February 1, 2002
Nunavik loses friends in
Quebec cabinet
Three Quebec cabinet ministers,
all of whom had worked closely with Nunaviks leaders over the years, quit
politics on Tuesday before being pushed out of cabinet in a shuffle.
Guy Chevrette, 62, had
been Quebecs native affairs minister since the mid-1990s. Taking his place
is Rémy Trudel, a former minister of municipal affairs who has visited
Nunavik on many occasions.
Chevrette had regularly
visited Nunavik. Last year, Makivik Corporation president Pita Aatami accompanied
him on a tour of Europe to promote Quebecs dealings with native people.
High-ranking Parti Québécois
members had urged older ministers such as Chevrette, who juggled five other
posts in cabinet, to step aside in favour of younger faces. With this move,
Quebec premier Bernard Landry gives his party a fresher face in its bid for
re-election.
A Quebec election will
be held either this year or next, and the PQ, re-elected in 1998 under former
premier Lucien Bouchard, wants to become the first Quebec government in 46 years
to win a third consecutive mandate
"Its very dangerous
for a party to succumb to ageism," Chevrette said after a meeting with
Landry on Tuesday.
"Its not age
that dictates whether you can succeed its your ability to achieve,
and I hope our party draws a lesson from that."
David Cliche, 49, who had
served as native affairs minister before Chevrette and once lived in Nunavik
when he worked for the provincial government, quit when it became apparent he
would lose his industry, science and technology cabinet post.
Jacques Brassard, 61, quit
because he would have lost his natural-resources portfolio.
Michel Létourneau
was named minister responsible for northern development.
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