Bloc Québécois seeks concessions from Liberals to maintain their support
Bloc Québécois Leader Yves-François Blanchet states that his party is not pushing for an immediate election as it could favor the Conservatives. He made these remarks following the NDP’s decision to end its agreement with the minority Liberal government, which was supposed to keep them in power until 2025. The Liberals now require the support of at least one other party to stay in power on crucial votes.
“I believe Quebecers are not eager for an election, seeing as the Conservatives are leading in the rest of Canada, and Quebecers do not favor the Conservatives,” he mentioned.
Blanchet also criticized Poilievre for the way he called on the Bloc to help oust Trudeau, accusing him of making “insulting remarks” towards them. Poilievre has aimed to attack the NDP in English and criticize the Bloc in French.
Blanchet emphasized that the Bloc is in a strong position in Québec compared to the Liberals and Conservatives, and he aims to leverage this advantage.
“My focus is not on propping up the Trudeau government, I do not favor the Trudeau government more than Quebecers,” stated Blanchet, later adding, “the question now is… what progress can we achieve.”
He outlined these potential “gains” as assisting seniors, granting more immigration powers to Quebec, repealing the controversial caribou decree, ending subsidies to the oil industry, and halting Ottawa’s interference in Quebec regarding language and secularism laws.
The Bloc leader’s remarks followed NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh’s announcement of ending the supply and confidence agreement with the Liberals.
Singh expressed on Sept. 5 that an election is now “more likely” but did not commit to opposing the government.
“Our decisions will be based on the upcoming votes and how we choose to vote on those issues,” said Singh.
Blanchet also did not dismiss the possibility of voting no confidence to overthrow the government but mentioned he wouldn’t support a Conservative motion only aimed at such an outcome.
The House of Commons will reconvene on Sept. 16 under this new landscape. The Liberals will need the support of the NDP or the Bloc in confidence votes to maintain power.
On Sept. 16, byelections will also be held in Winnipeg and Montreal. Winnipeg sees a strong NDP presence, while Montreal’s seat leans towards the Liberals.