
What will it take for Anglo-Quebecers to ditch the provincial Liberals?
MONTREAL — One word that often surfaces during discussions with Montreal’s English-speaking community regarding Francois Legault, head of the party leading Quebec’s election polls, is “trust” — or the lack of it.
Legault’s message of having a strong, nationalist Quebec inside Canada, working for families and making all citizens richer has gained support across most of the province — but less so on Montreal’s “West Island.”
Ridings in the sprawling middle-class suburbs west of downtown delivered Liberal majorities topping 80 per cent in the 2014 election, in large part because residents there are fiercely federalist.
People there bring up Legault’s past as a staunchly sovereigntist Parti Quebecois cabinet minister. They remember how in 2005, in his role as PQ finance critic, Legault proudly produced a report indicating Quebec would record a budgetary surplus its first year as an independent country.