Paul St-Pierre Plamondon vows to push PQ forward with only three seats in National Assembly

“The project of Quebec’s independence … this project continues to give hope and to make us dream,” St-Pierre Plamondon said after he won his riding of Camille-Laurin.

Parti Québécois Leader Paul St-Pierre Plamondon fights back tears as he is welcomed by his supporters following his loss in the provincial election to a majority CAQ government in Boucherville on Monday, Oct. 3, 2022. Photo by Evan Buhler /The Canadian Press

BOUCHERVILLE — Rejecting any notion of his party collapsing, a confident Paul St-Pierre Plamondon stood before Parti Québécois faithful Monday night and vowed to push the party forward.

By the time St-Pierre Plamondon took the stage at a Boucherville ballroom, results showed the PQ would win only three seats at the National Assembly — seven fewer than in 2018, when the party was handed its worst defeat in nearly 50 years.

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But buoyed by winning his own riding of Camille-Laurin, St-Pierre Plamondon delivered a defiant speech focused on the future of the sovereignty movement in Quebec and his ambition to lead the party through a rebuild.

“I feel a great sense of pride,” St-Pierre Plamondon said as PQ supporters waved Quebec flags before him.

“The project of Quebec’s independence, devalued or even scorned for so long by the Liberals and now by the CAQ … this project continues to give hope and to make us dream,” he added. “It’s a project that’s full of light and love, and when I listen to you, I am filled with hope myself.”

In addition to St-Pierre Plamondon winning in Camille-Laurin, the party held onto the Îles-de-la-Madeleine riding, where Joël Arseneau was re-elected, and Matane-Matapédia, where the popular Pascal Bérubé won two thirds of the vote.

The only other PQ incumbent seeking re-election, Méganne Perry Mélançon, lost a tight race in Gaspé. It and all the open former PQ seats were picked up by the CAQ.

“This is a win here tonight (in the riding) that we can and will celebrate,” Bérubé said during an interview that played for the crowd in Boucherville. “There’s obviously a national context too, but tonight isn’t the night for analyzing that.”

At the outset of the campaign, it appeared this election could be a matter of survival for the Parti Québécois.

In 2018, the party suffered its worst setback in nearly 50 years — in part due to the rise of François Legault’s Coalition Avenir Québec — and was pushed to the margins of Quebec’s political landscape.

That election saw the PQ fall from 30 seats at the National Assembly to 10, with then-leader Jean-François Lisée losing his own riding and stepping down as leader before the end of election night.

At the beginning of this year’s election campaign, it was believed the party might fare even worse. Polls had the PQ dead last among the province’s five main parties and suggested it could be reduced to a single seat at the National Assembly.

St-Pierre Plamondon, heading the party since October 2020, faced frequent questions about how it felt to be at the helm of a storied political party on the brink of collapse.

But as the campaign advanced, polls appeared to shift in the PQ’s favour. St-Pierre Plamondon was praised for his strong performances in the campaign’s two televised leaders debates and unflinching defence of sovereignty.

In a Léger-Le Journal-TVA-QUB poll conducted last week, nearly a third of respondents said they believed St-Pierre Plamondon had led the best campaign — top among all leaders. Voting intentions for the party had also climbed from nine to 15 per cent.

Whether St-Pierre Plamondon himself would win his seat in Camille-Laurin was still up in the air heading into election night.

And though the night gave PQ faithful very little to celebrate, it was clear among those on hand that the party’s leader winning his riding would be an acceptable consolation prize.

By the time St-Pierre Plamondon’s win was announced, the quiet crowd in Boucherville erupted for one of the only times of the night.

On stage, St-Pierre Plamondon made sure to address what he said is the need for electoral reform, noting the “distortion” between the PQ receiving 15 per cent of the vote but only winning three seats.

But true to his campaign, the leader remained positive, barely mentioning the party being reduced to three seats.

He ended his speech by quoting former PQ premier Jacques Parizeau and calling on young people to join the party and support its cause.

“Quebec’s destiny is to become a country,” St-Pierre Plamondon said. “And we are the party that will work relentlessly to realize our independence.”

Status quo elsewhere in Montreal’s east end

Besides St-Pierre Plamondon winning Camille-Laurin, Montreal’s east end ridings remained the same Monday night as they were before the election.

The Jeanne-Mance—Viger riding, which shares the same borders as the city’s St-Léonard borough, was retained by the Liberals’ Filomena Rotiroti, who’s held the seat since 2018.

The Anjou—Louis-Riel riding, which includes all of Montreal’s Anjou riding and a part of Mercier–Hochelaga-Maisonneuve, was won by the Liberals’ Chantal Gagnon. The riding had been represented by the Liberals’ Lise Thériault since 2001, who did not run in this election.

The Bourassa-Sauvé riding, which includes most of Montréal-Nord, was won by Liberal candidate Madwa-Nika Cadet. The riding has been Liberal since its creation in 2003.

The Liberals also won the Lafontaine riding, which includes most of Montreal’s Rivière-des-Prairies neighbourhood. Marc Tanguay, who has held the seat since 2012, was re-elected.

The CAQ retained the Pointe-aux-Trembles riding, which includes Montréal-Est and the neighbourhood of Pointe-aux-Trembles. The riding had been a Parti Québécois stronghold until being won by the CAQ’s Chantal Rouleau in 2018. Rouleau retained the seat Monday night.

Québec solidaire also maintained its presence in Montreal’s east end, with incumbent Alexandre Leduc winning the Hochelaga-Maisonneuve riding.

jfeith@postmedia.com

twitter.com/jessefeith

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