an important step forward. |
And sometimes you have to go to war. |
He presided over a cabinet in which the No. 2 man was Paul Martin, |
I don't think we have to wait for the second report. It's up to the Canadian people to judge this party, the Liberal party. |
I think he made the right decision. The situation has changed. He knows this himself. We have to take this into account and he did. |
I think it's very clear, and the reaction today, on TV, on radio, all of them go in the same sense, ... people say they just don't believe Paul Martin wasn't involved. If he didn't see, it's because he didn't want to see. |
I went around Quebec saying the same thing I just said to you, and I see no opposition at all, |
I'll go issue by issue, just like we did with the Liberals. |
I'm very confident next time, next referendum, we'll win that referendum. |
If the speech stays like this, we're prepared to give the government a chance and vote for (the speech). |
If you develop a foreign policy the way we see it, then we'll have an army that will intervene mainly to secure democracy in some countries, participating in international forces, going when there's a natural catastrophe, either inside Quebec or outside Quebec, |
In other words, it's money talks, |
In Quebec, there is no place for corruption, ... You cannot trust the Liberals, but you can trust the Bloc Québécois. |
In Quebec, there is no place for corruption. You cannot trust the Liberals, but you can trust the Bloc Québécois. |
It could help the country, it could help the farmers, it could help the taxi drivers and so on. We have to do something. This is a crisis. It touches a lot of people, especially the forest people, |