
(Quebec) Widely ahead in the polls, Jean Charest refused to play cautious, last night in a debate heads to trade lively, colorful, entertaining and sometimes cacophonous. The Liberal received the first attack against the PQ Pauline Marois and adequacy Mario Dumont, from the first exchange between opponents. As expected, they were more often than not ignored each other during the evening to gang up against Mr. Charest. On some occasions, they have even expressed agreement with one another. The fight heads Version elections in 2008, has had nothing to do with the previous confrontation. Both the outgoing prime minister seemed lazy in 2007, so it took the initiative. Mario Dumont began the evening by putting forward the words courage and boldness. The different themes were the opportunity to showcase its most original ideas, such as private health or a school building on Quebec discipline. Throughout the evening, Pauline Marois kept smiling and hammered the same message against the Liberals. "It's wonderful, she joked. Mr. Charest (government) for six years and is responsible for anything. " Mr. Charest opened the duel in addressing viewers. An economic storm rose, he said. He invited Quebecers to be "of the Gauls and resist" the winds. Replica of a Pauline Marois who has not fouled once in the names and numbers throughout the evening: his Liberal opponent think that its interests and hiding the truth about what happens to the Caisse et placement du Quebec. "It can not continue like this," said the leader of the Parti Quebecois. Dumont relaxed The adequacy Mario Dumont appeared surprisingly relaxed despite opinion polls that predict nothing less than the disappearance of his political party. From the outset, the head of the Democratic Action summed up his political approach. "Working for you, your family, your portfolio." The first confrontation between the three focused on health. The head of the Quebec Liberal Party has accused more than once elsewhere, Ms. Marois to have no regrets for having retired thousands of doctors and nurses in the 1990s. He turned to Mr. Dumont to divert the theme to the adequacy of promise cut $ 2 billion in the state. "If someone is literally scare Quebecers, you," he said to Mario Dumont. The PQ leader and his counterpart adéquiste have joined to denounce a promise that the Liberal could never keep: to eliminate waiting lists. "Your balance is a real fiasco," said Marois. (...) You do not even capable of building a hospital, the CHUM in Montreal. The adequacy returned his two adversaries back to back. Difficult to distinguish who did the most harm to the network of health. The head and founder of the ADQ came back with its proposal for "more private health". Losses apprehended with the Caisse de depot et placement du Quebec stole the spotlight at the block on finance. Ms. Marois and Mr. Dumont have launched new assaults for figures on the losses. Liberal leader fell on his favorite line of defense: it can not interfere in the affairs of the Fund. "You know, losses, launched Mr. Dumont. I find it sad. The people of Toronto have learned through the newspapers in Quebec, pensions are threatened. "To Pauline Marois," we will not hide the truth to people. " Jean Charest has repeatedly sought to know in detail where Mr. Dumont intends to slash the state apparatus to reach $ 2 billion. In education, all agree to reduce the pupil-teacher ratio in schools. The PQ fired red balls on the Charest government has put "Quebec in fire and blood" with the crisis of loans and scholarships and has "done nothing" against school dropout. The adequacy insisted on a school building on "effort" and concerned "guys" who receive massive studies. The exchanges on culture have been a singular moment of combat leaders. Pauline Marois has returned to his opponent's suitability for asking: "Are we capable of putting all our energy" budget and to repatriate powers from Ottawa? It held that it wishes to move to this request beyond neglect any means, including the referendum. Mr. Dumont replied that it was already agreed on such a request, but he doubted whether a sovereignist party, as is the PQ can convince the federal government to cede an inch of its jurisdiction. The Liberal wanted to use these words to lock his opponents in the same bag. "While we are facing an economic storm," said Jean Charest unchecked, the ADQ and the PQ proposes to change the Canadian constitution. The outgoing prime minister Pauline Marois accused of wanting a "constitutional crisis". Answer it is funny because "the king of referendums is Jean Charest, who held 89 on the demerger." Both politicians appeared in dark suits, Mr. Charest blue tie, Mr. Dumont in shades of gold. Ms. Marois was dressed in black. The convener Stéphan Bureau has never lost control. His only stumble? He addressed to "Ms. Charest during the debate.
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