From November 1, 1997 story
Hope and glory
by David Johnston, The Gazette
What a name!
Constance Middleton-Hope.
Middleton-Hope, brings
to the job a forceful and at times uncompromising personality that mirrors
the current mood of Quebec's English-speaking community.
"The best compliment I can give her is that she's a no-nonsense
woman," said Maria Peluso, a professor of political science at Concordia
University.
"Nobody is going to take advantage of Alliance Quebec as long as
she's there," said Phyllis Mosher, a former president of the Business
and Professional Women's Club of Montreal.
Middleton-Hope, who has held a number of senior administrative positions
in Quebec education, describes herself as a "moderate radical."
It wasn't that long ago that moderate was a noun, not an adjective, in English-Quebec
politics. Now radicals are everywhere. Radical is in. Radical is cool. Radical
is even politically correct.
"In those days, the way you got a raise was you left for another
job," she said during an interview at her Hudson home, where she lives
with her husband, Clark. The couple raised three children, two of whom now
work in Western Canada. One son works as a contractor in Vancouver. Her
other son is a police officer in Calgary. She has a daughter in Pincourt,
and five grandchildren in all.
In 1962, at the age of 35, Middleton-Hope returned to the work force
as a teacher. In the three decades since, she has become one of the most
accomplished English-speaking career women in Quebec of her generation.
You get tired just reading her resumé:
Teacher, school vice-principal, Lakeshore School Board, 1962-74. First
female vice-chairman of the Superior Council of Education, which advises
the government on education policy, 1974-78. Assistant director-general
of the Montreal Island School Council, 1979-88. President of the Féderation
des Femmes du Québec, 1988. Director of development and social action,
Christ Church Cathedral, Montreal, 1988-1991. Director of social action
and community concerns, the Synod of the Anglican Diocese of Montreal, 1991-96.
President of her own consulting firm, Link-Ages, which among other things
mediates disputes in the non-profit sector. A founder of Chez Doris, a west-end
drop-in shelter. A fundraiser for Auberge Madeleine, an east-end shelter
for homeless women. Past president of a long list of community groups and
campaigns; co-ordinator of a long list of conferences and seminars. And
on and on.
"If anything, you recognize immediately that she is someone of strong
moral character and solid values," said Vera Danyluk, chairman of the
Montreal Urban Community. "The French have a wonderful expression,
and I always say it's too bad we don't have the same expression in English:
Etre bien dans sa peau. Constance is very comfortable in her persona."
And that name, that name, that rock-solid Anglo-Saxon name.
Truth is, she's neither a Middleton nor a Hope by birth. Her maiden name
is Mackay, the surname of her father, a Scot. Her mother, Alice Cloutier,
was a French-speaking Quebecer descended from the original Cloutier settlers
who came to New France from France in the 1600s.
In 1953, she married Clark Middleton-Hope of Westmount, whose own father
immigrated to Montreal from England in 1904 and started an accounting business
that prospered. Clark's father left England a Hope; Middleton was one of
his middle names. He arrived here a Middleton-Hope, and found his newly
hyphenated name and English accent to be definite assets in the Montreal
of the turn of the century.
Since becoming chairman of the Alliance last May, Middleton-Hope has
impressed her colleagues.
"She's a very capable individual," said Gary Shapiro, an Alliance
board member and also the founding president of the Quebec Committee for
Canada, the lobby group behind the municipal unity-resolution initiative
that promotes partition as a price of Quebec independence. "She gets
things done and understands the issues and knows how to delegate."
Shapiro and David Black, also of the QCC's inner circle, were the most
conspicuous of the 11 additions to the Alliance's board at the organization's
annual meeting last May.
"What we're trying to do is get the Alliance to become a little
more aggressive, for lack of a better term," Shapiro said. "The
problem was they weren't doing a lot of things they should have been doing,
and they weren't getting credit for a lot of things they were doing."
As soon as they were elected to the board, Shapiro and Black lobbied
for the creation of a Canadian-unity committee within the Alliance. The
committee met three times this year to hammer out a mandate, but Shapiro
and Black were unable to get the majority of committee members to support
the notion of partition in the event of Quebec separation. On the other hand,
the final draft of the mandate statement, which is to be presented soon
for board approval, calls upon the Alliance to ask the federal government
to state flatly that Quebec has absolutely no right to become an independent
nation on the basis of a unilateral declaration of independence that would
follow any narrow Yes victory in a referendum on an unclear question.
Middleton-Hope said the mandate statement, which is silent on partition,
"meets the thinking and dialogue and conversation and debate that the
membership has had on this issue."
As for Quebec supposedly having no right to separate under terms proposed
by the sovereignist movement, she said, "That is something that has
to be repeated over and over and over again. I remember teaching a Grade
9 class about the causes of the French Revolution. Two years later, I had
the same class in Grade 11. And I said, `I don't think we have to spend
too much time on this. What were the causes of the French Revolution?' And
the class just looked at me like: `Huh?'
"You have to say things over and over again.''
As a former history teacher, Middleton-Hope knows that history is product
of both fact and myth. But in Quebec, she says, myths loom uncommonly large,
the product of four decades of revisionist history.
"Quebec has been very successful with revisionist history. They
say, "Well, there was this guy Champlain, and this place Montreal,
but Quebec really didn't begin until 1960. Before that, the English oppressed
the French, and that's the way it was, going back 200 years to the Conquest.
There's no mention that most of the soldiers were mercenaries who didn't
speak English or French. That's never taught.
"And we keep seeing this. You hear people say, `Oh, if you walked
into Eaton's, you couldn't find anyone who could speak French.' Even though
if you walk into Eaton's today, you can't find anybody who can speak English.
I've been in Eaton's recently, and the "fat old English lady"
has been replaced by the "fat old French lady."
Middleton-Hope talks at a fast clip and is quick with a witty retort,
just like all those perpetually sassy characters in Hollywood movies from
the '40s and '50s. In the past, many people have used the word gruff to
describe her, but then again, if she were a man, maybe they'd they just
say she was commanding, decisive.
"It's not that she's gruff or self-confident, though she is self-confident,"
Danyluk said. "It's that she's very confident in the conviction of
her own beliefs."
In other words, she's the boss, and what she says goes.
"But my aggression is tempered now by the fact that I'm more sensitive
to how people feel," Middleton-Hope said. Did she used to hurt people?
"Oh, I think so," she replied quickly. "You know, when you're
powerful and pushy, you do that, inevitably. I think I'm more conscious
now of how people react, and more respectful of their needs."
Said Mosher: "Connie knows when to put her foot down, and when not
to put her foot down."
Of all of Middleton-Hope's past administrative jobs, only one ended on
a sour note: her brief tenure as president of the Féderation des
Femmes du Québec. The federation won't talk about Middleton-Hope,
while Middleton-Hope says the federation came to regard the promotion of
sovereignty as its primary concern.
"When you run into one focus, you lose sight of all the other variables
that make up life," she said.
"Constance had a rough time with the women in the francophone feminist
movement," said Peluso, also active in the women's movement. A lot
of these movements and groups in Quebec are plagued with sovereignty as
their priority. The federation actually believes that the nationalist movement
in Quebec is good for women. When you show them how nationalist movements
everywhere else in the world have turned against women, they say, `Oh yes,
but that would never happen here.' And I say, `Oh really? Do you mean your
men are better than other men? Is that what you're saying?''
It was while she was working at the Superior Council of Education that the
fluently bilingual Middleton-Hope discovered that debating issues in a francophone
arena is different from debating them in an anglophone environment.
"You learn to moderate your speech, you learn to use sequential
arguments, you learn to present a recommendation that has had some detail
brought to it, and then reinforce that recommendation," she said. "It's
a different arena to work in. You have to know your players in Quebec. I've
noticed in Ottawa, it's more of a scrum, rather than that poised approach,
the re-thinking and coming to conclusions. In Quebec, you have to present
your arguments in a way that they will be received, or else you're just
going to be disregarded."
So says this moderate radical.
PS The job pays a stipend of $25,000 a year.
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