June 11, 2012 - 10:11 PM
MONTREAL - Premier Jean Charest's Liberals were poised to hold on to one of their strongholds in Quebec byelections Monday night but faced a strong challenge in another that the governing party has held for nearly the last half-century.
The Parti Quebecois had pulled ahead of the Liberals in Argenteuil riding, north of Montreal, which has been a Liberal fortress for almost a half-century and was once the fiefdom of Liberal leader Claude Ryan.
The riding had been held by David Whissell, who quit Charest's cabinet to devote more time to his construction business.
There was better news for the Liberals in Montreal-area Lafontaine riding, where they held a comfortable lead over the PQ and Coalition For Quebec's Future.
Lafontaine became vacant earlier this year after the resignation of former Liberal Tony Tomassi, who quit his seat in the legislature to fight fraud and breach of trust charges.
Tomassi, who was once Charest's family minister, left the Liberal party and caucus in 2010 after allegations of improper use of a credit card issued by a private company to him while he was a member of the legislature.
Premier Jean Charest called the byelections after months of unrest in the province due to student protests over tuition fees which have occasionally turned violent.
An inquiry into construction industry corruption and the awarding of public contracts, which Charest resisted calling for almost two years before yielding to public pressure, has also just gotten underway.
News from © The Canadian Press, 2012