Québec solidaire (QS) insisted that training on climate change for deputies be mandatory, but not all of its 12 elected officials participated.
This was learned by The Canadian Press on Wednesday.
The training was given by experts at the National Assembly on Tuesday 18 April.
However, even if QS makes the environment its hobbyhorse, four elected members of its caucus out of 12, the parliamentary leader of QS, Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois, as well as the deputies Sol Zanetti, Étienne Grandmont and Andrés Fontecilla were absent.
“We had the link [de visioconférence] for the deputies who could not [être présents] on the first date, so it will be done soon, ”wrote a training communications manager, Stéphanie Guèvremont, Wednesday afternoon.
Mr. Nadeau-Dubois was absent due to a “family issue”, it was specified, while the three other deputies participated in a “public meeting on social housing”.
This training was of symbolic importance. It was a cross-partisan initiative and it comes from the government.
However, last year, at the request of former PQ member Sylvain Gaudreault, a similar training was organized before the dissolution of the House and the elections.
Last December, the government returned to the charge this time. The Minister of the Environment, Benoit Charette, had a motion adopted to invite various organizations “to organize, as soon as possible, cross-party training for MPs on climate change”.
QS then insisted that the motion include a passage on the mandatory nature of training for all MPs, but this was not retained in the final wording.
Mr. Charette then argued that it was easier to bring together “three deputies, or ten, or twenty, than 90 deputies”. QS then ensured on a daily basis The duty that all his chosen ones would take part in it.
The Coalition avenir Québec (CAQ) confirmed that 70 deputies out of 90 were registered and that Premier François Legault, like his Minister of the Environment, Benoit Charrette, were there.
However, the CAQ cannot guarantee that all of its registered MNAs took part.
The Liberal Party, for its part, confirmed that 15 of its 19 elected officials took part in the meeting and that the others were going to watch it.
Finally, the Parti Québécois (PQ) indicated that its three deputies were there.
Quebec’s Chief Scientist, Rémi Quirion, along with the Chair of the Climate Change Advisory Committee, Alain Webster, and the General Manager of the Ouranos Consortium, Alain Bourque, gave the training.
A second part of the training should follow this fall. It will focus on “accelerating climate action, Quebec’s options for reducing greenhouse gases (GHGs) and adapting to climate change”.
Chief Scientist of Quebec since 2011, Mr. Quirion is responsible for advising the government on all kinds of scientific issues.
Mr. Webster and his committee are responsible for advising the Minister of the Environment on policies, programs and strategies to fight climate change.