Once-moribund Parti Québécois is resurgent, but support for independence staying flat
MONTREAL — Almost a year and a half after it was widely seen as being near death, the Parti Québécois is topping provincial polls. And the party’s leader, Paul St-Pierre Plamondon, is the seen as the best person to be premier.
But despite St-Pierre Plamondon’s promise of an early referendum on sovereignty, the party’s rise isn’t coming amid a surge in support for independence. Observers attribute the PQ rebound largely to the growing unpopularity of Premier François Legault and his Coalition Avenir Québec government.
“There’s no uptick in the desire for Quebec sovereignty,” Christian Bourque, executive vice-president at the polling firm Leger, said in a recent interview.
His company’s latest poll, published in Quebecor newspapers last Wednesday based on a survey this month of 1,032 Quebecers, put support for the PQ at 32 per cent, compared with 25 per cent of respondents saying they would vote for the CAQ. Support for independence was at 35 per cent, Bourque said, around where it has been for more than a decade.