I was ambivalent about the new Governor General until I heard her first speech from the throne. The rumours about her being a separatist were disquieting, but considering Quebec politics where so many people have been separatist at one point or another, a firm commitment to Canada now is acceptable. More concerning was her alleged involvement with former FLQ terrorists. I think that's what's been forgotten, though- beyond her having had a meal with them for her husband's documentary, we don't know whether there actually was any relationship. It is possible she was there simply for that reason, she is a journalist herself, and that's it. Certainly, it makes no sense for a hard-line separatist to take up the position of Governor General, and her speech from the throne seemed to be exactly what the Canadian gov't should have been saying to Quebec ages ago, and precisely the type of thing separatists would not want the people of Quebec to hear.
Briser les solitudes. It's about time. And I think all these attempts to paint her as a separatist by the Bloc and Parti Quebecois show how desperate they are to discredit her to Canadian nationalists. They had hoped that she, an intelligent and professional immigrant woman, would have been bought into their cause. She represents precisely the demographic that they have had so little success in reaching out to, and let us not forget that come referendum time, every vote matters. Canada is attempting to be very representative of the people, very representative to newer Canadians, and that shows that anyone can make it in this nation. That's a powerful tie to all of those immigrants in Quebec who feel left out by the forces in Quebec who base their nationalism on a language and culture that newcomers have little in common with. Instead of feeling excluded and unQuebecois, they feel Canadian. And those in Quebec who may be soft separatists approve of this move by the PM, and certainly it will affect how they perceive Canada. The appointment of Michaelle Jean was a coup by Martin against the separatist forces and it's one of the few feathers in his cap. It was a success for the nation, and this bickering about whether she was or wasn't a separatist is just the sort of reaction the separatists were hoping to stir up among us English Canadians so they could paint us as haters of the independence of Quebec.