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État québécois


For the Government of Quebec, see Politics of Quebec.

L'État québécois and l'État du Québec (in English the Quebec State) are terms used by some citizens of the Canadian Province of Quebec to refer to their government and territory, as a preferred alternative to province du Québec.

Contents

Meaning

The terms are much used by sovereigntists, but can be used by nationalists not necessarily favouring independence.

For the sovereigntists who use this term, the word État, or State, is used to signify that to their way of thinking, Quebec is a national government representing the homeland of a people, a nation, as in l'État français or l'État italien. However, France and Italy are countries whereas Quebec is a province of the country of Canada and no such legal entity as the Quebec State exists.

Origins

The term, with nationalist undertones, first became popular in Quebec during the Quiet Revolution. It was used especially by Jean Lesage and the members of his federalist nationalist Liberal government.

Reasons

Sovereigntists see the term province as less dignified, even contemptuous, for two reasons.

Modern use

The word province being increasingly unpopular and taboo for many sovereigntists in Quebec nowadays, État québécois and État du Québec are often heard in the modern Quebec French of its citizens and politicians who support the Quebec sovereignty movement.

The latter was used in the title of the symbolic law passed by the governing Parti Quebecois' majority members in the National Assembly of Quebec in 2000 titled an Act respecting the exercise of the fundamental rights and prerogatives of the Québec people and the Québec State. This symbolic document was the sovereigntists rebuttal of the Clarity Act, a Canadian Law that describes in details the conditions that need to be met before a declaration of independance can be legally valid.

See also

Modern Quebec

Conquest and colonialism

01-04-2007 01:30:44
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