
Claude Ryan
'Claude Ryan',
CC,
D.h.c. (
January 26,
1925 –
February 9,
2004) was a
Canadian politician and leader of the
Parti libéral du Québec from
1978 to
1982. He was also the
National Assembly of Quebec member for
Argenteuil from 1979 to 1994.
Born in
Montreal, Quebec, he was the
director of ''
Le Devoir'', a French-language
newspaper available in the province of
Quebec, from
1964 to
1978. During his tenure at the head of the editorial staff he became known for his probity and his mastery of contemporary political issues. His advice was sought by nearly all the provincial governments of Quebec, left or right, and by opposition parties.
Ryan garnered national attention during the 1970
October Crisis, when he was accused of participating in a plot to overthrow
Robert Bourassa's recently elected government. Though the plot was later proven to be baseless, it served as a source of tension between Ryan and Prime Minister
Pierre Trudeau, who Ryan suspected of having spread the rumor in an attempt to damage him politically.
As Liberal leader he led the defeat of the
1980 Quebec referendum on sovereignty against
René Lévesque, but then led his party to defeat in the
1981 election and never became
Premier of Quebec. After the Liberals regained power under
Robert Bourassa in the
1985 election, Ryan served as
Minister of Education.
While many in English Canada might remember him for his work against the establishment of a completely independent Quebec, separate from Canada, those who followed his career, as a publisher and later as a politician, have noted that he was also totally opposed to the existing federal status quo, which he considered as too centralized, despite statements to the contrary by the then prime minister of Canada
Pierre Elliott Trudeau.
He
retired from
politics in September
1994 and died in Montreal, on
February 9,
2004 at 4:20
a.m, of
stomach cancer. In 1995, he was made a Companion of the
Order of Canada. In 2006, he was posthumously made a Grand Officer of the
National Order of Quebec.
[1]
After his death, he was the target of bitter insults by controversial sovereignist film director
Pierre Falardeau. Falardeau's comments met with general disapproval from all sides of the political spectrum.
See also
★
Politics of Quebec
★
List of Quebec general elections
★
List of Quebec leaders of the Opposition
★
Timeline of Quebec history
External links
★
National Assembly biography
★
CBC News: Claude Ryan remembered for his 'unshakeable faith' in Canada