The administrations of Jean Chrétien and Paul Martin, 1993–2006
The new Liberal government faced several challenges, including an ongoing recession, political fragmentation along regional lines, and a resurgence of the independence movement in Quebec. In early 1995 Canada’s self-image was tarnished when the government disbanded the Canadian Airborne Regiment, which had been tainted by charges of torture and murder while serving in Somalia. Shortly thereafter Canada became involved in a dispute with Spain over Spanish commercial fishing in Canadian waters off Newfoundland. A Spanish fishing boat was seized, and tensions mounted between the two countries before an international agreement was negotiated to govern access and assure that depleted stocks would not be overfished.
In October 1995 the country came closer than ever before to political partition. Quebec held another referendum on secession, and this time the separatists were only narrowly defeated, by a margin of 50.6 to 49.4 percent. The independence movement benefited from the charismatic personality of federal representative Lucien Bouchard, who took over the leadership of the Parti Québécois and became premier of Quebec in 1996. As prosperity returned to the country, enthusiasm for independence in Quebec waned, and Bouchard became more pragmatic in his dealings with the federal government and his fellow provincial premiers. The goal remained the same, but, unless secession actually seemed likely, confrontation was to be avoided. In the meantime the federal government attempted to mollify Quebec by pursuing a policy of “distinct status” for the province but assuring, through legislation called the Clarity Bill, that any future referendum would require federal approval and involvement.
A new generation of Canadians—both inside and outside Quebec—seemed less concerned with the sovereignty issue and more interested in the opportunities that had emerged with NAFTA and its resultant prosperity. Economic growth—and the tax bounty that accompanied it—permitted provincial governments and the federal government to secure their fiscal position, though not without considerable rancour. Payments from Ottawa to the provinces were reduced as Chrétien was determined to balance the federal budget; in similar fashion, provincial governments shifted costs to municipal governments and individual citizens, who frequently found themselves without services they had come to expect or, in some cases, paying for those services with increased or new taxes and user fees. Prosperity camouflaged many problems encountered by the middle and upper classes, but working-class and unemployed Canadians found themselves without support. In some provinces, particularly Alberta and Ontario, both under the leadership of Progressive Conservatives, the cost cutting was ideological, deep, and divisive. Tax cuts in these provinces, particularly for wealthier citizens, were viewed as a panacea for Canada’s economic and social ills.
Although opposition parties enjoyed electoral success at the provincial level, they rarely won nationally. The Liberal Party, seen by many Canadians as the natural governing party, secured its position through its accommodating positions and its strength, particularly in the ridings (districts) of Ontario. Chrétien’s leadership was not dynamic, but it appeared competent and satisfactory, especially because his term was accompanied by a buoyant economy. In 1997 the Liberals were reelected. Although they won fewer than two-fifths of the vote, they captured 101 of Ontario’s 103 seats in the House of Commons and secured a governing majority. The Reform Party, which won 57 of the 74 ridings in Alberta, British Columbia, and Saskatchewan, supplanted the Bloc Québécois to become the official opposition party. Chrétien’s popularity began to wane in the late 1990s; by 2000, efforts to unite Canada’s conservatives bore some fruit with the creation of the Canadian Alliance, which elected as its leader Alberta’s former provincial treasurer Stockwell Day, who became the leader of the opposition in Ottawa. Nonetheless, the opposition was still split, consisting of parties as disparate as the conservative Canadian Alliance, the nationalist Bloc Québécois, and the socialist New Democratic Party (NDP), and in the 2000 general election the Liberals were able to achieve a comfortable majority in the House of Commons, securing a third term for Chrétien—Canada’s first prime minister to win three successive majorities since 1945.
Chrétien stepped down as leader in 2003 to be replaced by his former finance minister, Paul Martin. Almost immediately, a series of financial scandals broke regarding massive government largesse to certain advertising firms in Quebec, notably at the time of and following the 1995 referendum. In addition, the Canadian Alliance and the Progressive Conservatives joined forces as the Conservative Party of Canada, forming a more unified opposition to the Liberals. The Liberals, however, won a fourth consecutive electoral victory in 2004, though Martin was denied an overall majority.
Martin’s Liberal minority government struggled to maintain power, but it nevertheless pursued major reforms of health care policy and legalized same-sex marriage. Hanging over the government, however, was the financial scandal in Quebec. A report on it from the Gomery Commission in November 2005 confirmed that the Liberals and their supporters had received excessive payments and was critical of Chrétien, though Martin himself was personally exonerated. Later that month the Liberals lost a vote-of-confidence motion in the House of Commons, and in the subsequent elections in January 2006 the Conservatives were elected to oversee a minority government; their leader, Stephen Harper, became prime minister.
Roger D. Hall