‘Quebec bashing’: why an English federal debate question continues to draw criticism
MONTREAL — A question at the English-language federal leaders’ debate last week has become a major issue in Quebec, boosting the Bloc Québécois in the polls and drawing criticism from Quebec politicians, federal party leaders and the province’s media.
For people who follow Quebec politics, the widespread negative response to the question, which described two Quebec laws as discriminatory, wasn’t a surprise.
They say it comes at a time when many Quebecers are particularly sensitive to the idea that English-Canadian journalists, politicians and public intellectuals talk down to Quebec — widely referred to as “Quebec bashing” — and when the province’s popular Premier François Legault has successfully portrayed himself as the defender of Quebec’s language and culture.
“Personally, when I heard that question, I cringed,” Martin Papillon, a professor of political science at the Université de Montréal, said in an interview Wednesday. “Not because I thought the question was completely outrageous, but because I thought it was out of bounds for the anchor of a debate to ask such a loaded question.”