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Following the 1988 election, however, the Meech Lake Accord was attacked from a variety of ideological angles outside of Quebec, uniting forces as disparate as ex-prime minister [[Pierre Trudeau]], the [[National Action Committee on the Status of Women]], the [[Reform Party of Canada]], and the [[Assembly of First Nations]]. It was blocked in the Manitoba legislature by First Nations MLA [[Elijah Harper]], and then finally failed when legislature of Newfoundland cancelled its planned vote on the issue just before the 1990 deadline, signalling a rejection. Meech Lake was revised as the [[Charlottetown Accord]] of 1992, but this was defeated in a national referendum.
Following the 1988 election, however, the Meech Lake Accord was attacked from a variety of ideological angles outside of Quebec, uniting forces as disparate as ex-prime minister [[Pierre Trudeau]], the [[National Action Committee on the Status of Women]], the [[Reform Party of Canada]], and the [[Assembly of First Nations]]. It was blocked in the Manitoba legislature by First Nations MLA [[Elijah Harper]], and then finally failed when legislature of Newfoundland cancelled its planned vote on the issue just before the 1990 deadline, signalling a rejection. Meech Lake was revised as the [[Charlottetown Accord]] of 1992, but this was defeated in a national referendum.


With the failure of the Meech Lake and Charlottetown accords, Mulroney was unable to achieve constitutional recognition of Quebec as a distinct society, and in the [[Canadian federal election, 1993|1993 election]] the Conservatives won only a single seat in Quebec (and only two in the entire country). The bulk of the Tory vote in Quebec went to the [[Bloc Québécois]]. The yet newly created Bloc was an openly sovereigntist party led by [[Lucien Bouchard]], a former MP and cabinet minister in Mulroney's government.
With the failure of the Meech Lake and Charlottetown accords, Mulroney was unable to achieve constitutional recognition of Quebec as a distinct society, and in the [[Canadian federal election, 1993|1993 election]] the Conservatives won only a single seat in Quebec (and only two in the entire country). The bulk of the Tory vote in Quebec went to the [[Bloc Québécois]]. The newly created Bloc was an openly sovereigntist party led by [[Lucien Bouchard]], a former MP and cabinet minister in Mulroney's government.


== Legacy ==
== Legacy ==

Revision as of 02:31, 15 May 2014

In Quebec politics, le beau risque (French pronunciation: [lə bo ʁisk], the good risk) is a political catch phrase describing the "risk" the Parti Québécois (PQ or "péquists") took in asking Quebecers to support federal Progressive Conservatives (PCs or "Tories") under Brian Mulroney and accept an amended version of the Constitution Act, 1982, which the péquist Quebec government under René Lévesque has previously refused to sign. Mulroney's Tories promised Quebec the opportunity to fully enter into the constitution "with honour and dignity" and have its distinctiveness recognized in the document.

It was coined by Parti Québécois Premier of Quebec René Lévesque. His taking the "beau risque" provoked a crisis in the party, as its main founding principle was the entry of Quebec into a different relationship with Canada, and a number of PQ Members of the National Assembly of Quebec left their seats as a result.

In the subsequent 1984 Canadian election the Progressive Conservatives took 58 out of 75 seats in Quebec. Mulroney attempted to fulfill his promise to Quebec via the Meech Lake Accord of 1987, a package of constitutional amendments including a "distinct society" clause for Quebec recognizing that province's unique status. In the 1988 Canadian election, fought around the issue of free-trade with the USA (which the Tories supported), the PCs increased their total in Quebec to 63.

Following the 1988 election, however, the Meech Lake Accord was attacked from a variety of ideological angles outside of Quebec, uniting forces as disparate as ex-prime minister Pierre Trudeau, the National Action Committee on the Status of Women, the Reform Party of Canada, and the Assembly of First Nations. It was blocked in the Manitoba legislature by First Nations MLA Elijah Harper, and then finally failed when legislature of Newfoundland cancelled its planned vote on the issue just before the 1990 deadline, signalling a rejection. Meech Lake was revised as the Charlottetown Accord of 1992, but this was defeated in a national referendum.

With the failure of the Meech Lake and Charlottetown accords, Mulroney was unable to achieve constitutional recognition of Quebec as a distinct society, and in the 1993 election the Conservatives won only a single seat in Quebec (and only two in the entire country). The bulk of the Tory vote in Quebec went to the Bloc Québécois. The newly created Bloc was an openly sovereigntist party led by Lucien Bouchard, a former MP and cabinet minister in Mulroney's government.

Legacy

In 2006, under the Conservative government of Stephen Harper, the Canadian House of Commons passed a motion recognizing "that the Québécois form a nation within a united Canada". The motion was without constitutional force, however. In the subsequent election of 2008, the Conservatives won ten seats in Quebec, the same number as they had won in 2006. In the 2011 election, the Conservatives were reduced to five seats in the province.

See also