Neha Patil (Editor)

The Three Periods

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The Three Periods is a Quebec sovereigntist strategy. Before the 1993 federal election in Canada, Parti Québécois (PQ) leader Jacques Parizeau evoked a strategy for attainment of Quebec independence called the Three Periods. The strategy is partly inspired by the three periods of play in ice hockey (the most popular sport in Quebec). It is seen as a typical Parizeau concept: dedicated and straightforward, especially compared to some sovereigntist attitudes like a few (not all) of René Lévesque's (specifically in the last years of his government) or to the étapisme or "step-by-step" strategy.

Contents

First period

  • The election of a great number of candidates from the recently founded Bloc Québécois in Ottawa for 1993 federal election.
  • It was achieved: the Bloc sent 54 Member of Parliament (MPs) to the Canadian House of Commons and became the Official Opposition. Parizeau and the PQ publicly supported the Bloc campaign.
  • Second period

  • The election of a Parti Québécois government in Quebec City for the 1994 Quebec election.
  • It was achieved: 77 PQ Members of the National Assembly (MNAa) were elected to the National Assembly of Quebec, won a majority government and received a plurality (although slimmer than expected) in popular vote.
  • Third period

  • The calling and victory of a second referendum on sovereignty for Quebec.
  • It failed: the referendum was indeed called in 1995 with 49.42% in favour. Controversy over the nature of the referendum led to the Clarity Act of 2000.
  • Resurgence

    After the plummeting popularity of the newly elected federalist Quebec government in 2003-2004, the sponsorship scandal, the Bloc's renewed popularity for the 2004 federal elections and the rise in support for sovereignty (49% in April 2004), some evoked the return of a new three part plan. Pauline Marois even wrote an article for the Saison des idées in 2004 in favour of establishing a four period plan.

    References

    The Three Periods Wikipedia