Quebec's Liberal Party wants a Quebec constitution
The provincial Liberal party wants a Quebec constitution.
It would abolish certain sections of Bill 96, ensure English-language health care and education rights are respected.
Despite some opposition, a motion was passed at the party’s convention in Levis, Que. over the weekend.
"We are crystal clear on this. Some will agree some will disagree with us, it's all about democracy," says interim leader Marc Tanguay.
The convention took place against the backdrop of a budding leadership race, and candidates weighed in.
Pablo Rodriguez says there will "be some changes for sure," with Frederic Beauchemin backing him saying that Bill 96 is "a bill that we will modify."
Denis Coderre stresses that though he would like to "clean up" Bill 96, he has no plans to scrap it – which Charles Milliard agrees with.
Some party divisions were on display at the convention, with some saying the idea is "too nationalistic" while others, like Marc Belanger, aren’t sure where they stand.
If a Liberal government comes into power, the party pledges to include repealing the cap on English CEGEP enrolment and the six-month deadline imposed on immigrants to learn French.
It would also cut clauses it says restrict access to English health services, formally exempt Indigenous communities from French-language laws and tighten the rules around the use of the notwithstanding clause.
The party will select a new leader next year, one who could have a different vision for a Quebec constitution.
Tom Mulcair, CTV’s political commentator, says the timing is tricky.
"To say this is absolutely what the Liberal party itself has as a platform, that takes away some of the freedom of movement of the candidates who are actually running, and I think that is a fundamental mistake," he says.
The details will be finalized through a consultation process.
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Police release bodycam video of officer-involved incident at Hindu temple protest in Brampton, Ont.
Police say an officer who forcefully removed a 'weapon' from a protester outside of a Hindu temple in Brampton was acting 'within the lawful execution of his duties' after bystander video of the incident circulated widely online.
W5 Investigates Car security investigation: How W5 'stole' a car using a device we ordered online
In part two of a three-part series into how thieves are able to drive off with modern vehicles so easily, CTV W5 correspondent Jon Woodward uses a device flagged by police to easily clone a car key.
Some Scotiabank users facing 'intermittent' access to banking days after scheduled maintenance
Scotiabank users say they are having issues using their bank’s services following a scheduled maintenance period that ended days ago.
RCMP begins deploying body-worn cameras to frontline officers across Canada
Within days, thousands of frontline RCMP officers will be starting their shifts equipped with a body-worn camera, as the national police force begins deploying the program across Canada.
'Countless lives were at risk:' 8 charged, including teen wanted in deadly home invasion, after West Queen West gun battle
A teenage boy arrested along with more than 20 others following a gun battle in Toronto’s West Queen West neighbourhood was wanted in connection with a deadly home invasion in Etobicoke back in April, Toronto police say.
Everything is under US$20 at Amazon's newest store
Amazon is targeting retail rivals Shein, Temu and TikTok Shop with a new deeply discounted storefront that sells a wide array of products for US$20 or less.
Many long COVID patients adjust to slim recovery odds as world moves on
There are certain phrases that Wachuka Gichohi finds difficult to hear after enduring four years of living with long COVID, marked by debilitating fatigue, pain, panic attacks and other symptoms so severe she feared she would die overnight.
Sandy Hook families help The Onion buy Infowars
The satirical news publication The Onion won the bidding for Alex Jones' Infowars at a bankruptcy auction, backed by families of Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting victims whom Jones owes more than US$1 billion in defamation judgments for calling the massacre a hoax.
California teenager admits to making hundreds of hoax emergency calls
A California teenager has admitted to making hundreds of swatting calls — hoax emergency calls — over a two-year period, creating 'fear and chaos' when police responded to his false reports of bomb threats and mass shootings at schools, homes and houses of worship, federal prosecutors said.