Liberal Leader Philippe Couillard defended attacks by his troops against the rival Coalition Avenir Québec as the province’s election campaign hit the one-third mark on Tuesday.
Couillard said he wouldn’t condone the harsh words of three candidates, including two outgoing senior ministers, who accused the CAQ of a lack of transparency and frequent flip-flops.
CAQ Leader François Legault, whose party has been steadily ahead in the polls, called out the Liberals for those frequent attacks and questioned why Couillard didn’t deliver them himself.
READ MORE: Which party deserves the title of most ‘progressive’ in Quebec politics?
But Couillard dismissed his opponent’s complaint Tuesday, saying that while the Liberal campaign has kept to his plan of being positive, it doesn’t prevent criticism of opponents when warranted.
“It’s a campaign of debates, my candidates aren’t engaging in personal attacks, they are asking questions,” he said in the Gaspe region, adding they are valid questions related to CAQ policies and commitments.
“This is the essence of democracy: we have debates, we have difference of opinions, so we can criticize. Have we been criticized in the recent four years? Sometimes. It is it legitimate for us to do the same? Of course it is.”
READ MORE: Poll shows Liberals leading Quebec youth vote
Asked to evaluate his first two weeks, Couillard said he’s received positive marks for the Liberal campaign thus far.
“The appraisal is that we’ve been doing an organized campaign, well managed, according to an established plan, day after day after day,” he said.
“We are leading a campaign that’s strong on our promises, and the link between those promises and the everyday lives of people and people see it.”
Legault, meanwhile, said he wants to bring the focus back to ideas with his party still leading in the polls ahead of the Oct. 1 vote.
“I hope in the last two-thirds that are left, we talk more about our proposals on the economy, health and education, of our extraordinary team,” the CAQ leader said.
“There have been all sorts of other subjects…in the campaign. I hope we’ll come back to the merits of the propositions in the three sectors that are most on the minds of Quebecers — that is the economy, education and health care.”
WATCH: Quebec parties aim to woo seniors
The political parties headed to the province’s outlying regions on Day 13, with Couillard dangling the prospect of decentralizing the decision-making teams in certain provincial departments and relocating them to those areas where it makes geographical sense.
For example, Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean would see the province’s Forestry Department move to its region or employees specializing in mining would see their resources moved to Abitibi-Temiscamingue, he said.
READ MORE: CAQ leader announces ‘party’s most important healthcare commitment’
In Thetford Mines, 250 kilometres east of Montreal, Legault made several promises to better support Quebecers who take care of a sick or elderly family member.
One of them was a pledge to create 20 temporary care homes and hike a caregiver tax credit to $2,500 from $1,176.
Back in the Gaspé, Parti Québécois Leader Jean-François Lisée promised to reduce the cost of hunting and fishing licences and encourage the practice, particularly among youth.
The PQ says the measures would be welcome among the roughly one million Quebecers who take part in the sport.
Lisée was joined by candidate Sylvain Roy, who has represented the eastern Quebec riding of Bonaventure for the party since 2012 and is in another fight of his own: he is beginning throat cancer treatments as of Wednesday while seeking re-election.
READ MORE: Parti Québécois and Québec Solidaire want to boost minimum wage to $15 per hour