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courage is contagious
Viewing cable 09OTTAWA231, LITTLE LOVE LEFT - THE CONSERVATIVES AND QUEBEC
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Reference ID | Created | Released | Classification | Origin |
---|---|---|---|---|
09OTTAWA231 | 2009-03-23 17:15 | 2011-05-20 00:00 | CONFIDENTIAL | Embassy Ottawa |
VZCZCXRO7403
PP RUEHGA RUEHHA RUEHMT RUEHQU RUEHVC
DE RUEHOT #0231/01 0821715
ZNY CCCCC ZZH
P 231715Z MAR 09
FM AMEMBASSY OTTAWA
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC PRIORITY 9244
INFO RUCNCAN/ALL CANADIAN POSTS COLLECTIVE PRIORITY
RUEHFR/AMEMBASSY PARIS PRIORITY 1073
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 OTTAWA 000231
SIPDIS
E.O. 12958: DECL: 03/23/2019
TAGS: PGOV ECON CA
SUBJECT: LITTLE LOVE LEFT - THE CONSERVATIVES AND QUEBEC
REF: 08 OTTAWA 1293
Classified By: PolMinCouns Scott Bellard, reasons 1.4 (b) and (d)
¶1. (C) Summary: The 2008 federal election damaged Prime
Minister Harper's political standing in Quebec. Rather than
heal campaign rifts over Conservative juvenile crime
proposals and cuts to arts funding, PM Harper's subsequent
attacks in December against the "separatist" Bloc Quebec's
support for the short-lived Liberal/NDP coalition pact
further alienated many Quebec voters. The government's
efforts to reign in the growth of equalization payments have
also fanned discontent. PM Harper reportedly blames Quebec
Premier Jean Charest for the Conservatives' failure to win a
parliamentary majority. While continuing to bolster
Conservative party organizational and communications
structures in Quebec, PM Harper probably has already
concluded that Conservative prospects in the province are
dim, and shifted gears to winning new seats in Ontario and
British Columbia in the next election. End summary.
BRUISED BY THE BALLOTS, EH?
---------------------------
¶2. (SBU) In the October 2008 federal election, the Bloc
Quebecois successfully used the wedge issues of Prime
Minister Harper's tough anti-crime legislation and cuts to
cultural funding to argue that Conservatives were out of
touch with "Quebec values." Quebec voters reportedly also
resented Conservative billboards claiming that voting for the
Bloc Quebecois was a "waste of money." PM Harper's attacks
on the "separatist" Bloc Quebecois for its role in supporting
the short-lived proposed coalition between the opposition
Liberal and New Democratic parties in December further
angered many ordinary Quebecers, many of whom see themselves
nowadays as federalists seeking to influence policy in
Ottawa, rather than as advocates for Quebec independence.
¶3. (SBU) Support for the Conservatives has plummeted in
Quebec, especially in and around Quebec City. A recent
Strategic Counsel/Globe & Mail/CTV News poll showed only 10
pct of Quebecers would vote for the Conservatives, far behind
the Bloc (40 pct) and Liberals (30 pct), and level with the
NDP and Green Party (each with 10 pct). It was the worst
showing for the Conservatives in Quebec since December 2005.
Many commentators have predicted that, in the next federal
election, the Conservatives will be hard-pressed to retain
their current ten Parliamentary seats, much less gain more of
Quebec's 75 "ridings" (voting districts with MPs).
BAD BLOOD, N'EST-CE PAS?
------------------------
¶4. (C) PM Harper's relations with Quebec Premier Jean
Charest -- a former federal Cabinet minister under
Conservative then-Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, before
returning to provincial politics in 1998 -- appear to have
been strained at least since the March 2007 Quebec provincial
election, when Charest took C$700 million in fiscal imbalance
money from the federal budget and unexpectedly earmarked it
as a tax cut. PM Harper's December 2007 joint appearance
with Action Democratique du Quebec (ADQ) then-leader Mario
Dumont in his Riviere-du-Loup constituency, at a time when
Charest had a minority government, also reportedly hurt
relations with Charest. During the October 2008 federal
election, Charest openly seconded the Bloc's criticism of the
federal government's cuts to arts spending and proposals on
juvenile offenders.
¶5. (C) According to Privy Council Office (PCO) Quebec Policy
Advisor Eric Ferguson (protect), PM Harper's failure to
respond to a letter that Charest had sent to federal
Qrespond to a letter that Charest had sent to federal
Conservative party leaders during the October 2008 election
outlining Quebec's top demands also caused friction.
Ferguson (a Quebec City native who is a nine year PCO
veteran) claimed that PM Harper was "shocked" that Charest
had even sent the letter -- especially in the midst of an
election campaign -- and laid the blame specifically on
Charest for the Conservatives' failure to win a parliamentary
majority in that election. (Note: The letter's fifteen
requests included greater funding for higher education and
non-profit organizations, respect for "Quebec's approach" to
juvenile offenders, support for a Quebec City-Windsor high
speed train, and a formal role for Quebec in nominating
Supreme Court justices. End note.) However, Ferguson
commented to poloff on March 18 that relations between PM
Harper and Charest may now be slowly improving, noting that
they spoke during the week of March 10 and planned to speak
again on March 19.
WEAK ROOTS, PEU DE FLEURS
-------------------------
OTTAWA 00000231 002 OF 003
¶6. (C) Conservative Party insiders have repeatedly chafed
at the lack of obvious talent within the pool of Quebec's
Conservative MPs, leaving the party entrusting important
portfolios to less-than-obvious choice MPs in the mostly vain
attempt to woo Quebec voters. The biggest recent blunder, in
retrospect, was the August 2007 appointment of Maxime Bernier
(Beauce) as Foreign Minister; he resigned in disgrace in
April 2008 after compromising classified documents at his
girlfriend's house. (He nonetheless won re-election in 2008
by the largest margin nationwide.) The 35-year old Public
Works Minister Christian Paradis (Megantic-L'Erable) was then
a surprise choice, given his lack of experience or stature,
to be the Conservatives' new "lieutenant" for Quebec.
Current Foreign Minister Lawrence Cannon (Pontiac), National
Revenue Minister Jean-Pierre Blackburn (Jonquiere-Alma), and
Intergovernmental Affairs Minister Josee Verner
(Louis-Saint-Laurent) are the other Quebecers now in the
cabinet, with many commentators attributing their prominence
to their origins rather than their talents or prospects. PM
Harper reportedly tried but failed to persuade ADQ leader
Mario Dumont to enter federal politics following the ADQ's
disappointing December 2008 Quebec general election result.
According to the PCO's Ferguson, Dumont also turned down PM
Harper's offer of a Senate seat in December 2008. Some
analysts have predicted that Dumont's departure from Quebec's
political scene may be a blessing in disguise for PM Harper
by opening the door for a rapprochement with Charest. But,
according to Ottawa-based political consultant Bruce
Campbell, Charest may be reluctant to be perceived as warming
up to PM Harper while the latter's popularity in Quebec
remains so low.
¶7. (SBU) Another self-inflicted blow to the Conservatives
came in mid-March, when Conservative MP Daniel Petit
(Charlesbourg-Haute-Saint-Charles) publicly described
Quebecers as a bunch of "illiterates" when it comes to
learning English. The Bloc Quebecois responded that the
remarks showed the Conservative party's lack of credibility
and weakness in Quebec.
NEVER GIVE UP, MAIS...
---------------------
¶8. (C) To improve his communications efforts in Quebec, PM
Harper has increased the number of Quebecers in the Prime
Minister's Office (PMO). Previously, PMO Deputy Press
Secretary Dimitri Soudas was PM Harper's sole advisor on
Quebec, but there are now at least four PMO senior officials
devoted to Quebec policy. The PCO's Ferguson noted that
Conservative officials are increasingly participating in
Quebec media events, including television shows appealing to
a wider cross-section of the electorate. Separately, in
early March, Minister Paradis announced that he had obtained
additional financial resources for Conservative party
activists in Quebec and that Quebec riding associations would
be given greater flexibility to join forces in regional
clusters.
¶9. (C) The Conservatives' highly lauded (and feared, by the
Liberals) campaign "war-room" (reftel) had featured a large,
separate unit exclusively devoted to the Quebec campaigns in
the October 2008 election. However, according to Minister
Paradis' chief advisor on organizational planning,
Conservative MP Jacques Gourde (Lotbiniere-Chutes de la
Chaudiere) -- who also serves as Parliamentary Secretary both
for Public Works and for National Revenue -- even his own
October 2008 re-election had owed more to his extended family
ties than to the Conservatives' organizational and
Qties than to the Conservatives' organizational and
communications strategies. Conservative party activists were
reportedly disappointed to learn in early March that PM
Harper had abandoned plans to create a Quebec wing of the
Conservative party, as many had hoped. Campaign decisions in
the next election apparently will again remain concentrated
in the hands of the Ottawa-based national Conservative
campaign director, rather than in the field.
¶10. (C) In an apparent recognition that prospects remain
limited for Conservative victories in Quebec, the
Conservatives appear to be increasingly looking elsewhere.
PM Harper's re-introduction of tough anti-crime legislation
-- knowing full well it would be unpopular in Quebec -- in
2008 and 2009 seemed to many as clearly an appeal to the
Conservatives' western constituency but also potentially to
win over voters in British Columbia, where a rash of gangland
killings has alarmed Vancouver residents. The PCO's Ferguson
claimed to poloff that PM Harper's ever-improving relations
with Ontario Liberal Premier Dalton McGuinty, and the
government's new-found willingness to bail out the Ontario
automobile sector, reflected Conservatives' interest in
broadening their popularity in vote-rich Ontario, with its
106 Parliamentary seats. (Note: There is no automobile
OTTAWA 00000231 003 OF 003
sector in Quebec. End note.) Similarly, the Conservatives'
intensive outreach to ethnic minorities and immigrant groups,
especially by Minister for Citizenship, Immigration, and
Multiculturalism Jason Kenney, may be another signal that the
Conservatives are now targeting Liberal strongholds in the
Greater Toronto Area and Vancouver, instead of Quebec, to win
that illusive majority.
IT'S THE MONEY, CHERI(CHAREST)!
-------------------------------
¶11. (SBU) Bloc Quebecois leader Gilles Duceppe and Premier
Charest have both publicly criticized PM Harper for reducing
the growth rate of equalization payments, accusing him of
unilateralism and of breaking his word. (Note: Equalization
is a federal transfer program to reduce fiscal disparities
among provinces, and is entrenched in the 1982 Canadian
Constitution. End note.) The Quebec government on March 19
announced an expected deficit in its 2009-2010 budget,
exacerbated by what it claims will be C$770 million less in
federal equalization payments than earlier projected. In the
2009-2010 fiscal year, Quebec will nonetheless still receive
58 pct of all federal equalization payments to provinces and
territories, or C$8.35 billion out of a total of C$14.36
billion -- an increase of C$330 million from the 2008-2009
fiscal year. Quebec's total federal transfer payments in
2009-2010 will be C$17.7 billion (for equalization, health
transfers, social transfers, direct targeted support, and
trust funds), an increase of C$800 million from 2008-2009.
¶12. (C) According to the PCO's Ferguson, Canada's 2009
stimulus package will also directly benefit Quebec, through
job training as well as housing and aboriginal programs. He
noted that he spends 90 pct of his time on stimulus-related
issues and has a list of Quebec shovel-ready projects,
including infrastructure, water, hydro, roads, hospitals,
higher education, housing, and social projects. The federal
government owns the bridges around the island of Montreal and
is considering renovating the Champlain Bridge, Ferguson
added. In addition, the 2009 federal budget provided
improved credit access for Quebec companies through the
Export Development Corporation. Finance Minister Jim
Flaherty in January announced a contribution of C$1 billion
to the "Societe Generale de Financement du Quebec" (SGF) to
support its investments in Quebec businesses. In December
2009, the federal government and the Quebec and Ontario
provincial governments will jointly review the results of a
feasibility study for a Quebec City-Windsor high-speed train,
although Transport Minister John Baird has publicly stated
that the estimated C$30 billion price-tag may be too high to
support.
COMMENT: A DIEU, QUEBEC?
-------------------------
¶13. (C) Once heralded in Quebec for the 2006 House of
Commons motion recognizing the Quebecois as a nation within a
united Canada and for giving Quebec a permanent seat within
Canada's Mission to UNESCO, PM Harper and the Conservative
Party no longer generate much, if any, enthusiasm among
Quebecers. While the Conservatives cannot afford entirely to
alienate the province or to give up all hope of more
potential Quebec seats to win an eventual majority in the
House of Commons, it will be heavy lifting even to maintain
their current base of support. In the week before the
October 2008 election, Conservatives had begun to walk away
from the prospect of a parliamentary majority built on
victory in Quebec, and PM Harper and his key strategists may
have already calculated that Conservative resources will earn
Qhave already calculated that Conservative resources will earn
better returns in Ontario and British Columbia. However,
fears of the Liberal Party under increasingly popular new
leader Michael Ignatieff picking up seats in Quebec in the
next election will likely force the Conservatives to continue
to compete for the scraps in Quebec, even though well aware
that the Bloc -- which now holds 49 of Quebec's 75 seats in
the House of Commons -- will remain the dominant political
force in federal politics in Quebec for the foreseeable
future.
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