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Robert BourassaRobert Bourassa (July 14, 1933–October 2, 1996) was a politician in Quebec, Canada. Born in Montreal, he served as Liberal Premier of Quebec from May 12, 1970 to November 25, 1976. He served as premier again from December 12, 1985 to January 11, 1994). Profile Robert Bourassa graduated from the University of Montreal law school in 1956 and was admitted to the Barreau du Qubec the following year. As Premier of the Province of Quebec, he played a critical role in the October Crisis of 1970 in which his colleague Pierre Laporte was murdered. It was Bourassa who pushed the Prime Minister of Canada, Pierre Trudeau, to declare a state of emergency, which resulted in the Canadian army patrolling the streets of major cities in Quebec and in the national capital, Ottawa. After Laporte's kidnapping, Bourassa barricaded himself and his cabinet behind heavy layers of security. Bourassa and Trudeau often clashed over issues of federal-provincial relations and Quebec nationalism with Trudeau opposing what he saw as concessions to separatism. Trudeau also looked down on Bourassa personally, once referring to him as a mangeur d'hot dog (a hot dog eater). Bourassa lost the 1976 Quebec election to Ren Lvesque, leader of the separatist Parti Qubcois. He resigned as Liberal Party leader, and accepted teaching positions in Europe and the United States. He subsequently returned to politics as Liberal leader on October 15, 1983, and regained the office of premier in 1985. During his time in power, he implemented policies aimed at protecting the status of the French language in Quebec. In 1974, he introduced Bill 22, the first legislation designed to strengthen the position of French within Quebec. However, this legislation was soon superseded by the Charter of the French Language also known as Bill 101, introduced by the Parti Qubcois government that replaced him in 1976. In his second term, he invoked the notwithstanding clause of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms to override a Supreme Court ruling that declared parts of the Charter of the French Language unconstitutional, causing some English-speaking ministers in his government to resign. A few years later, however, he introduced modifications to the language charter. These compromises reduced the controversy over language that had been a dominant feature of Quebec politics over the previous decades. The majority of Quebecers reached a consensus on accepting the new status quo. Bourassa also pushed for Quebec to be acknowledged in the Canadian constitution as a "distinct society", promising Quebecers that their grievances could be resolved within Canada with a new constitutional deal. Early in his first term, he participated in an early attempt at constitutional reform, the Victoria Charter of 1971, which quickly unravelled. In his second term, he worked closely with federal Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and received many concessions from the federal government, culminating in the Meech Lake Accord and the Charlottetown Accord. When both of these accords failed to be ratified, the constitutional reform efforts collapsed, reviving the separatist movement. Bourassa initiated the James Bay hydroelectric projects, but ran into opposition from environmentalists and the Cree who lived on the land in question. The Bourassa government also played a major role in rescuing the 1976 Olympic Games in Montreal from the huge cost overruns and construction delays incurred by the mismanagement of the project by mayor Drapeau's administration. Bourassa retired from politics in 1994 in poor health and having lost the popularity that had returned him to the premier's office. He was replaced as Liberal leader and premier by Daniel Johnson, Jr., who lost an election to the separatist Parti Qubcois after only nine months. In 1996, he died in Montreal of skin cancer and was interred at the Cimetire Notre-Dame-des-Neiges in Montreal, Quebec. Quotations Elections as party leader He won the 1970 election and the 1973 election, lost the 1976 election, retired and returned, won the 1985 election and 1989 election, and resigned in 1994. See also External links First Term Second Term Bourassa, Robert Bourassa, Robert Bourassa, Robert Bourassa, Robert
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