François Legault’s CAQ ended PQ/Liberal duopoly with back-to-back majorities
MONTREAL — From founding a successful airline to creating a political party that won back-to-back majority mandates, François Legault is stepping down as Quebec premier with a reputation as a builder and as someone who has had a profound influence on Quebec society.
Legault became a minister before he was even elected. It was Lucien Bouchard, premier between 1996-2001, who recruited the accountant and co-founder of Air Transat and appointed him minister of trade, science and technology in 1998. That was two months before Legault was elected for the first time as member of the legislature for the Rousseau riding, northeast of Montreal, in that year’s general election.
He went on to hold the two most important positions in cabinet — minister of education and then minister of health — in the successive governments of Bouchard and Bernard Landry, before joining the opposition in 2003. Legault stayed on the opposition side of the legislature for five years before he resigned.
In early 2011, he and businessman Charles Sirois published a manifesto entitled “Coalition pour l’avenir du Québec” — Coalition for Quebec’s future — that called for a political movement unburdened by the federalist-sovereigntist debate that its authors said had dragged the province down for generations. Later that year, both men founded the Coalition Avenir Québec as a middle ground between the two fighting sides — it would be federalist but nationalist, championing a strong autonomous Quebec within the Canadian federation.


