this partnership. After
all, how can 25% of a country's population break up the country through a
secession and then come back to have a 50% say within the country's common
institutions, thus acquiring a kind of veto over some of its most strategic
policies? But it really doesn't matter whether the idea makes sense or not, it's
needed as a vote-getter, to camouflage the vote on secession.
The second of these strategies consists in presenting Quebecers with a done
deal to some extent by denying their Canadian dimension. When the PQ government
gave a $200,000 cheque a few months ago to the organizers of the Quebec Games in
Trois-Rivières so as to make sure that there wouldn't be any maple leaves
visible at the Games, it was more than just an anecdote. It has to be seen as a
symbol of this strategy that consists of taking Canada out of Quebec as much as
possible, while waiting to take Quebec out of Canada.
When Ms. Beaudoin recently said how pleased she was that the "Printemps
du Québec" in Paris represented us "in all our dimensions,"
she naturally didn't include our Canadian dimension, which had been carefully
rendered invisible to the Parisians.
But it is not enough to present Canada as being foreign to us. It is not
enough to make no mention of its merits, to say nothing about Canadian
solidarity, or of the leverage that belonging to Canada gives us on the
international scene, of the assistance that the Department of Foreign Affairs
and Canada's embassies provide to the external policy of the Government of
Quebec, and to hide as much as possible the existence of equalization or ice
storm relief, or in general all of the positive synergy that Quebecers and other
Canadians achieve together. Canada has to be depicted as being harmful to us, as
a threat. A threat so long as there is not an international border between it
and us. That's what the strategy is: to depict Canada as a threat. Not because
it is bad in itself, but because, well, Canada is another nation, which thinks
of its own interests.
Canada, especially the Canadian government, the feds, are objectively against
Quebec. Which explains the oft-heard expression, "it's the feds' fault."
When things are going badly, blame it on the feds. When they're going well, say
it's in spite of the feds. High unemployment: blame it on the feds. The
development of the high-tech sector in Montreal: in spite of the feds.
Francophone Quebecers who become prime minister and ministers in Ottawa are
especially singled out. In his most incantatory speeches, Lucien Bouchard
describes Jean Chrétien as a "hatchet man", an "enemy"
of Quebec. Recently, in a particularly lively sparring match in Parliament,
Gilles Duceppe called the Prime Minister a "token French-Canadian."
I myself heard him in his seat yelling "collaborator", while
his colleagues were shouting "sell-out." Coming out of the
House of Commons, at a press scrum, he called him "Uncle Tom".
These are infamous statements, which are designed to convince Quebecers that
they can't work for Canada without renouncing what they are, without working
against Quebec.
The reference to the Supreme Court, which resulted in protection for
Quebecers in the eventuality of a separatist premier abusing his powers and
trying to deprive them of their full Canadian identity on the basis of an
unclear and illegal procedure, was naturally depicted as an all-out attack
against Quebec and Quebec democracy.
Any passing fad can become an opportunity to present our belonging to Canada
as unnecessary, harmful or threatening. If the fad is a common currency, then
get on board no questions asked, hooray for the greenback, or the "amero"
or whatever, never mind that yesterday you were all for keeping the Canadian
dollar, and the day before for Quebec's adopting its own currency. It's the
cause that's important, not consistency in the positions you take. Who cares if
economists predict serious problems and high unemployment if you abandon the
Canadian dollar? The cause justifies all the risks that Quebecers may be
subjected to.
In 1993, it was trendy to say that Canada was almost bankrupt, headed for
Third-World status. And so Lucien Bouchard campaigned in the federal election
calling on Quebecers to get out of this almost bankrupt country. "If
they [Canadians outside Quebec] are intent on going bankrupt, let them go. But
we're going to save our skin," he said on August 14, 1993. In 1995,
Canada was well on its way to financial recovery, as a result of difficult cuts.
And so Lucien Bouchard campaigned in the referendum calling on Quebecers to vote
yes so as to escape the "cold wind" of cuts. But in 1996,
Lucien Bouchard became Premier, and was forced to do some cutting himself and
set the objective of a zero deficit. Which prompted another U-turn: we no longer
need to become independent to escape the cuts, we need to make cuts to afford
independence. And we'll achieve a zero deficit within a country that should
logically have gone bankrupt. It doesn't matter if you don't make any sense:
it's the cause that's important, not consistency in the positions you take.
On October 17, 1967, Jacques Parizeau gave a speech in Banff which was to
become famous, in which he explained that Canada was an exceptionally
decentralized federation, too decentralized, and that it had to centralize to
achieve rational economic management. The trendy idea at that time was economic
planning, Keynesianism. On January 28, 1999, Mr. Parizeau gave a speech in
Quebec City in which he explained that Canada is an exceptionally decentralized
federation, too decentralized, and that it had to centralize to adapt better to
the new international order. The trendy idea now is globalization. [TRANSLATION]
"If the federal government is to be able to retain the powers of a
genuine government and to set policies, it is imperative that it centralize what
is an extraordinarily decentralized federation."
It's no matter that the centralization announced again and again by
Mr. Parizeau has been decades in coming and is still nowhere to be seen, or
that it's hard to see why today's globalization, any more than yesterday's
Keynesianism, should change Canada into a centralized country. It's the cause
that's important, not consistency in the positions you take.
Another strategy to convince Quebecers that Canada is harmful consists in
grossly exaggerating the slightest difficulties, the smallest disagreements, so
as to prove that Canada itself doesn't work. Then you follow this up with lots
of wailing and gnashing of teeth. Any pretext will do: the anniversary of the
ice storm, the social union agreement, the federal budget, the provincial
budget, Mr. Bouchard goes to Europe, Mr. Bouchard goes to Mexico.
This is where you get the aggressive practice of what Messrs Bouchard and
Parizeau referred to during the election campaign as "booty politics".
It consists of constantly calling for more powers and more money from the
federal government, on every front. If the feds balk, you denounce their refusal
as proof that Canadian federalism is rigid and incapable of reform. If they
react positively, you suggest that Quebecers have done well to give themselves
some clout by electing separatists, and that this is nothing compared to the
clout they'll have once they vote Yes.
2. Highlighting our Canadian dimension
So how do you counter the strategies of the promoters of exclusive
nationalism? Simply put: by refusing to play their game.
The separatist leaders want to play on confusion, so as to hide from
Quebecers the break-up with Canada that secession would represent. So, let's
play on clarity. Let's say clearly that it's impossible for Quebecers to have
their belonging to Canada taken away from them in an atmosphere of confusion
unless they have clearly expressed their will to renounce it. It's impossible
because it would be undemocratic. And it would be illegal. Let's say clearly
that the Government of Canada does not have the right to negotiate an end to its
constitutional obligations toward Quebecers unless they have clearly asked it to
do so, through a clear majority on a clear question on secession. Not on the
ambiguous concept of sovereignty: Quebec within the federation is sovereign
within its own areas of jurisdiction. And not on the intellectual fraud of
partnership. On secession.
The opinion by the Supreme Court exists to guarantee the rule of law and
democracy for all. So let's respect it, as democrats.
Don't play their game. When they try to hide Canada, let's show it off. When
they tried to hide the ice storm relief, we spoke out. When they tried to hide
equalization, we spoke out. When they tried to hide the international leverage
Canada gives us, we spoke out. But it must not be only the Government of Canada
and the Quebec Liberal Party that speak out. To those voices must be added the
voices of all of us who believe that being a Quebecer and a Canadian at the same
time is a wonderful thing.
When they present Canada as a threat, let's take them up on their own
contradictions. So when they say with such intransigence that Bernard Landry or
Louise Beaudoin, for example, can serve Quebec's interests effectively because
they are Quebecers, whereas John Manley or Sheila Copps, for example, cannot,
because they are not Quebecers, let's ask them how, within Quebec itself,
non-Francophones could agree to confide their interests to Francophones. To
accept the intolerance of their reasoning is not only to accept the destruction
of what is the very ideal of Canada, which is different populations helping one
another, it is also to undermine the solidarity of Quebecers among themselves.
And we have to show that, and show it clearly.
When they stoop to personal attacks, we must never follow suit. But we must
show zero tolerance for such disgraceful behaviour. I cannot understand how
Gilles Duceppe got off so lightly after his shameful and ignoble attacks on the
Prime Minister.
When they practise booty politics, we must refuse once again to play their
game. It is time for us to say, and convince ourselves, that the issue of the
division of powers between the Government of Canada and the Government of Quebec
is not a bargaining chip to allay separatism. It is first and foremost a
question of quality of public service. Quebecers have two governments that have
constitutional powers: their provincial government and their federal government.
They are entitled to demand that these two governments work together as
effectively as possible.
Let's look at the two current hot buttons being pushed by the PQ government:
foreign policy and cultural policy. No one can seriously claim that the two
governments disagree on policy direction in these areas. In fact, most of the
time, they share the same objectives. And when disagreements have arisen in the
past, it can't be said in hindsight that it has always been the federal
government that was in the wrong in terms of the interests of Quebecers. Indeed,
the very opposite was true during the entire Duplessis era.
On April 13, 1999, when pressed by journalists, the Bloc MP Yvan Loubier was
unable to cite a single case of Canadian foreign policy that had disadvantaged
Quebecers. On May 26, he signed a convoluted document which shows just how
hollow his indictment of Canadian foreign policy is: "The Canadian state
is not a tool in the service of Quebec's national interest, even though its
policy is often articulated–very skillfully–by Quebecers." In
short, the only thing wrong with Canadian foreign policy is that it is, well,
Canadian.
There is an electronic version of Hansard going back to January 1994. I
checked it out, and found that, prior to Mr. Bouchard's recent trip to
Barcelona between March 13 and 15, 1999, the Bloc had not asked a single
question in Question Period during all that time regarding the place of the
Quebec government abroad. It is obvious that this international offensive by the
PQ and the Bloc is a referendum strategy.
Let's look at a hot button from the recent past: job training. The transfer
has created a lot of problems, which can charitably be attributed to a
transition period. Of course, one might suggest that the wholesale transfer of
the Quebec federal public service to the Government of Quebec in the event of
secession would create a veritable avalanche of red tape.
We believe we have found the best arrangement between provincial
responsibilities in the related sector of education and federal responsibilities
for economic development and employment insurance. We will do everything in our
power to ensure that this new formula, which places heavy responsibilities on
the provinces, is a winning formula for Canadian workers. But it must be
acknowledged that past arrangements could not have been as bad as all that,
since the International Institute for Management Development is on record as
saying that Canada has one of the most highly skilled workforces in the world.
The moral of this story is that job training is too important in itself to do be
sacrificed on the altar of booty politics.
There is no single right answer in this area. The Swiss recently decided in a
referendum to make job training a federal constitutional jurisdiction. As far as
I know, that decision hasn't created any Swiss separatists.
And finally, when the separatist leaders try to capitalize on the divisions
among us federalists, when they transform the smallest disagreement, the
slightest tension, into proof that Canada doesn't work, we must not play their
game there either. We must say, loud and clear, that nothing in this country
justifies secession. Nothing in Quebec, and nothing elsewhere in the country. To
be sure, we have our disagreements on economic policy, the social union, foreign
policy. We have our own ideas on how the roles of the two orders of government
ought to be arranged. We have our own views on the type of leadership that is
best for the country. And we all have our own ideas on the constitutional
changes that should be made, including a more clearly articulated recognition of
Quebec's difference. But we all believe in this country.
To be sure, it is not the opposition's job to sing the government's praises.
Within the Liberal family, the federal and provincial parties sometimes have
different perspectives. This is natural and healthy. We all have our own ideas
on how to improve the country. But we all believe that Canada as it is, with its
own forces for change, is a great country. We don't have to make it acceptable
to Quebecers, because it already is, and far more. It is infinitely preferable
to the secessionist gambit.
In short, we must keep the burden of proof squarely on the separatists'
shoulders. It is up to them to show that happiness means losing Canada. Two
thirds of Quebecers do not want a referendum, which means they do not want to
have to choose between Quebec and Canada. They want to be Quebecers and
Canadians, rather than Quebecers without Canada. And they're absolutely right.
|