Pierre Poilievre Just Opened a Can of Worms Canada Didn’t Need
One careless political swing… and suddenly we’re arguing about separation again.
You ever notice how some political mistakes don’t just land with a thud… they bounce?
That’s what happened this week.
A comment meant to take a shot at the Liberals somehow managed to wake up two things Canada has spent decades trying to keep in the back closet… separatism and constitutional drama.
And here’s the kicker…
It didn’t even take long for the wheels to come off.
Pierre Poilievre claimed separatist sentiment basically disappeared under Stephen Harper’s Conservatives.
Nice soundbite. Clean applause line.
Problem is… history didn’t cooperate.
Because separatist movements didn’t vanish.
Not in Alberta.
Not in Quebec.
Not even close.
Alberta has flirted with separatist talk for well over a century. Sometimes loud. Sometimes quiet. But gone? No.
And Quebec?
That argument falls apart even faster.
In 2012… smack in the middle of Harper’s time as Prime Minister… Quebec elected a separatist government under the Parti Québécois.
That’s not ancient history.
That’s not fuzzy memory.
That actually happened.
Which meant the claim got fact-checked almost immediately.
And political opponents smelled blood in the water.
The Bloc Québécois didn’t waste time jumping on it.
Suddenly the conversation wasn’t about Liberal failures or affordability or housing or trade.
Nope.
We were back talking about separation.
Again.
And worse?
The whole thing reopened debate around the Clarity Act… the law that governs how separation referendums would even work in Canada.
Because in Canada, leaving the country isn’t supposed to work like deciding where to order pizza from.
You don’t just shout “50% plus one!” and call it a day.
The Clarity Act exists because national divorce is messy, emotional, economically dangerous, and historically expensive.
Now suddenly there’s renewed chatter about repealing it.
That’s the part people should pay attention to.
Not because separation is suddenly around the corner.
It isn’t.
But because political carelessness has consequences.
You toss out a line trying to score points, and before you know it, people you weren’t trying to help are standing there holding the microphone.
Separatist voices got attention they didn’t earn.
Media narratives shifted.
The conversation changed overnight.
And once identity politics gets oxygen in this country, it spreads fast.
We’ve seen this movie before.
Markets hate uncertainty.
Investors hate constitutional drama.
Businesses hate instability.
Canadians? Most of us are just tired.
Tired of politicians playing verbal dodgeball with facts.
Tired of outrage replacing accuracy.
Tired of politics turning into performance art.
Because this is bigger than one bad statement.
It’s about discipline.
Leadership means knowing that when you talk about national unity, words matter.
Canada isn’t some cheap political prop you wave around to score points for the evening news clip.
You don’t casually poke old regional wounds and expect nothing to happen.
And here’s the uncomfortable truth…
You don’t need strong opponents when you hand them ammunition yourself.
That’s the part that should worry people.
Because the loudest political messes often start with one careless sentence somebody thought would land better than it did.
Turns out history has receipts.
The Recap…
One political jab turned into something much bigger.
A shaky claim about separatism quickly got fact-checked… and suddenly Canada was back talking about Quebec, Alberta, referendums, and the Clarity Act.
Funny how fast politics changes when facts show up with paperwork.
The Gut-Punch…
Canada’s biggest political wounds don’t usually reopen because somebody planned it.
They reopen because somebody talked before they thought.
Source credit:
Parliamentary debate, historical election records, public reporting on separatist movements, the 2012 Quebec election, and recent commentary surrounding the Clarity Act debate.
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I, for one, am so, so tired of this separation talk. With all that’s going on in the world can we not just work together instead of this childish nonsense? Reminds me of when my kids were young and when they didn’t get their way they would have a hissy fit!
Almost as if Project 2025 is a global goal with global roots to groups like the IDU and Heritage foundation 😉