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French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War The October Crisis and The 1980 and 1995 Quebec Referendums
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French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

Feb 22, 2016

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French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War. The October Crisis and The 1980 and 1995 Quebec Referendums. The October Crisis. The Quiet Revolution. 1960-1966 is a period known as the Quiet Revolution in Quebec A period of dramatic change that would revolutionize the province - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

The October Crisis and The 1980 and 1995 Quebec Referendums

Page 2: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

The October Crisis

Page 3: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

The Quiet Revolution• 1960-1966 is a period known

as the Quiet Revolution in Quebec

• A period of dramatic change that would revolutionize the province

• The goal was to maintain Quebec’s French, Language and Culture

• As new policies were put in place, Quebec became a confident and proud province.

Page 4: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

BUT…• A small group believed Quebec

would only be freed from Canada through violent revolution

• The “Front de Liberation du Quebec” (FLQ) began a war of liberation in Quebec

• This radical group of separatists carried out bombings on federal property.

• They were organized into “cells” – small groups of people – and communicated by secret code

Page 5: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

Oct. 5, 1970• FLQ Kidnapped James Cross, a

British Diplomat , from his Montreal home

• If demands were not met, Cross would be executed:– $500 000 randsom– TV/Radio time to broadcast their

views– Safe passage out of Canada

• FLQ hoped this kidnapping would spark a wave of violence that would result in Quebec separation from Canada

Page 6: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

Oct 10, 1970• Pierre Laporte, Quebec

Minister of Labour, was kidnapped at gun point while playing football outside his home

• This second kidnapping caused panic and unrest for Quebec

• People were frustrated that the cases were not solved

Page 7: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

SO…• Quebec’s Premier asked the

Federal government for help• PM Trudeau asked Parliament to

proclaim The War Measures ActRECALL– P.M. Borden passed the War

Measures Act during WWI when Canada feared immigrants who had recently arrived from enemy countries

– It gave police special powers to search, question and detain suspects without cause or reason.

• A curfew was declared in Montreal and the Army was called in

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-7_a2wa2dd4

Page 8: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

Oct. 17, 1970

• Police received a tip about an abandoned car

• The body of Pierre Laporte was found in the trunk – strangled with the chain of his own religious medal

Page 9: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

Nov. 6, 1970

• One of Laporte’s kidnappers was found in a closet in a Montreal Apartment

• Other kidnappers were hiding behind a partition in the same closet – police were unaware

Page 10: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

Dec. 3, 1970• James Cross was found alive• Police and soldiers surrounded

the house where he was being held

• Cross had been held for nine weeks

• A deal for his release is negotiated:– FLQ kidnappers released Cross

into the custody of the Cuban Consul

– The kidnappers were flown to Cuba

Page 11: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

The Lasting Results of the October Crisis

• People lost faith in the government’s ability to protect society and their civil rights– 500 people were arrested

and held in custody for up to 3 weeks merely on suspicion

– Most were released without charges

• Sympathy for the FLQ in Quebec was over

Page 12: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

The Lasting Results of the October Crisis

• Separatists were determined to use peaceful methods

• Many French and English Canadians became aware of their true feelings about the issue of dividing our country and resolved to work even harder at cooperation and understanding

Page 13: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

The First Quebec ReferendumMay 20, 1980

Page 14: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

The Question"The Government of Quebec has made public its proposal to negotiate a new agreement with the rest of Canada, based on the equality of nations; this agreement would enable Quebec to acquire the exclusive power to make its laws, levy its taxes and establish relations abroad — in other words, sovereignty — and at the same time to maintain with Canada an economic association including a common currency; any change in political status resulting from these negotiations will only be implemented with popular approval through another referendum; on these terms, do you give the Government of Quebec the mandate to negotiate the proposed agreement between Quebec and Canada?"

Page 15: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

The ‘Yes’ Side

• The ‘Yes’ side was led by the Parti-Quebecois (a provincial separatist party)

• Their leader was Rene Levesque

Page 16: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

Why Separate?• The people of Quebec were

upset with the Federal Government under Trudeau for their handling of the October Crisis

• There was a history of bad blood between Quebec and the rest of Canada dating back almost 400 years

• The Parti-Quebec won 69 out of 110 seats in a provincial election in 1976 giving them a mandate to pursue sovereignty

Page 17: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

The ‘No’ Side

• The ‘No’ side was led by the provincial Liberal Party and the Canadian Government

• Their leader was Pierre Elliot Trudeau, PM of Canada and Provincial Liberal Leader Claude Ryan

Page 18: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

The Turning Point• Both parties fought hard to win

the votes of the people through speeches, pamphlets and television ads

• Lise Payette mobilized women against sovereignty when she referred to those who opposed sovereignty as Yvettes (a woman from a primary reader who stays home and cooks while her husband goes off for adventures)

• After this, the ‘no’ side started winning public support

http://www.cbc.ca/archives/categories/politics/federal-politics/a-la-prochaine-fois-the-1980-quebec-referendum/im-just-a-girl-who-must-say-no.html

Page 19: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

The Referendum and Results

• The referendum took place on May 20, 1980

• The results were:– 60% non– 40% oui– 85% of eligible voters

came to the polls

Page 20: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

The Effects of the Referendum• Despite their referendum loss,

the Parti-Quebecois were re-elected in 1981

• Quebec refused to sign on to the Constitution in 1982

• The rest of Canada made two attempts to get Canada to sign on to the Constitution with the Meech Lake Accord and The Charlottetown Accord

• Quebec passed language laws to protect their French culture

Page 21: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

The Second Quebec ReferendumOctober 30, 1995

Page 22: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

The Question

“Do you agree that Quebec should become sovereign after having made a formal offer to

Canada for a new economic and political partnership within the scope of the bill

respecting the future of Quebec and of the agreement signed on June 12, 1995?.”

Page 23: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

The ‘Yes’ Side• The ‘Yes’ side was led by

the Parti-Quebecois (a provincial separatist party) and the Bloc Quebecois (a federal separatist party)

• Their leaders were Jacques Parizeau (Premier of Quebec) and Lucien Bouchard (Leader of the Official Opposition)

Page 24: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

Why Separate?• There was a history of bad blood

between Quebec and the rest of Canada dating back almost 400 years

• The Parti-Quebec regained power in Quebec running on a platform of holding an early referendum

• The Bloc Quebecois won enough seats to become the Official Opposition in the House of Commons

• Both attempts at getting Quebec to sign on to the Constitution had failed

Page 25: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

The ‘No’ Side

• The ‘No’ side was led by the provincial Liberal Party and the Canadian Government (other than the Bloc Quebecois)

• Their leader was Jean Chretien, PM of Canada and Provincial Liberal Leader Daniel Johnson Jr.

Page 26: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

The Turning Point

• Three days before the vote on October 27th, The Canadian Government sponsored a unity rally in Montreal to convince people to vote ‘No’

• After losing, Jacques Parizeau blamed the loss on big business money and “the ethnic vote”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0ygdKavHXdA

Page 27: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

The Referendum and Results

• The referendum took place on October 30, 1995

• The results were:– 50.6% non– 49.4% oui

Page 28: French-English Relations in Canada During The Cold War

The Effects of the Referendum• Jacques Parizeau resigned

from politics and returned to private life

• The Clarity Act was brought in to make sure that if the province tried to separate again, that the rules for such a referendum would be fair

• Quebec was represented as a ‘Distinct Society’ by the Federal Government