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in his own words

Quebec right attacks MNA Amir Khadir

Just a week after being proclaimed the most popular politician in Quebec, Amir Khadir, the only MNA from Quebec solidaire, was out in public again to support a controversial issue knowing it would prompt rabid attacks from his opponents.

Khadir took to the street on Dec. 18 to picket a Montreal shoe store that sells Israeli-made products, as a part of a consumer boycott campaign initiated by the Boycott, Divestment and Sanction group, a Palestinian solidarity organization. While the effectiveness of this tactic for the Palestinian cause is debatable, one ought to commend Amir's courage to stand up for his principle without fearing what it will do to his popularity.

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in his own words

A good year for Québec solidaire

In the past year, Amir Kadir, Québec solidaire's first elected MNA, has become one Québec's most popular personalities. He has won plaudits from all observers and, more importantly, from the public for his performance in and out of the National Assembly. His widely publicized positions denouncing political corruption among the ruling Liberals, supporting the battles against the government's spring austerity budget, or lambasting mining and pharmaceutical corporations, have won him a growing recognition among working people and the wider public.

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Columnists

Which way ahead for Quebec?

The movement for Quebec independence, born in the 1960s, and incarnated by the Parti Québecois, the promoter of Quebec sovereignty, is undergoing severe internal strains, and facing a major external challenge.

Former PQ minister François Legault has organized a Coalition for Québec's Future which is readying itself to contest the next Quebec election. Brandishing a right-of-centre program, Legault, a wealthy one-time Air Transat owner and executive, has promised to set to one side the Quebec independence/sovereignty question for a decade.

in her own words

Defend Nycole Turmel as well as Quebec's right to self-determination

Jack Layton, Nycole Turmel, and Olivia Chow during the federal election campaign in April 2011. Photo: Nycole Turmel/flickr

Just days after being named interim leader of the New Democratic Party, Nycole Turmel has become the target of a vicious attack by the mainstream media in English Canada. Her crime? Supporting Quebec's right to self-determination. Until this latest media assault, Turmel had also been a member of Québec solidaire -- a progressive sovereigntist party in Quebec -- and previously she was a member of the Bloc Québécois.

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rabble news

Will the Orange Wave lift Quebec solidaire too?

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Redeye

What sets Quebec solidaire apart from other political parties

March 2, 2011
| Redeye talks with Roger Rashi, founding member of Quebec Solidaire and a social and political activist living in Montreal.

15:17 minutes (13.99 MB)
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