François Legault will seemingly serve a second term as premier, with all major news outlets officially projecting that his Coalition Avenir Québec party will win a majority of seats in the October 3 Quebec election.
The Parti Québécois, for decades the political engine of Quebec's sovereignty movement, has suffered a substantial defeat in the October 3 provincial elections, with their projected seat total of three.
As the October 3 election approaches, Quebec political parties are outlining their campaign aesthetics the bright colours, glittering graphics and often generous headshot filters they'll use to attract voters like crows drawn to shiny garbage. In a province where four major parties and a handful of smaller organizations are competing for attention, perhaps no campaign element comes with higher stakes than the slogan.
Less than a week before the Quebec election, the CAQ is still on track to crush its opponents even though its support is slipping, according to the latest poll by Léger and Québecor.
Ahead of the Quebec election, Premier François Legault is less popular than any other point since he entered the post in 2018, according to the latest Angus Reid Institute (ARI) poll of premier approval ratings. Only 43% of Quebecers polled in the September survey said they either approved (23%) or strongly approved (20%) of Legault's performance.