Skip to content

Ignatieff vows no special powers for Quebec

MONTREAL — Hours before a Montreal fundraiser poised to capitalize on the new-found support recent opinion polls seem have accorded the federal Liberals, Michael Ignatieff said he has no plans to give Quebec special powers if elected prime minister.
Michael Ignatieff
Liberal leader Michael Ignatieff gestures during a speech at a Liberal party fundraiser in Montreal on Thursday.

MONTREAL — Hours before a Montreal fundraiser poised to capitalize on the new-found support recent opinion polls seem have accorded the federal Liberals, Michael Ignatieff said he has no plans to give Quebec special powers if elected prime minister.

Still the Liberal leader hopes Quebecers will see him as the “other choice” and vote for him.

“I’m in the process of rebuilding our party and I need Quebecers to do it,” he told a crowd of more than 1,100 supporters who paid $500 each for a ticket to the swanky cocktail party.

Party insiders predicted Thursday’s event could generate double the amount of money Prime Minister Stephen Harper pulled in last week at a similar, $150-a-ticket Montreal fundraiser that drew about 2,000 people.

But with a speech that was long on platitudes and short on the sort of detail many Quebecers have been waiting for, it was clear Ignatieff was preaching to the choir.

Noting Canada needs a “uniter not a divider,” Ignatieff slammed Harper for wasting a $13 billion surplus that could have been used during the current economic crisis.

He also suggested the Bloc Quebecois isn’t the answer.

“The best possible Canada is a Canada where Quebecers are in power,” he said. “The Bloc Quebecois is not a solution for a better Quebec and Canada.”

Ignatieff vowed to restore funding for the arts, culture and scientific research and promised to invest in post-secondary education.

He also defended himself against recent Tory attack ads that characterized him as an elitist world traveller who has spent much of his time abroad.

“They say I read books. Worse — I write them. That I lived in foreign lands. The horror,” he quipped in French.

“But what they don’t realize, it’s not me that they’re questioning today. If they attack me, they attack everybody who has lived abroad, all those who came from abroad.”

Ignatieff’s comments came hours after he told The Canadian Press that he has no plans to change the rules of federalism, adding Quebec Premier Jean Charest is well equipped to fulfil his duties.

“The Charest government has all the powers it needs to do excellent work for the citizens of Quebec and I see no reason to revisit the issues of jurisdictions and powers,” he said.

While recent public opinion polls suggest Ignatieff’s support is growing in the province, his adversaries nonetheless accuse him of being too centralist.

“What he tells us is that (Pierre Elliott) Trudeau’s Constitution is appropriate for Quebec, that there’s no need for change...and we should be happy despite the fact Quebec has refused to sign it,” Bloc Quebecois Leader Gilles Duceppe said.

But Ignatieff denies he wants to concentrate powers in Quebec, saying he was the first federalist politician to say Quebec ought to be recognized as a nation.

Among his few concrete promises to date, Ignatieff did say he would name Quebecers to key economic posts in his cabinet.

Among the first of Ignatieff’s major appearances in the province, Thursday’s event drew a number of Quebec business leaders as well as Liberal MPs.

Among the attendees was former leader Stephane Dion, who described the fundraiser as “a big success that shows to what point Liberal values and Liberal objectives remain strong in Quebec.”

Denis Coderre, Ignatieff’s Quebec lieutenant, drew some comparisons between this event and Harper’s fundraiser.

“Unlike Harper’s event, the people here are from Montreal,” he said. “We didn’t need to call in the buses. It’s our way of being good environmentalists.”