Maxime Bernier testing voters’ loyalties in Quebec’s conservative Beauce
SAINT-GEORGES-DE-BEAUCE, Que. — Maxime Bernier, leader of the People’s Party of Canada, has shaped his political persona in the mould of his home region of the Beauce: fiercely independent, industrious, entrepreneurial.
But since he slammed the door on the Conservatives in 2018 and started his own right-wing political party, he has tested the loyalties of the people from this unique part of Quebec.
A hilly territory of small towns dotted along the Chaudiere River between Quebec City and the border with Maine, the Beauce has kept Bernier, and before him his father Gilles, in the House of Commons for a combined 26 years.
Now, Bernier is fighting for his political survival. He is dogged by accusations that he’s done little to weed out racists and conspiracy theorists from his own ranks, and he faces a vengeful Tory machine bent on burying his political career.