Why Canadians Shouldn’t Trust the Quebec Government: A Case of Hypocrisy and Mismanagement
Quebec politicians love to talk about sovereignty, waving the banner of independence as if it were a birthright. But let’s get real: they can’t even manage a bridge properly. Take the A25 fiasco. Quebecers pay some of the highest taxes in Canada, yet the provincial government failed to hire enough qualified local engineers to build a critical piece of infrastructure. Citizens foot the bill, endure the delays, and watch their hard-earned money vanish into bureaucratic incompetence.
If you think this is a small issue, think again. Quebec’s obsession with political identity and French-language symbolism is coming at the expense of practical governance. Roads crumble, infrastructure projects falter, and essential services lag—all while politicians pat themselves on the back for “protecting Quebec culture.”
And let’s talk about the big claim: independence. How can Quebec ever hope to stand alone when it can’t even staff its transportation projects or adapt to federal changes? The driver shortages haunting transportation companies are not the fault of immigrants—they’re the result of poor planning by both Quebec and federal governments. Instead of preparing businesses for regulatory changes, politicians leave them scrambling, and taxpayers end up paying the price.
Insurance policies make matters worse. Cancellation fees block new drivers, preventing fresh talent from entering the workforce. In Quebec, if you want to survive and make money, you have to become a contractor. The system punishes the average worker while insiders and bureaucrats flourish.
Quebec is a financial trap. Politicians are too busy creating arbitrary French-language rules and defending imaginary sovereignty to focus on real-world problems—like fixing roads or ensuring competent engineers run projects. And with federal influence constantly shaping provincial decisions, the dream of independence isn’t just unlikely—it’s laughable.
Here’s the hard truth: Quebec will never achieve independence. Its government is unprepared, overregulated, and obsessed with image over substance. Citizens are overtaxed, underrepresented, and left to pick up the pieces of a government that prioritizes rhetoric over results. Quebecers should stop buying the myth—they’re paying for a fantasy they will never live.