Charest called the election on November 5, saying he needed a "clear mandate" and a majority to handle the economic storm. He was criticized, however, by the
Parti Québécois and the
Action démocratique du Québec for calling a snap election to get a majority when they were willing to work with him to fix the economy. Most notably, the election was marked by a significant collapse in support for the ADQ. Formerly a relatively minor party, the ADQ had attracted significant protest support in the
2007 election, beating the Parti Québécois to
Official Opposition status. In 2008, however, the party's support dropped back to approximately 15 per cent of the popular vote, roughly the same range of support the party attracted before 2007. As a result of this loss of support,
Mario Dumont announced in his concession speech that he would step down as party leader. In the final days of the election campaign, the concurrent
parliamentary confidence dispute became an issue, with Prime Minister
Stephen Harper attacking the credibility of a potential
Liberal-
New Democratic Party coalition government because the
Bloc Québécois had pledged to support the coalition on
motions of confidence. Both Marois and Dumont called upon Charest, a former leader of the federal
Progressive Conservatives, to clarify where he stood on the coalition and on Harper's use of anti-
sovereigntist rhetoric in the dispute. Charest emphasized that the Bloc MPs had been legitimately elected by Quebecers, and stated that "I live in a society in which people can be sovereigntists or federalists, but they respect each other. The same thing should prevail in the federal parliament." Media analysts noted that while Charest's Liberals won a majority, the final result was much narrower in both the popular vote and the seat total than polls even just a few days before the election had predicted, because the Liberals only won an eight-seat majority, a result which was widely credited to a late voter swing toward the PQ as a result of Harper's comments. ==Timeline==