A first full session about to test the CAQ supermajority
For its first real full session, the Coalition Avenir Quebec (CAQ) government will be able to test the effects of its supermajority in the national assembly on the smooth running of parliamentary business and the results it has promised the population.
During this session, which opens on Tuesday and ends on June 9, there will be a lot of talk about improving the health and education networks, the labour shortage and inflation.
The CAQ's overwhelming dominance over divided opposition parties is a nice gift for Premier François Legault, who is celebrating 25 years in politics this year.
But it also has its pitfalls: in addition to the wear and tear of power that always awaits a government in its second term, there are fewer and fewer excuses for not providing tangible solutions in the areas of health and education.
The house sat last fall after the CAQ won a landslide victory on Oct. 3, but it only lasted two weeks.
Legault said recently that the short session last autumn was just a "practice session" for his team to make sure that all the new recruits were familiar with how parliament works.
There are many newcomers in this legislature.
The CAQ won the general election by taking 90 seats out of 125, well above the 74 it took in 2018. This leaves only 35 seats for the other three parties in the house: 21 for the Quebec Liberal Party (PLQ), which forms the official opposition, 11 for Québec Solidaire (QS) and three for the Parti Québécois (PQ).
The CAQ leader has already announced his colours for the next few months and even years. He gave many clues, notably at the pre-sessional caucus meeting of CAQ elected officials in Laval last week.
Of course, there is the labour shortage that affects all of Quebec and that the premier wants to solve, notably with 100 per cent francophone immigration - a challenge, he admits himself.
Legault also telegraphed on Friday that he intends to ask the unions for more flexibility to solve the lack of bodies in the health and education networks.
The request is being made in the midst of negotiations for the renewal of public sector collective agreements that expire at the end of March.
Minister of Education Bernard Drainville has already given a taste of the scenarios being considered.
He is proposing to add a second adult in the classroom, a childcare worker, to help teachers who are overwhelmed by the special needs of their students. The minister unveiled the seven priorities he wants to work on, but he will have to announce in the coming months how they will be implemented and how much they will cost.
Furthermore, Legault recently issued a serious warning to the industries after several warning signs previously. Quebec no longer intends to automatically grant the Preferred Rate L to large electricity consumers.
The rate could now be modulated according to efforts to reduce consumption and greenhouse gases (GHG).
The government will take this route because it must reduce GHG emissions in accordance with its international obligations, but also because Hydro-Québec's surpluses are dwindling.
A bill should be tabled for the revision of industrial rates next fall.
In the meantime, on Tuesday morning, a parliamentary commission will resume its study of a controversial bill aimed at capping the increase in residential electricity rates according to inflation.
The CAQ government has also expressed other clear legislative intentions in recent months.
A reform of the health-care system as well as a bill on the revision of medical aid are expected.
Minister of Labour Jean Boulet has indicated that he will table legislation in February to regulate child labour. More specifically, he could set the general age of admission to employment at 14 years, on the recommendation of a group of unions and employers' associations.
Finally, Environment Minister Benoit Charette hinted that he would introduce a bill to increase water charges, which are ridiculously low in Quebec.
Legault said last week that he had no intention of marking 25 years in politics this year.
This report by The Canadian Press was first published in French on Jan. 31, 2023.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Advocate questions whether Air Canada has 'cultural problem' after issue with teen's wheelchair
Flying over the Grand Canyon was a highlight for the Gellisen family during their trip to Phoenix, but their flight home to Toronto was a much different experience, with several family members forced off of the flight over tensions related to a teen's wheelchair.

Military under fire as thousands of troops face lost cost-of-living allowance
The Canadian Armed Forces is under fire for its plan to cut thousands of troops off a cost-of-living allowance without much notice.
Essential oils and a secret code name: Things you didn't know about the coronation
King Charles III's coronation will be held on May 6 at London's Westminster Abbey. Here are some little-known facts about the ceremony:
Why lettuce prices are likely to rise again in Canada next month
Lettuce prices are likely to rise next month and could stay high into the summer, agriculture experts say, as flooding in a key California farming area becomes the latest example of extreme weather's effect on the food chain.
Teen dead after 'unprovoked' stabbing at Toronto subway station
Police have identified a teenager who died after being stabbed in an ‘unprovoked’ attack at a Toronto subway station Saturday night, and have charged an adult male suspect with his murder.
'Reconciliation through art': Campaign aims to get an Indigenous woman on Canada's $20 bill
A new campaign is aiming to get an Indigenous woman honoured on the next $20 bill in Canada for the first time.
In Macron's France, streets and fields seethe with protest
In France, a country that taught the world about people power with its revolution of 1789 -- and a country again seething with anger against its leaders -- graduating from bystander to demonstrator is a generations-old rite of passage.
Is the David porn? Come see, Italians tell Florida parents
The Florence museum housing Michelangelo's Renaissance masterpiece the 'David' invited parents and students from a Florida charter school to visit after complaints about a lesson featuring the statue forced the principal to resign.
Singh 'not satisfied' with confidence-and-supply agreement
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh says he's 'not satisfied' with his party's confidence-and-supply agreement with the Liberals — signed a year ago this week — because it's shown him he could do a better job running the country than the current government.