Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois serves as a ticket of Michel Hébert to collect donations

News 18 October, 2017
  • Photo Simon Clark
    The member of parliament in solidarity of Gouin explained that it is, according to him, a way to “replicate, with a smile” to a ticket, ridiculing his party.

    Marc-André Gagnon

    Wednesday, 18 October 2017 14:39

    UPDATE
    Wednesday, 18 October, 2017 15:10

    Look at this article

    Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois has found himself on the defensive after being served a ticket for the blogger Michel Hébert to collect donations from members of Québec solidaire.

    “I told you that Québec solidaire would be the subject of chronic assassins. But there is something else, this is madness,” wrote the spokesperson of Québec solidaire, in an email sent to its members.

    Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois online then are a few excerpts of a text posted online last Sunday by the blogger of the Newspaper, Michel Hébert.

    “QS, it is the policy version of the tofu. […] This party took care to conceal its true face, his affinity for communism, its roots plunging to the extreme left, where the reality is different, violence is commonplace and the economy is of no importance…”

    “Intoxicated Nadeau-Dubois has already participated in a “festival” marxist.”

    As reported in the Huffpost Québec, GND ends his email by inviting the members of his party to respond “to this kind of operation around […] by making a donation”.

    QS “not feeling heard”

    When asked about this in the press briefing, the member of parliament in solidarity of Gouin explained that it is, according to him, a way to “replicate, with a smile” to a ticket, ridiculing his party.

    Mr. Nadeau-Dubois is forbidden to pose as the victim of the media. “This is not a tactic, nor Donald Trump, nor conservatives. […] If the liberal Party had sent its members or its activists, activists in an e-mail saying : “this columnist has treated of all the names, it you try to replicate, please help us”, I would have found that it is a good way to mobilize its activist base, not that it is moved.”

    Even if he did not like his party to be compared ” to the policy version of tofu “, Gabriel Nadeau-Dubois has ensured that Michel Hébert was ” totally the right to do so “.

    “They can print and paste on all the walls of the parliament, if he wants it. It is his most basic right,” repeated the spokesman for Québec solidaire.

    A little earlier, her colleague Manon Massé has assured that it wasn’t the intention of his party to ” call into question the entire journalistic work “.

    “It is that, sometimes, it happens that we can grow a little bit the impact that it makes us, the evil that it makes us, when we don’t feel heard (as a political party),” said the member of parliament for Sainte-Marie–Saint-Jacques, who is also a spokesperson of Québec solidaire.