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attempted to satisfy Quebec's demands with a
Constitutional amendment that would also include an interpretive clause recognizing Quebec's "distinct society". The failure of three provinces to ratify the Accord by the 1990 deadline was widely viewed by French-speaking majority in Quebec as a rejection
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and a clean break with Canada. The two leaders agreed to a compromise position for the referendum: Bouchard would be given one year to negotiate a new deal with Canada following a referendum victory; Parizeau would declare UDI if negotiations failed.
172:, a former PQ Cabinet Minister in René Lévesque government, would lead the PQ back into government in 1994 and quickly set about organizing a referendum on sovereignty for 1995. Parizeau favored a hardline
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movement emerged in the early 1960's during the Quiet
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of Quebec's culture and language. Support for sovereignty soared to record levels well above 50%. Conservative
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over the objections of LĂ©vesque, who demanded more federal powers transferred to Quebec.
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Controversy over antisemitic comments by Quebec politician Yves
Michaud
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Pennsylvania
Politics Today and Yesterday: The Tolerable Accommodation
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and hold a losing referendum on sovereignty in 1980. Prime
Minister
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angrily left the
Conservative caucus to form the sovereigntist
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nationalism based on the Quebec state, the French language and
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and conservative politicians such as Quebec
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232:Category:Political history of Quebec
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