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Every trend line for the Quebec premier is headed in the same direction: down The post Legault Just Keeps Sinking in the Polls first appeared on The Walrus.
Quebec Premier Francois Legault speaks at a news conference on May 8, 2024 at the legislature in Quebec City. Photo by Karoline Boucher / The Canadian Press. Article content.
Quebec Premier François Legault, a former airline CEO, recalls a memorable exchange with Donald Trump, back when the U.S. president was launching a Trump Shuttle between Boston and New York and ...
Quebec Premier Francois Legault speaks at an event on Oct. 3. (Christinne Muschi/Bloomberg News) This month’s reelection of Quebec Premier Francois Legault — a canny but unsophisticated ...
A onetime businessman who co-founded a successful budget airline, Mr. Legault started his political career in the separatist, social democratic Parti Québécois, a group ideologically opposed to ...
Legault insists he will seek a third mandate from Quebecers during an election set for October 2026. However, poll aggregator Qc125 shows the CAQ could be reduced to just four seats from 86 if an ...
Premier François Legault's fight to protect French has a cost in Quebec. And it’s more than a financial burden ... Premier Francois Legault in Montreal on Aug. 20, 2024.
CAQ Leader François Legault is campaigning on a promise to limit immigration in Quebec to 50,000 people per year, a figure meant to maintain the status quo. But his tendency to backtrack on ...
Days after Quebec Premier François Legault penned a letter saying Quebec has reached its capacity to welcome refugees, community organizations say his statements are misguided.
Voters in Quebec gave a second term to Premier François Legault, who has shifted the province from a once fervent-independence movement to a nationalism focused on French Québécois identity.
Legault would not waste this crack at real, national power. His first major piece of legislation, Bill 21, tackled a subject he had expressed contempt for just a few short years earlier.
Legault repeated to Nadeau-Dubois his view that one reason for the shortage is the rising number of temporary immigrants, including 178,000 asylum seekers. The total is now 560,000, way more than ...