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    1. AdmiralAsshat69 on

      Leaders matter a lot. Not sure how Milliard is perceived in general but the PLQ needs a Bourassa type more than a Captain Canada right now if federalists have any chance of appealing to francophones.

      But if the alternatives look like they are promising chaos in an uncertain time, there’s a wedge for the Liberals. That 3% increase with francophone voters is something, at least, first time in years I’ve seen them gain any ground at all.

    2. MTL_Dude666 on

      „Malgré une victoire à l’élection partielle dans Chicoutimi, le Parti québécois est en perte de vitesse dans les intentions de vote nationales, tout comme la souveraineté, plus impopulaire qu’il y a deux ans.“

      The new PLQ leaded hasn’t done anything yet and he’s close to PSPP. It is very telling considering that PSPP has been „working hard“ as leader of the PQ for more than 5 years!

      I wouldn’t be surprised if:

      – PSPP decides to stop mentioning a referendum to prevent more popularity losses, which ends up angering hardcore separatist who would then flee the PQ and follow the PCQ;

      – The PLQ, free to focus on the real threat from the US (as opposed to the PQ which is stuck in identity politics and separatism as per their own mandate) would eventually come up first, with the PQ in second place but with the PCQ very close to surpass the PQ.

    3. Looks like the Liberals have rebounded to roughly where they were before the scandal while the PQ has sunk a bit, this would be a good outcome for the federalists since a PQ minority would be better held to account and not free to pursue an agenda that the majority of Quebec votes don’t want. (going off the polls on separation etc.)

      It’s better than what we have here in Alberta presently where the UPC under Smith is using it’s majority to empower a small minority of separatists while ignoring majority opinion on the subject etc.

    4. Seperation is a really unpopular idea in Quebec, and the large majority that don’t a referendum will likely coalesce around the most viable alternative. Having a non-Montrealer with the last name Millard is also the right move for the PLQ to improve their score in the regions.

    5. Not a surprise. PSPP is chasing identity politics and is focused on a battle from 250 years ago. Any party who chooses to stay in their lane and focuses on improving the quality of life, health and education sectors of the Province should win.

      BTW – If the Liberals were smart, they would rebrand to a Quebec-centric name.

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