Jean Charest
Jean Charest (born June 24, 1958) is a Canadian lawyer, politician, and the premier of Quebec. His legal name is John James Charest.Born in Sherbrooke, Quebec, he worked as a lawyer from 1981 until he was elected Progressive Conservative member of Parliament for Sherbrooke in the 1984 election. In 1986, at age 28, he was appointed to Brian Mulroney's cabinet as minister of state for youth, the youngest Cabinet minister in Canadian history. In 1988 he became minister of state for fitness and amateur sport, and Environment minister in 1991.
After Mulroney's retirement Charest was a candidate at the 1993 Progressive Conservative leadership convention, impressing many and placing a strong second to the frontrunner going in, Defence Minister Kim Campbell. Charest served as Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Industry, Science and Technology in Campbell's cabinet.
In the 1993 election, the party was swept from power and elected only two candidates out of 295 electoral districts (ridings)—Charest himself and Elsie Wayne.
In April 1995 he became party leader and launched a rebuilding effort. In the 1997 election the Tories received 19% of the vote, but won only 20 seats out of 301, mostly in Atlantic Canada. The party was back from the brink, but Charest himself considered the result a disappointment.
In April 1998 Charest left federal politics to become leader of the Quebec Liberal Party (not affiliated with the federal Liberals).
In the 1998 Quebec election, the Liberals received more votes than the incumbent Parti QuÃÂébÃÂécois, but because the Liberal vote was concentrated in fewer ridings, the PQ won enough seats to form another majority government. In terms of the number of National Assembly seats held by the two parties, the results were almost identical to the previous election of 1994 under Liberal leader Daniel Johnson, Jr
In the April 2003 election Charest was elected premier of Quebec with a majority government, ending nine years of rule by the PQ.
Declaring that he had a mandate to reform health care, cut taxes, reduce spending and reduce the size of government, Charest prepared an ambitious neoliberal agenda. However, as of early 2004 he has encountered substantial opposition from unions and other groups and he and his party have suffered considerable loss of popularity in the polls. So far, much of Charest's political agenda remains unimplemented.
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Elections as party leader
Canada: He lost the 1997 election.
Quebec: He lost the 1998 election and won the 2003 election.
See also
External links
Preceded by:
Bernard Landry
List of Quebec premiers
Succeeded by:
incumbent
Preceded by:
Don MazankowskiDeputy Prime Minister of Canada
Succeeded by:
Sheila Copps
Preceded by:
Kim Campbell
Progressive Conservative Leaders
Followed by:
Elsie Wayne