:''This article is about the term "État québécois". For the government of Quebec, see
Politics of Quebec and
National Assembly of Quebec.''
The
French language expression '''État québécois''' (
English: ''Quebec State'') or '''État du Québec''' is a term used by some
Quebecers to refer to their
province or provincial government.
Meaning
The term is commonly used by
Quebec sovereigntists, but is also used by nationalists not necessarily favouring
independence.
To the separatists, the word ''État,'' or "
state", signifies that
Quebec is a national government representing the homeland of a
people, a
nation, as in ''l'
État français'' or ''l'
État italien.'' However, no entity legally named "State of Quebec" exists.
The intent of the word ''État'' is to imply that Quebec is, or ought to be, a
state in the legal sense. Frequently, however, the wording used in a given context says only that the government of Quebec is a "state" institution, and it is intentionally left unclear whether this refers to the Canadian state or an independent Quebec state. For example, "
crown corporation" can be expressed as ''société d'État'' without any nationalist connotation. Also, similar to the
English word "state", ''état'', when not capitalized, can mean "state of being" or "establishment". (
French uses capitalization to contrast ''État'', the legal term, with ''état'', the more general meaning, but this does not distinguish usage in proper nouns.) Ironically, ''Quebec Establishment'', while not the usual intent of this expression, could be considered a correct description of Quebec's legal status as a province.
The term was used in the title of a law passed by the governing ''
Parti Québécois'' in the
National Assembly of Quebec in
2000 titled an ''
Act respecting the exercise of the fundamental rights and prerogatives of the Québec people and the Québec State''. This symbolic document was the separatists' rebuttal of the
Clarity Act, a Canadian
statute that describes in detail the
referendum conditions that need to be met before the Government of Canada would enter into any form of discussion with representatives from the Province of Quebec concerning that Province's status in Canada.
Origins
The term, with
nationalist undertones, first became popular in
Quebec during the
Quiet Revolution. It was used especially by
Jean Lesage and the members of his
Liberal government as an alternative to ''Province de Québec'' ("Province of Quebec"), the official name given by the
British Parliament to its colony of Quebec and reaffirmed as part of the nation of Canada in the
British North America Act.
Reasons
The term "
province" is seen by a relatively small minority of Quebeckers as less dignified, even contemptuous, for two main reasons.
★ "Province" is used for the nine
English-majority provinces. From the
Quebec nationalist perspective, Quebec forms a
nation, distinct from both
English Canada and
French Canada, and should not be put on the level of a regional entity.
★ "Province" is also a legacy of the
British colonial empire and the
Seven Years' War when France chose to give up its colony in the northern part of
New France in preference to
Guadaloupe. The expression
Province of Quebec was the first name for this territory that became part of territory already under British administration (later
Lower Canada,
Canada East, then
Province of Quebec again), and "province" as a legal term was the equivalent of
colony. This was consistent with the
Quiet Revolution, presented by many of its proponents and architects as a process of
decolonization.
See also
Modern Quebec
Conquest and colonialism
★
Articles of Capitulation of Montreal
★
Articles of Capitulation of Quebec
★
Battle of the Plains of Abraham
★
British colonization of the Americas
★
British Empire
★
French colonization of the Americas
★
New France
★
Quebec Act
★
Seven Years' War
★
Treaty of Paris