This is a breakthrough for the new leftist Quebec Solidaire party. The right 
wing ADQ party self-destructed giving the Liberals a slim majority. 

This is from the Canadian Medicine blog:

http://canadianmedicine.blogspot.com/2008/12/left-wing-md-elected-as-quebec-gives.html

Tuesday, December 9, 2008
Left-wing MD elected as Quebec gives Liberals a majority
 
In yesterday's Quebec election, voters returned Jean Charest's Liberal Party to 
majority status in the legislature by a small margin, largely thanks to the 
epic collapse of the right-wing ADQ.

The election results marked a number of milestones. Turnout was the lowest 
since 1927; Mr Charest became the first Quebec premier in over 50 years to win 
a third mandate; and Mario Dumont, the only leader the ADQ has known, quit as 
head of the party after they lost 34 of the 41 seats they held going into the 
election.

But the most important milestone with regard to the future of the province's 
controversial healthcare debate was the election of the physician Amir Khadir 
(right) in the Montreal riding of Mercier as the first-ever representative 
elected from Québec solidaire, the left-wing, feminist, separatist party 
established in 2006.

The Montreal Gazette described his victory party last night as follows:

Greeted with rock star adoration by the young, hip crowd, the outspoken 
Iranian-born physician hailed his victory and advances in a handful of other 
ridings as signs Quebecers are thirsting for a new political order – one where 
“the economy services society” rather than the other way around.
Dr Khadir, who moved to Quebec as a child, attended medical school in Montreal 
and went on to become a microbiologist and infectious-diseases specialist. He 
currently works at a hospital in the Montreal suburb of Lachenaie, and told 
Pierre Foglia of La Presse that he wants to keep working there one day out of 
fifteen. (An admirable goal, no doubt -- but we'll have to wait to find out 
whether it's really doable for an opposition member in a National Assembly held 
by only a slim majority.)

His medical experience extends far beyond the Montreal area. As a member of the 
humanitarian medical aid groups such as Médecins du monde, the group founded by 
a breakaway faction of Médecins sans frontières physicians including now-French 
Foreign Minister Dr Bernard Kouchner, Dr Khadir has worked in Iraq, Palestine, 
Zimbabwe, Afghanistan, Cuba, Nicaragua and India.

Most pertinently for his new job in government is his membership in a Quebec 
advocacy group known as the Coalition of Doctors for Social Justice. The group 
has in recent years emerged as one of the province's loudest groups opposing 
what it sees as, at a minimum, the Liberal government's failure to protect the 
public healthcare system from encroaching privatization caused by chronic 
funding and staffing shortfalls, or, worse, as the government's sometimes 
active though subtle encouragement of medicare privatization, as in the case of 
the post-Chaoulli Bill 33.

Québec solidaire's health platform reflects Dr Khadir's thinking on the 
subject: he has called for banning all forms of private healthcare for 
medically necessary services, increased funding for prevention, and a huge 
expansion of the public insurance plan's coverage that would include a number 
of delisted services including dentistry, optometry and psychotherapy. Of 
course, with only one party member elected to the National Assembly, those 
goals won't be realized as Dr Khadir might like them to be. But given his 
background and his campaign's focus on the healthcare system and its continuing 
problems, Quebecers should expect to hear a lot of his criticism of the 
government's work on the health portfolio. In this campaign video, Dr Khadir 
outlined his thinking on healthcare with a didactic presentation (in French) on 
a whiteboard:

           

Dr Khadir's radical approach to the healthcare system, by virtue of being so 
far left, might permit the PQ to shift its position to the left in response. 
"It’s the job of the left to move the center,” as the Montreal-born left-wing 
journalist Naomi Klein said in a New Yorker profile this month. “Get out there 
and say some crazy stuff! And then, suddenly, it’ll seem more reasonable for 
politicians to take riskier positions.”

Photo: Québec solidaire


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