History and Politics
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Prince Edward Island was
named in 1799 after the 4th
son of King George III who
was based in Halifax as
Commander in Chief or
British North America |
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Coat of Arms |
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Motto: |
JE ME SOUVIENS
- I
remember |
Early
History
Since
many continental explorations began
in the region, Quebec has been
called the cradle of Canada. In
1534, Jacques Cartier planted a
cross on the Gaspé and the following
year he sailed up the St. Lawrence.
In 1608, Samuel de Champlain built a
trading post on the site of the
present-day Quebec city, and from
this and subsequent settlements
Catholic missionaries, explorers,
and fur traders penetrated the North
American continent. The activities
of private fur-trading companies
ended, for a time, in 1663 when
Louis XIV made the region, then
known as New France, a royal colony
and chose Jean Baptiste Talon to be
intendant, or administrator.
The long
struggle to protect the colony and
the fur trade from the Iroquois
(other tribes were allies of the
French) and the British was
effectively lost in 1759, when the
British defeated the French on the
Plains of Abraham (see
Abraham,
Plains of).
By the Treaty of Paris of 1763,
Great Britain acquired New France.
In an attempt to conciliate the
French inhabitants, the British
passed the Quebec Act of 1774, under
which the colony was allowed to
continue its semifeudal system of
land tenure and to retain its
language, religion, legal system,
and customs.
After
the American Revolution, many
British Loyalists came to settle in
Quebec. By the Constitutional Act of
1791 the British separated the area
west of the Ottawa River and created
the colony of Upper Canada (now
Ontario) there. Quebec became known
as Lower Canada, and in 1791 the
first elective assembly was
introduced.
The
resentment of leaders of the French
community toward the British
precipitated a revolt in 1837 led by
Louis Papineau. Although the
rebellion was crushed, the
disturbances in Upper and Lower
Canada caused the British to send
the Earl of Durham (see Durham, John
George Lambton, 1st earl of) to
study conditions in the British
North American colonies. His report
led ultimately to internal
self-government and the creation of
the Canadian confederation. Upper
and Lower Canada were reunited in
1841, and Quebec became known as
Canada East. Responsible (elected)
government was granted in 1849.
Confederation and the French-English
Question
With
the formation of the confederation
of Canada in 1867, Canada East
became the province of Quebec.
Provisions for the preservation of
its special, traditional
institutions were specifically
written into the Canadian
constitution. English and French
were made the official languages of
both Quebec and the Canadian
parliament, and a dual school system
was established within Quebec.
However, in 1974 French was made the
sole official language of the
province, and all
non-English-speaking children were
required to attend French-language
schools. But the coexistence of
majority-French and minority-English
cultures within the province and the
reverse situation within Canada as a
whole have remained sources of
tension. Attempts in Manitoba and
Ontario at the beginning of the 20th
cent. to curtail or abolish separate
Catholic schools increased the
French Canadians' feeling of
isolation. In 1917 they vehemently
opposed conscription for World War
I.
Twentieth-Century Economic and
Political Developments
During the 20th cent. great economic
growth in Quebec was coupled with
increased determination to maintain
and broaden provincial rights. The
boundary between Quebec and
Newfoundland and Labrador was only
finalized in 1927, when Newfoundland
was not yet part of Canada; although
the boundary was accepted by Canada,
Quebec has never officially
recognized it. In the 1960s
separatist groups, advocating an
independent Quebec, gained
attention. In 1970 separatist
terrorists kidnapped a British
diplomat, James R. Cross, and the
Quebec Minister of Labour, Pierre
Laporte. Cross was later released,
but Laporte was found murdered.
In
1976 the Parti Québécois (PQ), a
party of French-Canadian
nationalists formed in 1970, won
control of the provincial parliament
under René Lévesque. The new
government initiated a series of
language and cultural reforms
whereby the use of English was
discouraged; this caused an
out-migration of English-speakers
and their companies, mainly to
Ontario. During the 1980s, however,
Montreal attracted many
high-technology and financial
services companies.
In
1980, Lévesque's plan for an
independent Quebec, called
sovereignty-association, was
rejected in a provincial referendum
by 60% of the voters. The PQ was
returned to power in 1981, however,
and in 1982 the provincial
government refused to accept the new
Canadian constitution. From 1985 to
1994, the Liberal party, led by
Robert Bourassa and Daniel Johnson,
controlled the assembly. In 1987
there appeared to be progress on the
issue of Quebec separatism, when the
Meech Lake Accord was signed, but
the accord collapsed in 1990. A
package of constitutional reforms
was subsequently drafted by the
Canadian government and presented to
voters in a national referendum in
Oct., 1992, but it was defeated.
In
1994 the PQ, now led by Jacques
Parizeau, regained control of the
provincial government. A referendum
on independence was narrowly
defeated in Oct., 1995. Parizeau
announced his resignation and was
replaced in 1996 by Lucien Bouchard,
who had led the Bloc Québécois in
Ottawa. Quebec was recognized by
Parliament as a “distinct society”
because of its language and culture
and was granted a veto over
constitutional amendments.
Separatists said the changes were
symbolic and vowed to continue their
struggle. They suffered two blows in
1998, however, when Canada's Supreme
Court ruled that Quebec could not
legally secede on its own and the
PQ's majority shrank in provincial
elections.
In
1999 polls showed that support for
secession had shrunk to about 40% of
Quebec voters; in the Oct., 2000,
national elections the Bloc
Québécois received fewer votes than
the Liberals for the first time
since 1980. A federal law designed
to make it harder for Quebec to
secede was passed in July, 2000; it
required that a clear majority
support a clearly worded proposition
and that borders, the seceding
province's responsibility for a
share of the national debt, and
other issues be resolved by
negotiations. In 2001, Bouchard
resigned; he was succeeded as
premier by the new PQ party leader,
Bernard Landry. The Liberals, led by
Jean Charest, decisively defeated
the PQ in the Apr., 2003, elections,
and Charest became premier. The Bloc
Québécois scored gains in the June,
2004, national elections, but the
vote was regarded more as a
rejection of the Liberals than as
support for secession. In the Mar.,
2007, provincial elections, the
Liberals lost seats but secured a
plurality and formed a minority
government. The PQ placed third,
surpasssed by the Action
Démocratique, a conservative party
that called for autonomy, instead of
independence, for Quebec.
Quebec sends 24 senators and 75
representatives to the national
parliament.
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