Quebec: Canadians Feel Country Would Be Just Fine Without The Province

The Huffington Post Canada  |  By Eric Grenier Posted: 03/16/2012 8:57 am Updated: 03/16/2012 9:01 am

A majority of Canadians outside Quebec think the country would fare just as well or better without the francophone province, while almost three-quarters feel the province will never be satisfied with whatever concessions the federal government may make. These are the findings of a new poll which indicates Canadians have little sympathy for Quebec.

Léger Marketing conducted this survey for the QMI Agency between February 28 and March 5, polling 2,509 Canadians.

Though 80 per cent of Canadians feel that everything should be done to ensure everyone has a sense of belonging to Canada, 75 per cent say they have grown tired of the national unity debate.

But they also think the waters between Ottawa and Quebec City have calmed. Fully two-thirds of Canadians outside the province think relations have improved or stayed the same between the two governments. This is in sharp contrast to the 54 per cent of Quebecers who feel they have worsened.

A plurality of citizens in the rest of the country would rather not bother. Though 39 per cent see Quebec as an asset, 43 per cent think it is a burden for Canada. That proportion increases to 57 per cent in Alberta.

More than any other province or region, Quebec is identified as the part of the country that gets more than its fair share from confederation by Canadians living outside Quebec (36 per cent). Quebecers, on the other hand, identified the West as the most spoiled region (37 per cent).

However, Canadians do identify Quebec as being different from the rest of the country. A slim majority said so outside of the province, while 82 per cent of Quebecers agreed they are different. But 72 per cent of Canadians outside of Quebec said the province will always be dissatisfied, no matter what concessions the federal government may make.

This is perhaps the reason why 21 per cent of non-Quebece Canadians feel Canada would be better off without the province, while 40 per cent say the country would fare just as well. Fully 73 per cent think Quebec would be worse off on its own, compared to only 43 per cent of Quebecers who think the same thing.

Despite a majority feeling Canada would not suffer without Quebec, only 16 per cent of Canadians in the rest of the country want Quebec to become a separate country. Three-quarters of respondents want Quebec to remain Canadian, compared to 45 per cent of Quebecers who support independence.

But little more than one in 10 Canadians outside Quebec believe the province will achieve that independence, compared to one-third of Quebecers. But, if Quebec did vote in favour of sovereignty and demanded recognition by the United Nations as an independent country, 41 per cent of Canadians would want the federal government to block the request. Only 36 per cent would accept the demand. This is in sharp contrast to the 70 per cent of Quebecers (which includes both sovereigntists and federalists) who would want Canada to recognize this hypothetical referendum’s result. Only 16 per cent of Quebecers hope the federal government would try to prevent the province gaining independence.

The relationship that exists between Quebecers and Canadians in the rest of the country continues to be a complicated one. The likelihood national unity will become a hot topic in Canada in the near future appears remote, but the gap separating the two solitudes appears as wide as ever.

Éric Grenier taps The Pulse of federal and regional politics for Huffington Post Canada readers on most Tuesdays and Fridays. Grenier is the author of ThreeHundredEight.com, covering Canadian politics, polls, and electoral projections.

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A majority of Canadians outside Quebec think the country would fare just as well or better without the francophone province, while almost three-quarters feel the province will never be satisfied with ...
A majority of Canadians outside Quebec think the country would fare just as well or better without the francophone province, while almost three-quarters feel the province will never be satisfied with ...
 
 
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11:51 AM on 09/02/2012
Quebec is turning into what they previously have tried so hard to fight against during the Quiet Revolution. One of their most popular parties is promoting their own dictatorial agendas. Quebec is going down fast. Our stupid government funnels copious amounts of money into Quebec to atone for what happened by the hands of others decades ago and now we are seeing the tables have completely turned. Visiting Montreal for the first time this summer was so underwhelming. My parents raved about it but they also said Montreal went downhill. So many bums, drunks and druggies were rampant of the streets. You had to hope that no one would smash your car in the hotel parking lot (because that happens all the time.) By the way we were staying at a fairly nice hotel. Overall Montreal was boring and lacked diversity. I would go to NYC again in a heartbeat. Even Toronto has far more to offer than Montreal. I have a feeling that with all the public assistance handed to Quebec on a silver plate that they will never separate.
04:05 PM on 04/24/2012
I wouldn't feel bad about Quebec separating. As long as it is done peacefully and equitably, we can get along in things that matter - trade, travel, economy etc. - and do without the irritants. I don't believe it would be easy for Quebec, though. Without the rest of us here to carry them, they would struggle.

As for them being "different", well, you've got that right.
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Kenneth T Tellis
03:24 PM on 04/18/2012
Would Canada be better off without KEBEC? You can bet your life it would. Canada without those Metis Bastards who falsely claim to be FRENCH will advance as fast as the US did. Because Canada would no longer be shackled by these Metis misfits who want everything butcontribute nothing to the National Coffers.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Canada Libre
Le Canada c’est le Québec. Vive le Canada libre
01:11 PM on 04/18/2012
Eric Grenier - Huffington post : ''A majority of Canadians outside Quebec think the country would fare just as well or better without the francophone province.''

Of course ! Decades of propaganda against Québec can not be in vain.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Canada Libre
Le Canada c’est le Québec. Vive le Canada libre
01:11 PM on 04/18/2012
Eric Grenier - Huffington post : ''three-quarters feel the province will never be satisfied with whatever concessions the federal government may make''

Of course ! A nation can never be satisfied to remain submitted to another nation.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Canada Libre
Le Canada c’est le Québec. Vive le Canada libre
01:10 PM on 04/18/2012
Eric Grenier - Huffington post : ''Canadians have little sympathy for Quebec''

Most anglos are not Canadians. They want nothing to do with the Canadien culture, the Canadien language, the canadien history and the Canadien identity. This polls just proves that, again.

Québécois and francophones in other provinces and territories of canada are the Canadiens.

That said, it is okay to have no sympathy for foreign nations, just at long as there is sufficient respect.
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Adrian31
60% of the time, it works everytime...
05:26 PM on 03/26/2012
Of course we'd be fine without Quebec. In fact, there'd be more federal money to finally go to other provinces. There'd be much less whining as well.

I'm sick of seeing this stuff - take it off the front page. Nobody cares anymore.
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dread
04:56 PM on 03/26/2012
On three trips to the east coast we went through Quebec. We found the staff in restaurants, gas stations and motels to generally be " unpleasant " toward us. We now cross at Niagara Falls and travel via NY, Vermont and Maine. These states appreciate the tourist dollars and are generally "quite pleasant". From our perspective they have already separated.
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Bumpers car
Fish till you die
06:21 PM on 03/26/2012
I gave up on going through Quebec years ago and refuse to spend anything in that province because of this never ending nonsense.. I cross at Cornwall and go through NY, Vermont, New Hampshire and Main. 150 Km shorter to N B and a lot cheaper. Takes about the same amount of time but food, gas and motel if you need one are all a lot cheaper. Scenery is better and the roads, though 2 lane mostly, are excellent.
04:08 PM on 03/21/2012
We don't need Quebec to leave. We need a re-confederation. The existing provinces and their boundaries made sense at the time of confederation. If Quebec did separate. Let's imagine what would be left. There would be a few distinct regions.

Pacific Coast & Mountains.
The Prairies
The far north.
Northern Ontario and Manitoba
Southern Ontario and the GTA Golden Horseshoe
Quebec
The Atlantic region.

I don't think any of them would be as successful alone as they would be within a larger Canada.

Those regions should re-confederate to form a new Canada.

Not one where PEI exists as a Province, but where the Maritimes existed as one greater region with representation in a new Canadian Parliament.

The other option would to to petition to become a protectorate of the United States. Given how that country runs it's politics and international relations, I don't think Canadians would want to become the next Peurto Rico.
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logicanada
Blogger, radio co-host, writer, editor, voice-over
11:33 PM on 03/20/2012
2,509 Canadians. Hmmmm. What exact percentage is that of 34 million people. Honestly Huffpo, why publish this divisive drivel as fact? You're not in the US here.
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07:42 PM on 03/20/2012
they are not worth the excessive cost to the rest of us, there is never enough and they are never satisfied and it never ends, it's the #1 industry there and they have made billions out of it. If they want go then bon voyage
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07:26 AM on 03/20/2012
WE LOVE QUEBEC, Huff post= period, basta, done, no more....
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BCSLAVE
Got a key?
06:40 PM on 03/19/2012
Breaking up the country is a bad idea and just plain dumb and dumber.

Was this poll another one taken exclusively from the Calgary area like the Harper support polls seem to be?
04:26 PM on 03/19/2012
Living in Quebec the last 6 yrs the big difference I notice is
1. the roads are a joke
2. people are much more emotional, both happier and ruder
3. Lot higher % of smokers
4/ You can buy beer and wine in the grocery store.
5. Rent can be very cheap
6. Store hours are very restrictive
7. Lot more disposible income from the Govt checks and the $7 daycare
04:23 PM on 03/19/2012
The only real objection I have to them seperating is that it was won by the English, it should be kept by the English or given back to the natives.

In hindsight we should have just bought it from France like the US did in the Louisiana purchase.