Bernard Landry (born March 9, 1937, Saint-Jacques, Quebec, Canada—died November 6, 2018, Verchères, Quebec) was a Canadian politician who served as premier of Quebec (2001–03) and leader of the Parti Québécois (PQ; 2001–05).
Landry studied law at the University of Montreal and economics at the Institut d’Études Politiques (Institute for Political Studies) in Paris. In 1968 he helped found the Parti Québécois, a movement committed to winning independence for Quebec. In 1976 Landry was elected to the provincial legislature, and the PQ came to power in Quebec. He rose rapidly through a number of cabinet posts to become Quebec’s minister of finance in 1985. Later that year, however, the PQ was defeated in the general election, and Landry temporarily left politics to teach at the University of Montreal.
In 1994 the PQ was returned to power, and Landry was appointed deputy prime minister, the second most powerful post in the provincial administration. After being named finance minister in 1996, he sought to revive the Quebec economy, which had been weakened by years of political uncertainty. He also focused on shoring up Quebec’s public finances. Both these tasks were essential, he argued, to give credibility to Quebec’s claims of statehood. In 1999 he was able to achieve a balanced budget for the provincial government—the first time this had occurred in some 40 years.
In 2001 Landry succeeded Lucien Bouchard as leader of the PQ and premier of Quebec. His goals for Quebec were clear and uncompromising: independence combined with an economic union with the rest of Canada. Landry asserted that Quebec was more than a “distinct society” within Canada; it was a nation that deserved to be recognized as a state. Only statehood, he believed, would allow Quebec to fulfill its destiny as a French-language community in North America. Landry faced tough challenges in his mission to secure an independent Quebec. In particular, he had to contend with the province’s English-speaking residents and immigrants, who were strongly opposed to separation. Overall popular support for independence had been falling steadily since the 1995 referendum that had narrowly rejected secession. In the 2003 election Landry was defeated by Jean Charest of the Liberal Party. Two years later he resigned as leader of the PQ.