Pubdate: Thu, 03 Nov 2005 Source: Montreal Gazette (CN QU) Copyright: 2005 The Gazette, a division of Southam Inc. Contact: http://www.canada.com/montreal/montrealgazette/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/274 Author: Don MacPherson COCAINE QUESTIONS HARD TO KICK Andre Boisclair might be too popular for his own good. And the polls that for the past couple of months have given him an ever-widening lead in the Parti Quebecois leadership campaign might actually be hurting him. They have encouraged him to adopt the classic front-runner's strategy of avoiding risk and, in particular, to duck questions about his admitted past cocaine use, questions that it might be in his long-term interests to answer. This week, his representative cancelled a scheduled interview with The Gazette's editorial board, explaining that the candidate will not give any in-depth interviews until after the leadership vote, which will be conducted by telephone Nov. 13-15. But Boisclair can't make the cocaine questions go away simply by running from them. While Liberals silently hope they'll face Boisclair as the PQ's next leader, sovereignist adversaries appeared yesterday to be using the cocaine issue in a last-ditch effort to stop his election. Le Devoir reported that fringe leadership candidate Jean Ouimet said in an interview that Boisclair had shown questionable judgment in using cocaine and would be "a time bomb" as PQ leader. Ouimet has been negotiating a stop-Boisclair alliance with Boisclair's leading rival, Pauline Marois. And Le Journal de Montreal published a letter from a well-known sovereignist writer saying it's too risky for the PQ to choose Boisclair as leader and he should pull out of the race. Victor-Levy Beaulieu also made it clear that he's no admirer of past moderate leaders of the PQ. He told me yesterday that he is a party member and is "favourable" toward Marois, since his first choice, left-wing candidate Pierre Dubuc, has no chance of winning. The Radio-Canada television public-affairs program Enjeux ran a report on the controversy. While it disclosed no new information about Boisclair's cocaine use, it did contain interview clips of several observers saying that Boisclair needs to submit to interviews on the subject to put the matter behind him. One of these observers is a Universite Laval political science professor, Anne-Marie Gingras, who emphasized in an interview yesterday that it's a question of public interest. Gingras, who said she has no partisan interest in whether Boisclair wins the PQ leadership, said he could become premier, making him "responsible for enforcing the law." She was not satisfied by his assurances that while he used cocaine as a cabinet minister, it never affected his job performance, and that he stopped several years ago. Among the questions he needed to answer were when he used cocaine and how often he used it. And the appropriate forum for him to answer was not in the hurried disorder of a scrum, but in a sit-down interview on television. Only then could the electorate make an informed decision. Gingras said Boisclair should not put too much stock in polls suggesting that his popularity increased after he admitted to having used cocaine, since public opinion is fickle. But while Gingras deplored that emphasis on strategic considerations reduces politics to "a game between politicians and journalists," strategic considerations have no doubt influenced Boisclair's handling of the cocaine issue. The polls quickly assured him that he had won his wager on saying as little as possible. The public sympathized with him as the victim of hounding by the media; hard-line sovereignists who once said the federalist press was trying to make him leader now said the same press was out to get him. And so far, there has been no new information has been published to keep the story alive. But by not making a full disclosure at a time and in circumstances of his own choosing, Boisclair has left those choices to others who might not have his interests or those of his party at heart. He has left himself at the mercy of his adversaries, both before the leadership convention and afterward. No one can always control the political agenda, but here's a case in which someone did have control over at least part of it, and chose to give it up. Although the cocaine issue won't stop Boisclair from becoming PQ leader, it isn't dead yet either, as we have seen this week. And it's Boisclair himself who won't put it to rest. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman