Politics
Ex-Montreal police chief could change Quebec election

Ex-police chief Jacques Duchesneau

Credits: QMI AGENCY

BRIAN DALY | QMI AGENCY

MONTREAL - Quebec's upstart third party scored the coup of the young election campaign, as the province's former anti-corruption czar is poised to run for the Coalition Avenir Quebec party (CAQ).

Jacques Duchesneau, former Montreal police chief and one-time head of Canada's air-security watchdog, will be a candidate for the CAQ (Coalition for the Future of Quebec), sources told QMI Agency on Friday.
CAQ Leader Francois Legault didn't confirm the news Friday, but he could make the announcement as early as Saturday.

Securing Duchesneau would be a major coup for Legault, who is poised for a breakthrough among voters tired of Liberal corruption allegations and PQ talk of separation.

Duchesneau would also have plenty of potentially embarrassing information on both traditional parties.
He shook up Quebec's political class by leaking his own anti-corruption report to the media after he got the impression the Liberal government would shelve it.

Last fall he referred to the mob as the construction industry's "silent partner" that strong-arms firms through a "pizzo," or protection tax, while enforcing the law of silence known as omerta.
Some of the ill-gotten gains were allegedly kicked back to municipal and provincial parties.

Premier Jean Charest called a public inquiry last year after Duchesneau made his revelations.

The election will be held on Sept 4. Charest is seeking his fourth consecutive mandate, but a poll earlier this week indicated the PQ had a slight lead in popular support just before Charest called the election Wednesday.
Sun News Videos

Christina Blizzard on the Ontario budget striptease

Christina Blizzard says that Andrea Horwath is engaged in a striptease, pulling off parts of Kathleen Wynne's budget.


Tim Hudak on Wynne's scandals

Ontario PC leader Tim Hudak says it's time to change the government in Ontario.


Gawker editor broke alleged Ford crack story

Gawker editor John Cook speaks with Brian Dunstan about the breaking the alleged Rob Ford crack video and what he saw in the video.

Ezra Levant’s The Source is the most provocative and thought-changing multimedia show in Canada.

This show is 100% focused on the political battles taking place across Canada, in the United States...even around the world.

Michael Coren brings you strong, balanced opinions to challenge conventional thinking.

Canada’s ‘everyman’ moves beyond the mainstream to search out the most interesting talkable topics in the world.

Byline brings you the stories you won’t hear anywhere else while exploring points of view that are all too often ignored.