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RCO





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PostPosted: Mon Oct 19, 2009 7:47 pm    Post subject: ADQ elects Gilles Taillon as new leader Reply with quote

.ADQ elects new leader – by two votes
64-year-old Gilles Taillon replaces Mario Dumont as head of provincial party


From Monday's Globe and Mail
Published on Sunday, Oct. 18, 2009 4:36PM EDT

Last updated on Sunday, Oct. 18, 2009 9:06PM EDT


.The struggling Action démocratique du Québec chose a new leader Sunday by the slimmest of margins, electing Gilles Taillon on the second ballot by two votes and leaving deep scars in an already divided party that may prove difficult to heal.

Mr. Taillon, 64, who is undergoing radiation treatment for prostate cancer recognized that he faces an uphill battle in reconstructing the ADQ into a credible alternative in time for the next election.

“Sure I have to fight against cancer,” Mr. Taillon said. “But I promise you I will be able to lead this party … I assure you the ADQ will be a tough adversary.”

In last year's provincial election, the party was reduced to seven seats after winning 41 ridings in 2007, when it formed the Official Opposition. Latest public opinion surveys showed the ADQ falling steadily in popular support, reaching new lows of around eight per cent in recent polls.

Fewer than 30 per cent of the 13,660 eligible party voters cast their ballots over the weekend. Party members were required to make a first and second choice using a specially designed telephone voting system.

Mr. Taillon's main rival, Éric Caire, held a 1-percentage-point lead with 41 per cent of the vote after the first ballot was counted, which eliminated the third candidate Christian Lévesque. The second choice on the ballots cast by Mr. Lévesque's supporters gave Mr. Taillon a 50.03 per cent majority, just barely enough to win.

Mr. Taillon and Mr. Caire fought a bitter campaign that split the fledgling right-wing party along ideological lines. The race deteriorated into an ugly feud when Mr. Caire, a staunch defender of right-wing policies and Mr. Taillon, promoting a more moderate platform, got embroiled in personal attacks. Mr. Taillon accused his opponent of falsifying his résumé to boost his status with party members. Mr. Caire warned that Mr. Taillon's “kamikaze” attacks would lead the party to a complete break-down.

Mr. Caire could barely contain his disappointment yesterday. “It's really difficult because we worked so hard and we had clear positions. We came close but coming close doesn't count,” he said, after arguing the need for Quebec to have right-wing party voicing legitimate concerns.

Mr. Caire's called on all members to unite behind Mr. Taillon, but that didn't prevent former ADQ Member of the National Assembly Catherine Morissette from quitting the party on the spot. “I can't see myself working with Mr. Taillon. The motivation just isn't there,” Ms. Morissette said.

Another former ADQ MNA François Benjamin said Mr. Taillon was never a team player and predicted his style of leadership will drive many members to abandon the party. “I never could see myself working under his leadership. He barely spoke to us when I was a caucus member,” Mr. Benjamin said.

Mr. Taillon, a teacher who eventually became director-general of the Quebec Federation of School Boards, later gained notoriety as president of the influential business lobby group Conseil du patronat.

Defeated in the last election, he has no plans to seek a seat in the National Assembly in the immediate future. His priority will be rebuilding the party, he said.

“But if a by-election in the next year to 18 months is called in a riding near my [Gatineau] home, then I'll run,” he said.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com.....le1328366/
Mac





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PostPosted: Mon Oct 19, 2009 10:01 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I don't know whether to hope the ADQ survives or gets replaced by a revitalized provincial Conservative Party?

-Mac
cosmostein





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PostPosted: Tue Oct 20, 2009 8:55 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

The ADQ is finished.
The Liberals won Dumont's riding in such a sweeping fashion over the ADQ candidate it made the ADQ's head spin.

Its over, Dumont is the party and Dumont is gone.


Last edited by cosmostein on Tue Oct 20, 2009 11:08 am; edited 1 time in total
thurmas





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PostPosted: Tue Oct 20, 2009 10:24 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

its a real shame because just 2 years ago they were 7 seats away from government and they could have really transformed quebec for the better i still think conservatism can work in quebec on the provincial side.
Mac





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Location: John Baird's riding...

PostPosted: Tue Oct 20, 2009 10:36 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

thurmas wrote:
its a real shame because just 2 years ago they were 7 seats away from government and they could have really transformed quebec for the better i still think conservatism can work in quebec on the provincial side.

I agree but they have to start at the grass roots level.

-Mac
cosmostein





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PostPosted: Tue Oct 20, 2009 11:08 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Mac wrote:
thurmas wrote:
its a real shame because just 2 years ago they were 7 seats away from government and they could have really transformed quebec for the better i still think conservatism can work in quebec on the provincial side.

I agree but they have to start at the grass roots level.

-Mac


The biggest problem the ADQ faced was that it was Dumont's party.

When you think of the ADQ, I am hard pressed to be able to name anyone in the party other then perhaps Sylvie Roy and that is because I follow politics as close as I do.

Couple that with the fact that they are now a divided party,
The final ballot of the leadership convention was:

Taillion 50.03% (1,957 votes)
Caire 49.97% (1,955 votes)

Two freakin' votes...
And you already have Caire supporters clamoring that they will leave the party.
http://www.montrealgazette.com.....story.html

Whats worse, a divided party with SIX seats...
Yikes.

The reality is that the ADQ needs to fail before a Conservative movement in Quebec can grow from the grassroots properly.

They will need someone like Maxime Bernier to run, and they will need a new party to rally around that is not centered around Dumont,

Perhaps its time for a return of the Parti Conservateur?
thurmas





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PostPosted: Tue Oct 20, 2009 12:47 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I am not sure the name parti conservateur would work because quebecers hate being tied to an ottawa party the union nationale name has some history to it or maybe parti bleue who knows but quebec needs a viable conservtive party and fast because the pq is stuck in neutral going no where and charest seems to have no real vision for quebec other than asking more from ottawa every 6 months.
CPP





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PostPosted: Tue Oct 20, 2009 3:03 pm    Post subject: More on the Quebec problem... Reply with quote

Another interesting article from a former Quebec Anglophone entitled 'The Canadian Disease of Ethnocentric Quebecois Nationalism'

http://www.galganov.com/editorials.asp?id=1168
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ADQ elects Gilles Taillon as new leader

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