Image by jggrz from Pixabay

Former CAQ minister Maïté Blanchette Vézina open to working with Éric Duhaime

Former CAQ minister Maïté Blanchette Vézina says she is ready to help Conservative leader Éric Duhaime make his voice heard in the National Assembly. She claims to have “certain conservative values.”

“We are in the exploratory stage of seeing how we can work together so that a conservative vision that aligns with my values can be brought to the National Assembly,” she said in an interview with La Presse Canadienne on Thursday evening.

Since he is not elected, Duhaime does not have access to the National Assembly. Vézina could therefore invite him to the parliament so that he can hold a press conference. She could also introduce a bill for him in the Red Room.

Vézina recently had lunch with Duhaime. “We realized that we share certain values, such as wanting to decentralize certain decisions,” said Vézina, who, until recently, was Minister of Natural Resources and Forests in François Legault’s government.

But she has no plans to join the Conservative ranks for the time being. The Rimouski MNA intends to finish her term as an independent.

However, Vézina is not ruling out the possibility of running as a candidate for Duhaime’s party in the 2026 election.

“If I return with a party, it will be one that has a solid vision for the regions. I haven’t read the Conservatives’ platform, so I’m not ready to run for them,” she said.

It should be noted that the PCQ did not elect any members in the 2022 election, despite receiving nearly 13 per cent of the vote.

“I really liked former minister Maïté Blanchette Vézina’s speech about the regions when she left the CAQ two months ago (…) Maïté has conservative values and is sensitive to the fact that 530,000 Quebecers have no voice in the National Assembly,” the Conservative leader wrote on social media on Thursday evening.

In September, Vézina caused a stir when she slammed the door on the CAQ after being excluded from the cabinet.

Upon her departure, she harshly criticized Premier Legault, even calling on him to step down.

At the time, she said she was still convinced of the “relevance of a third way, both inspiring and pragmatic,” and that the CAQ was a “great and wonderful team.”

–This report by La Presse Canadienne was translated by CityNews