In
1976, Pierre Marc Johnson successfully ran as the
Parti Québécois candidate for the district of
Anjou.
Premier René Lévesque appointed him to the
cabinet in 1977 and he was re-elected in
1981. Johnson served as Minister of
Labour from 1977 to 1980, Minister to Consumers, Cooperatives and Financial Institutions from 1980 to
1981, Minister of Social Affairs from
1981 to 1984 and
Attorney General from 1984 to 1985.
Premier of Quebec In the
leadership election of 1985, Johnson was chosen to succeed PQ founder
René Lévesque as leader of the party and consequently as Premier of Quebec. Johnson was generally considered to be soft on the
sovereignty of Quebec issue. He put independence on the back burner, as Lévesque had begun to do under the "
beau risque" approach and eventually made that approach the official
constitutional policy of his party, calling it "National Affirmation". Johnson was described as somewhat on the right of the party.
Leader of the Official Opposition He was re-elected to the legislature in
1985, but his party was defeated by the Liberals, led by
Robert Bourassa. His leadership was contested by more
radical PQ supporters, such as
Gérald Godin. On November 10, 1987, he resigned as head of the party,
Leader of the Opposition and member of the
National Assembly. He was succeeded as head of the PQ by interim leader
Guy Chevrette and later
Jacques Parizeau, who again made independence a primary goal. Johnson lost in the December 1985 election after becoming leader in October. Johnson became as opposition leader and stepped down as party leader in 1987 (with next election in 1989). == After politics ==