Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
National

Don't Count On Me To Support Western Demands: Bloc Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 Nov, 2019 08:09 PM

    OTTAWA - Bloc Quebecois Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet says anyone seeking more independence for the West in the hopes of promoting the oil and gas sector should not come to him for advice.

     

    "If they were attempting to create a green state in Western Canada, I might be tempted to help them," Blanchet said Wednesday. "If they are trying to create an oil state in Western Canada, they cannot expect any help from us."

     

    Blanchet made the remarks after emerging from a meeting with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. Blanchet said Trudeau strongly suggested the Bloc would see areas of consensus in the upcoming speech from the throne.

     

    That consensus will be needed when the Liberals, who were shut out of Alberta and Saskatchewan, are faced with greater demands for power and autonomy from some western premiers and the rising nationalist sentiment in Quebec, where voters elected 32 Bloc MPs.

     

    The Liberals, with only enough seats to form a minority government, will need the support of some opposition MPs to advance their legislative agenda.

     

    Blanchet, who said his party will do what it can to make Parliament work, said his meeting with Trudeau suggested there will not be anything in the speech from the throne to cause his Bloc MPs to vote against it. The speech opening the next Parliament lays out the government's broad plan and a vote on whether to approve it will test whether Trudeau has the confidence of the House of Commons.

     

    As the meeting was about to begin, Blanchet said he was ready to collaborate on common issues raised during the campaign, such as climate change, supply management in the dairy sector and the cost of living for seniors.

     

    Trudeau said he looked forward to a good meeting, describing his and Blanchet's "shared priorities" as including climate change, affordability, gun control and the protection of supply management.

     

    "We will also have conversations in which we disagree, but it will be done in respect because I think Canadians expect different parties in Parliament to work together constructively and that's exactly what I intend to do," said Trudeau.

     

    After the meeting, Blanchet said he will not be looking for red lines in the throne speech.

     

    "I don't want to see the speech from the throne as a source of problems, but I want to see it as a source of solutions and progress for the benefit of Quebecers who gave us a mandate and gave the other part of the mandate to the government," Blanchet told reporters.

     

    He also noted the throne speech is about high-level principles, and that decisions about whether to continue supporting the Liberal government would come as the Bloc sees how things play out in the budget, proposed legislation and committee work.

     

    At the same time, Blanchet made it clear no one should expect the leader of a sovereigntist party to suddenly take on the role of Captain Canada.

     

    "I still believe that Quebec will do better when it is a country, so I am not the one who will fight to have a nice, beautiful and united Canada," he said.

     

    Trudeau is sitting down with opposition leaders one by one this week, trying to identify areas of common ground where he can get their support for legislation once the House of Commons sits again in December.

     

    Trudeau met Conservative Leader Andrew Scheer Tuesday.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Unionized Workers Launch Walkout At Three Upscale Vancouver Hotels

    Unionized Workers Launch Walkout At Three Upscale Vancouver Hotels
    VANCOUVER - Unionized workers at three high-end Vancouver hotels say they have begun strike action to back demands for safe and stable work.

    Unionized Workers Launch Walkout At Three Upscale Vancouver Hotels

    Apparent Hit And Run In Northeastern B.C. Leaves Two Dead: RCMP

    Apparent Hit And Run In Northeastern B.C. Leaves Two Dead: RCMP
    RCMP in northeastern British Columbia confirm two people have died in what appears to have been a hit and run in Fort St. John.

    Apparent Hit And Run In Northeastern B.C. Leaves Two Dead: RCMP

    Miniature Horse's Ear Severed, Legs Gashed During Dog Attack In Nanaimo, B.C.

    NANAIMO, B.C. - A tiny therapeutic horse on Vancouver Island faces extensive surgery and a long recovery after it was attacked by dogs.

    Miniature Horse's Ear Severed, Legs Gashed During Dog Attack In Nanaimo, B.C.

    Jagmeet Singh Urges Canadians To Consider Troubling Impact Of Trudeau Photos, Video

    Jagmeet Singh challenged Canadians Thursday to try to see through his eyes the implications of a shocking trio of images catching Justin Trudeau in racist acts.

    Jagmeet Singh Urges Canadians To Consider Troubling Impact Of Trudeau Photos, Video

    Justin Trudeau Wore Brownface At 2001 ‘Arabian Nights’ Party, Here’s What Was Said About His Racist Dark Makeup

    Some of what was said Wednesday after a yearbook photo surfaced depicting Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in brownface and clad in a turban and robes at an "Arabian Nights"-themed party in 2001:

    Justin Trudeau Wore Brownface At 2001 ‘Arabian Nights’ Party, Here’s What Was Said About His Racist Dark Makeup

    DARPAN 10 with Harpreet Singh

    Honesty and integrity are the hallmarks of my career, for which everyone knows me. 

    DARPAN 10 with Harpreet Singh