‘Out of control’: Quebec politicians facing repeated intimidation on campaign trail
MONTREAL — Gilles Bélanger, a candidate for the Coalition Avenir Québec, recently moved his children and partner out of his house, and he makes sure the doors are always locked.
The drastic steps come after a car followed him home last Wednesday, and the next day at 5 a.m. he spotted a man on his wooded property in Magog, in Quebec’s Eastern Townships. The man fled as soon as Bélanger opened the front door, but later that afternoon as he drove in a campaign car with an image of his face on it, Bélanger noticed a vehicle stopped at a traffic light next to him. He says the driver pointed at him, mimicking a revolver.
“It’s getting out of control,” Bélanger, who is running in his second provincial election after winning his Orford riding in 2018, said in an interview Tuesday. “During the last campaign it wasn’t like this at all.”
Bélanger is among a growing number of candidates from all major parties in the Quebec election campaign who have complained to police after being allegedly threatened. Quebec provincial police Sgt. Geneviève Bruneau said Tuesday that 20 people have been arrested since the start of the campaign for threats against politicians or for damage to election-related property. She said police have noticed a significant rise in threats against politicians since the COVID-19 pandemic began.