This study was about Rene Lebesque, one of the former Prime Minister of Quebec from 1976 to 1985. Lesveques was born in New Carlisle of Gasperia in August 1922, died on November 1, 1987. With his early career, he studied at Lawalle College of Law School, but he did not finish his own time. He became a journalist and radio animator. Later, as part of the Liberal Party, he served the National Assembly of Quebec State from 1961 to 1967. Levisk is a very attractive person, which helps him win the citizen's trust and support.
In the 1970s, politician René Lévesque founded a party, PartiQuébécois (aka Péquistes), whose main purpose is Quebec's sovereignty. Basically, I want to go out in Quebec, but Canada does not make it happen. After a fierce campaign, the refusal of the proposal by the Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau and some persuasion maintained little of the existence of a referendum of the Separatists. By spring of 1984, political affairs made Canada a problem, and Québécois was betrayed. In a 1945 article George Orwell wrote about interests in sports and how nationalism and sports have become dangerous and intense mixtures. The team has become the nationwide representative. Mr. Orwell states as follows. "By dispatching a team to fight some competitors you really make things even worse."
Perhaps the most important basis for supporting Quebec's sovereignty movement is the recent political event. For practical purposes, many political experts view René Levescu's political career and effort as an indication that it is now considered to be the beginning of the modern movement. revolution. René Lévesque, the first sovereign referendum designer, claimed that after victorious in the 1980 federal referendum he was actively engaged in the transformation of the Canadian framework. This method is known as Le Baud Risk ("Beautiful Risk"), and many of the Ministers of the Lebesque regime resigned in protest. Asylum of the Canadian Constitution in 1982 did not solve this problem from the perspective of most sovereignty.
However, Quebec Prime Minister René Lévesque is not too concerned about the charter. In 1975, Quebec developed its own "Charter of Human Rights and Freedom", which prioritized other laws of the state (but did not participate in the "Canadian Constitution"). Lebesque did not respect Quebec 's traditional constitutional veto right, but it was a violent opposition to any new constitutional arrangements. After signing an alliance with the prime ministers of other states (see 8 gangs), he replaces "constitutional agreement" which prefers state rights rather than "some authority" or "rigidity" I agreed to give up rejection to. Concept of Federalism. ""