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Canada United, Quebec Divided
in
EDITORIALS
/ INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENTS
/ POLITICS ANDGOVERNMENT
/ REFERENDUMS
1995
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Canada United, Quebec Divided
in
EDITORIALS
/ INDEPENDENCE MOVEMENTS
/ POLITICS ANDGOVERNMENT
/ REFERENDUMS
1995
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Newspaper Article
Canada United, Quebec Divided
1995
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Overview
What is needed now is healing and a constructive dialogue with the rest of Canada over Quebec's legitimate political grievances. Canada's latest Constitution, dating only to 1982, eroded Quebec's traditional status as Canada's largest province and the citadel of one of its two founding cultures. Revising the Constitution to restore to Quebec the weight it deserves in Canadian affairs would honor both the majority who put their faith in Canada and the minority who voted for a sovereign Quebec closely linked to Ottawa. Quebec's separatist movement helped inspire and lead a \"quiet revolution\" of intellectual, cultural and economic renewal in a once-sleepy province. Quebec now has its own dynamic business class. Its people enjoy an enviable living standard and its politicians hold many of Canada's top national posts. Separatists want firm guarantees for Quebec's distinctive identity as well. Achieving these guarantees within the Canadian Constitution is the right response to Monday's divided vote.
Publisher
New York Times Company
Subject
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