Charest, Jean J. from TCE Standard
Charest, Jean J., politician, premier of Québec (b 24 June 1958 at Sherbrooke, Qué). Charest received both his undergraduate degree and a degree in law at Sherbrooke University. He was first elected as Member of Parliament for Sherbrooke in 1984. He was almost immediately appointed the assistant deputy speaker of the House of Commons, a position he held from November 1984 to June 1986. Prime Minister Brian
MULRONEY then made Charest minister of state (youth) and the youngest person ever to serve in the federal Cabinet. Mulroney added the responsibilities of Fitness and Amateur Sport in March 1988 and deputy leader of the House of Commons on 30 January 1989. While in New Zealand for the Commonwealth Games in January 1990, he resigned from Cabinet for having improperly spoken to a judge in a case regarding the Canadian Track and Field Association.
Charest remained a Mulroney favourite and in 1990 the PM appointed him chair of a special committee to study a companion resolution to the Meech Lake Accord. The Charest report, with its proposed modifications to the Meech Lake deal, was the pretext for the departure of Lucien BOUCHARD from the Mulroney Cabinet. Though Charest and Bouchard had been close until then, they have scarcely spoken since.
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L'honorable Marcel Masse, ancien ministre de l'Énergie, des Mines et des Ressources, assiste à une démonstration de poste interactif donnée par Daniel Clavet, du Centre canadien de géomatique. Au premier plan, l'honorable Jean Charest, ministre d'État à la Jeunesse et au Sport amateur (député de Sherbrooke), M. Jean-Paul Pelletier, maire de Sherbrooke, et M. J.H. O'Donnell, sous-ministre adjoint du Secteur des levés, de la cartographie et de la télédétection d'Énergie, Mines et Ressources Canada. |
Charest returned to the Cabinet as minister of the environment on 21 April 1991, leading the Canadian delegation to the Earth Summit in Brazil. He also sat on Cabinet committees on priorities and planning and on Canadian unity and constitutional negotiations.
Charest ran for the leadership of the federal Conservatives in 1993, and finished a strong second to Kim Campbell at the June convention in Ottawa. He was deputy prime minister and minister of industry and science in the short-lived Campbell government. He was then one of only two Conservative Members of Parliament elected in the disastrous campaign lost by Campbell in 1993.
Charest became interim chief of the party on 14 December 1993 and was confirmed as leader (the first French Canadian ever to head the Conservatives) in 1995. He spent the next two years rebuilding the party, fundraising and creating a consensus for a new platform that heavily emphasized conservative economic themes. In the 1997 election, a thinner and fitter Charest was the most effective party leader and clearly won the leaders' debates in both English and French. The Charest Conservatives managed 18% of the national vote and 20 seats overall. Reform, with the same percentage of the vote but concentrated in the West, managed three times the number of seats.
Charest was a powerful and perhaps the decisive voice in the 1995 Québec referendum. His popularity in the province increased thereafter with the polls taken in the summer of 1997 showing him ahead of even premier Lucien Bouchard. When Daniel Johnson resigned as leader of the Québec Liberal party in early 1998, Charest was prevailed upon to accept the leadership. He resigned as Conservative leader on 3 April and became Québec Liberal leader in May.
Charest, a Quebec nationalist whose agenda moves away from separation or sovereignty towards an assertion of Quebec's interests within Canada, defeated the Parti Québécois led by Bernard LANDRY on 14 April 2003. During his administration, he seeks to effect sweeping reforms to the provision of services by privatizing in some areas.
Author NORMAN HILLMER