Mr. Speaker, first off, I would like to congratulate Lucien Bouchard and the Parti Quebecois, in whom the people of Quebec put their trust yesterday. They will form the next government in Quebec.
I also want to congratulate Jean Charest and the Liberal Party, Mario Dumont and the Parti de l'action démocratique, and all those who participated in this election, whether or not they got elected, illustrating what democracy is all about and how much courage is required to take on this task.
I should point out that the government Quebeckers elected yesterday is a good government. This was not a referendum. We sovereignists never said it would be. The federalists in Quebec were the ones who held it would be a referendum election. They will have to live with that now.
We never made any such assertion. We are asserting, however, that it is indeed a sovereignist government that the people of Quebec elected yesterday, confirming the decision they had made in the 1994 provincial election and in federal elections, first in 1993 and again in 1997, with more than 60% of the members from Quebec in this House being sovereignists.
That said, today, we must realize that, from across Canada and also from Quebec yesterday everywhere, a clear message has been sent to Ottawa. It concerns social union. This has been a traditional demand of Quebec's for over 50 years. That is why I was somewhat amazed to hear the Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs state that the motion before us was a panic reaction. This is an issue that has been debated for 50 years, and we are told this morning that it is a panic reaction.
I am also a little surprised to hear him tell us that this was an artificial deadline. It is strange that this government insisted so much on Quebec taking part in these negotiations, considering that, since 1994, the PQ government was present at the negotiation table 89% of the time, while from 1990 to 1994, the provincial Liberals were present only 23% of the time. This is the reality.
The federal government kept telling the PQ government to take part in the negotiations, because it was important to settle the issue. That was before the election. Now, less than 24 hours after the results came in, this government says “This is not urgent. Why all the fuss?”
I did hear Roy Romanow yesterday and I am very disappointed by the attitude of the NDP today, because there are NDP governments—I can think of Mr. Clark and Mr. Romanow—that insisted on Quebec taking part in these negotiations, and that saw how important it was to settle this issue.
The issue goes back a long time. I said 50 years, which includes not only Maurice Duplessis, but also Jean Lesage, René Lévesque and Robert Bourassa. These people were from various backgrounds and represented different parties. However, they all shared the same view on this issue.
I would like to quote Jean Lesage who, in 1960, said the following and certainly not because he was panic-stricken:
This full financial compensation with the right to opt out should take the form of additional taxation rights, specifically reserved for the provincial governments, and of corresponding equalization payments. Each province would be free to dispose of these revenues as it pleases, within its own jurisdictions.
Daniel Johnson senior added the following in 1966:
Quebec hopes that it will be understood once and for all that, for socio-cultural reasons, it insists wholly and absolutely on its constitutional areas of jurisdiction being respected and accepts no federal interference in those areas, whether direct or indirect.
In 1970, Robert Bourassa, who can most certainly not be suspected of any sovereignist leanings, said:
Quebec continues to believe that this federal spending power in areas that come under exclusive provincial jurisdiction ought quite simply not to exist, and the federal government would do well to quite simply renounce it totally.
This was not panic speaking, it was a clear judgement by Robert Bourassa. In 1978, René Lévesque added:
Quebec believes that federal spending powers ought to be restricted only to those areas listed as exclusive or joint federal responsibilities.
This is what Quebec has been saying clearly for 50 years. Today in Quebec this is a view that is held not only by the Parti Quebecois, which will form the next government as a result of yesterday's election, but is also shared by Mr. Charest of the Liberal Party and Mr. Dumont.
This strategy of the sovereignists, along with that of the federalists, and indeed of all leaders of political parties in Quebec, all those who are politically active in Quebec, with the exception of the federal Liberal Party and the members of that party from Quebec who sit in this House, such as the Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, shows that we have the interests of Quebec at heart. What is being practiced here is not the politics of the worst case scenario, which is the worst kind of politics. We are acting in defence of Quebeckers' rights.
Nor are we engaged in a kind of blackmail, as the Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs said earlier. Good heavens, sovereignist policy has never had anything to do with holding a knife to anyone's throat. It was first expressed by Léon Dion, the father of the Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, and in pretty clear terms. Today, they are trying to convince us that it was the sovereignists who did so. We must get back a bit closer to the truth.
I believe the minister does not appreciate being confronted with reality, but that is what was said, and history will prove it. The sovereignists have never applied this policy. We were clear. We are here to defend our interests.
Yes, we believe in sovereignty, and it is our right to do so, just as others have the right to believe in federalism. That is not what we are debating today because, for once, federalists and sovereigntists are in agreement, the parties here—I hope that the NDP will rethink its position—because Mr. Clark is a New Democrat, Mr. Romanow is a New Democrat, Mr. Harris, Mr. Klein and Mr. Filmon are Progressive Conservatives, the Reform Party, the Progressive Conservative Party here, Jean Charest, Mario Dumont, Lucien Bouchard, almost everyone except, once again, the Liberals.
Who but this government is preventing the provinces and the federal government from changing for the benefit of all Quebeckers and Canadians? It sings the same old song at every referendum, makes up all sorts of stories before a federal election, and then, the morning after, tells us there is no rush to resolve the situation.
For months, we heard quite the opposite. Now they tell us no action is necessary. We say something has to be done and done fast. As the Leader of the Opposition quite rightly pointed out, we are not talking about a constitutional amendment. We are talking about an administrative agreement.
Why is this urgent? Because there is a budget in the offing. Because there are surpluses: $10.4 billion that the government has built up over the first six months by dipping into the pockets of the unemployed, by helping itself to money that should go to the provinces for post-secondary education, welfare and health, particularly health.
When the budget is brought down and if we do not reach an agreement making it possible to opt out with full compensation, we will see this government again launch into a spiral of reckless spending that will saddle us with new deficits, again interfering in provincial jurisdiction, having slashed health care funding throughout Canada with dangerous results, and swooping in to rescue us at the last minute, with assurances that Ottawa knows best.
We have had it. We are fed up. That is the long and the short of it. And that was the message sent by Quebeckers yesterday. And it is the message being sent by the 10 premiers. And I hope it is the message of all opposition parties worthy of the name in this House.