Despite Bloc's comeback, Quebec helps propel Liberals to minority government - Action News
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Montreal

Despite Bloc's comeback, Quebec helps propel Liberals to minority government

Quebecers are making sense of a divided province today, with the Liberals maintaining a strong presence in the federal election, even as the Bloc Qubcois enjoya resurgence in popularity.

'I heard your message tonight,' Trudeau tells Quebecers after Bloc bounces back

Liberal Leader Justin Trudeau and wife Sophie Grgoire Trudeau were all smiles as they went on stage at Liberal election headquarters in Montreal. (Paul Chiasson/The Canadian Press)

Quebecers are making sense of a divided province today, with the Liberals maintaining a strong presence in the federal election, even as the Bloc Qubcois enjoy a resurgence in popularity.

The Liberals won 35ridings, theBloc 32and the Conservatives10 in Monday's vote. The NDPwas reduced toa single seat: the party's Quebec lieutenant, Alexandre Boulerice, won a third term in theriding of RosemontLa-Petite-Patrie.

Historically viewed as a crucial battleground, Quebec onceagain featuredprominently throughoutthe election, with heated debateon issues ranging from the banning ofreligious symbols to the placement of future pipelines.

The Liberals took 40 of the province's 78seats in the 2015election, helping to propel Justin Trudeau to a comfortable majority government.

This time around, the Liberals faced a much tougher test from the Bloc. The sovereignist party gained momentum under leader Yves-Franois Blanchet, who easily took hisriding of Beloeil-Chambly onMontreal's South Shore.

Bloc revival

Blanchet, a formerParti Qubcoiscabinet minister,played off a renewed sense of nationalism under Premier Franois Legault's popular Coalition Avenir Qubec government.

In so doing,he helped lead the party back to relevance after it was limited to10 seats in the last electionand only four in 2011.

During the campaign, Blanchet vowed to fend off any federal government challenge to Bill 21, the province's religious symbols law, to block any attempt by the government in Ottawa to approve a new pipeline that would go through the province, and to vote against any attempt at abolishing the carbon tax.

Bloc Qubcoissupporters celebrate after a strong showing in Montreal. (Charles Contant/CBC)

"We propose to be the voice of the Quebec nation," Blanchet said before a boisterous crowd in Montreal.

To chants of "On veut un pays," (We want a country),he replied,"I do, too."

But he said sovereignty would have to wait.

"It's not part of our mandate," he said. "We have to learn how to relisten to Quebecers, in thatperspective."

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, who comfortably wonhis Montreal riding of Papineau, argued throughout the campaignthe Liberals would best represent Quebecers in Ottawa as a progressive government that would defend their environmental concerns.

His message appears to have been effective, even if his own popularity was a question mark. Manyhigh-profile Liberal candidates were re-elected, including cabinet ministers Marc Garneau andMlanie Joly.

EnvironmentalistSteven Guilbeault, one of the party's star candidates,was also elected inLaurierSaint-Marie, a Montreal riding that hasn't gone Liberal since 1988.

In his victory speech, speaking in French, Trudeau said, "I heard your message tonight," and promised to represent the interests of Quebecin Ottawa.

NDP crashes

Until the wee hours of vote counting, it appeared the NDP's Ruth Ellen Brosseaumight win her seatBerthier-Maskinongfor a third term, but the popular Brosseau a parachute candidate in 2011 who was easily re-elected four years later lost to the Bloc's Yves Perron in a tight race.

That reducedthe New Democratsto a single seat in Quebec, after winning 59 of 78 seatsonly two elections ago. That's despite NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh's promiseto hand the province more powers and more social services.

NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh addressed Quebecers in his speech in Burnaby, B.C. (Ben Nelms/CBC)

Singh, a Sikh who wears a turban, struggled to gain traction in the province, even though he saidhe wouldn't interfere in a court challenge against Bill 21.

Singh told a crowd in British Columbia, where he won his riding of Burnaby South, that he "won't abandon Quebec" and that he wants to unite progressive movements across the country.

"We will continue to have a presence there. I will have a presence there," he said in French.

Conservatives lose ground

The Conservatives under Andrew Scheer put an emphasis on strong local candidates and lower taxes in the hopeof winning over new voters.

But he struggled during the French-language debatesto defend his past comments on abortion and his plan to create a Canada-wide "energy corridor."

In the end, the Conservatives were unable to make inroads in the province and saw themselves lose ground compared to 2015, when they won 12 seats in Quebec.

The party dropped two seats to the Bloc Qubcois in the Quebec City area.

Gerard Deltell, who was re-elected for a fifth term in the Louis-St-Laurent riding, says the results reflect the diversity of opinion within the capital.

"We have threepartiesrepresenting the Quebec City area,as we have at the National Assembly," he said Monday night.

"We have to keep that in mind.As far as I'm concerned, Quebec has never been monolithic."

Maxime Bernier, who formed the People's Party of Canada, lost his riding in Beauce. (Mathieu Belanger/Reuters)

Maxime Bernier, who formed the right-wing People's Party of Canada after losing out in theConservative leadership race, lost his riding of Beauce.

Conservative Richard Lehoux, a former local mayor who comes from long line of dairy farmers, took the riding.