Marwah Rizqy Amplifies PSPP Debate in April 29 Column

Marwah Rizqy Amplifies PSPP Debate in April 29 Column

marwah rizqy is central to a column published on April 29, 2026, that attacks Radio-Canada’s handling of a discussion about Paul St-Pierre Plamondon’s natalist policies. The piece, updated at 00:15, says the exchange on Marie-Louise Arsenault’s show turned into criticism of the PQ leader and the way his ideas were presented.

The column quotes the line: “À soir, on fait peur au monde en disant que le chef du PQ veut enchaîner les femmes à leur poêle et les obliger à pondre un enfant par année.” It says the discussion also cast PSPP’s policies as women being submitted to “le capitalisme patriarcal” and described Québec women as “tradwives” tout droit sorties de La servante écarlate.

Marie-Louise Arsenault’s Show

According to the column, the exchange happened on an episode of Marie-Louise Arsenault’s show, where a philosophe marxiste criticized PSPP. The piece does not just describe a disagreement over policy; it frames the broadcast as a debate over how Quebec’s public broadcaster handled the subject and how sharply the topic was put before listeners.

That framing matters because the column presents Radio-Canada as having moved from being a refuge for souverainistes to a platform where PSPP is attacked through a highly charged discussion of natalist ideas. The column also places Isabelle Blais inside the political moment, saying she announced that she would be a candidate for the PQ.

Radio-Canada and the PQ

Paul St-Pierre Plamondon is identified in the column as the chef du PQ and as the target of criticism over his natalist policies. Paul Piché is also mentioned as “the last of his line in a devastated world,” a line that adds to the column’s argument that the broadcast treated the issue as more than a policy dispute.

For readers following Quebec politics, the practical takeaway is that the dispute is not only about PSPP’s ideas but about who gets to frame them on Radio-Canada and with what language. The column makes that fight explicit, and the debate it describes sits at the intersection of women, family policy, and the PQ’s public image.

The next step is already set by the column itself: the discussion it describes has entered the public record, and the people named in it — PSPP, Marie-Louise Arsenault, Isabelle Blais, and Paul Piché — now sit inside a broader argument about how Quebec’s media and political actors talk about natalist policy.

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