The PQ seems less an opposition party than part and parcel of the Liberal Party’s re-election strategy
Tag Archives: Pierre-Karl Peladeau
Pierre Karl Péladeau: A man of brash impulses gives in to another
Pierre Karl Péladeau exits politics just as he arrived: hastily. Martin Patriquin on the former Parti Québécois leader’s surprise resignation
PKP: Farewell to the PQ’s last-chance man
Paul Wells on Pierre Karl Péladeau’s historically short, ill-suited leadership of the Parti Québécois, and what comes next
The PQ grows another propaganda arm
A new research institute will ‘show the advantages of independence’. It’s hard to see what it could possibly add to the old argument.
Why a struggling Parti Québécois is bad for Quebec’s democracy
Pierre-Karl Péladeau is, predictably, stumbling toward the exit, while Philippe Couillard fumbles his way to undeserved success
Pierre Karl Péladeau won’t be a Parti Québécois saviour
Pierre Karl Péladeau is not going to ignite the PQ. He is about to fall into some familiar political traps.
Around the Bloc again: The renewed militancy of Quebec sovereignty
With shrinking coffers and membership, the Bloc Québécois is returning to its militant roots to fight for sovereignty—and survival
‘Citizen Péladeau’: What will the PQ do with their Péladeau moment?
He is a billionaire media mogul with ego and a temper. And he’s about to become the official face of Quebec separatism.
For the Parti Québécois, bad habit dies hard
Why the PQ has re-embraced its troublesome, vote-losing ‘values charter’
P.K. vs. P.K.
One had a political coming-out, the other a hockey love-in with the sport’s most loyal fans. A tale of the tape between Pierre-Karl Péladeau and P.K. Subban.