🔥 The Week-Long Strike That Shook Quebec's Campuses
In late March 2026, over 65,000 students from colleges and universities across Quebec, including thousands from Montreal institutions, launched a coordinated week-long strike from March 23 to 27. Organized by the Coalition de résistance pour l’unité étudiante syndicale (CRUES), the action culminated in a massive demonstration at Dorchester Square on March 27, where nearly 500 to over 1,000 protesters gathered before marching through downtown Montreal. Chants echoed demands for reinvestment in higher education as participants passed key sites like the Université du Québec à Montréal (UQAM) and dispersed near McGill Metro station. This surge of activism highlighted deep frustrations with provincial austerity policies amid rising living costs and stagnant support systems.
The strike disrupted classes at multiple CEGEPs (Collèges d'enseignement général et professionnel) and universities, drawing support from faculty at places like Dawson College. While no major arrests were reported, a heavy police presence underscored the tension, reminiscent of Quebec's storied history of student mobilizations.
Quebec's Unique Higher Education System Under Strain
Quebec's post-secondary landscape differs from the rest of Canada, featuring CEGEPs as a mandatory bridge between high school and university. These institutions offer two-year pre-university programs preparing students for three-year bachelor's degrees at universities or three-year vocational training for direct workforce entry. With over 460,000 students enrolled province-wide, the system emphasizes accessibility but faces chronic underfunding.
Montreal hosts powerhouses like McGill University, Concordia University, and UQAM, alongside CEGEPs such as Saint-Laurent and Dawson. Austerity has exacerbated issues: enrollment drops from a 33% tuition hike for out-of-province students and caps on international permits (down 49% in 2026), crumbling infrastructure, and hiring freezes slashing student services. At CEGEP Saint-Laurent, students described facilities as "depressing," with isolated programs like cinema lacking basic amenities.
Decoding the 2026-2027 Quebec Budget: Austerity in Numbers
The Legault government's March 2026 budget, presented by Finance Minister Eric Girard, allocated a modest 2.4% increase to education—below the 3.8% needed to match inflation and enrollment growth, per Institut de recherche et d'informations socioéconomiques (IRIS) estimates. Specific blows included a $25 million cut to student financial aid (Aide financière aux études or AFE), unchanged bursaries since 1986, and broader $570 million reductions risking special education services.
- Student Aid Cuts: $25M reduction leaves many choosing between food and rent.
- Infrastructure Neglect: Hiring freezes halt maintenance, leading to "falling apart" buildings.
- Enrollment Impacts: Tuition policies caused drops, straining budgets further.
- Overall Shortfall: Budget prioritizes corporate subsidies over public services like higher ed.
Critics argue this perpetuates inequality, making higher education accessible only to the privileged. The Federation of CEGEPs demanded full reinvestment to avert service collapses.
Student Leaders' Calls for Change
CRUES spokespeople led the charge. Elki Mercier warned, "Only the most privileged people will have access to education," highlighting AFE's inadequacy amid inflation. Naïma Le Nédic emphasized escalation: "The students will continue to escalate their pressure tactics." AECSL's statement from CEGEP Saint-Laurent decried governments favoring elites over public services.
Daphnée Lussier, a Saint-Laurent student, lamented infrastructure woes, while Dawson teachers like Emilie Richer noted job losses decimating programs. These voices underscore a unified push for reform, including paid internships and indexed international fees.
Photo by Yohann LIBOT on Unsplash
Ripples Across Montreal Institutions
UQAM saw heavy involvement, with over 20 student groups striking. McGill students rallied despite no official strike, linking austerity to university investments in arms. Concordia eyed further votes post-week. CEGEP Saint-Laurent hosted occupations, and Dawson faculty joined protests, fearing critical thinking erosion from cuts.
Disruptions forced class cancellations, amplifying calls for alliances with campus workers. UQAR's Simone Bélanger demanded massive reinvestment to preserve the social safety net.
Echoes of 2012: Quebec's Student Protest Legacy
This 2026 action mirrors the 2012 Maple Spring, where 300,000+ struck against 75% tuition hikes over five years, sparking pots-and-pans marches and a societal anti-austerity wave. Red square pins symbolized solidarity then and reemerged in 2026, worn by protesters like Nour El-Hage. Unlike 2012's tuition focus, today's fight targets holistic underfunding, but tactics—strikes, marches—remain potent, proving student power endures.
Financial and Infrastructural Toll on Students
Food insecurity plagues campuses; AFE covers basics inadequately, forcing dropouts. Infrastructure woes—leaky roofs, isolated facilities—dampen morale. Rising tuition (outrageous at CEGEPs/universities) compounds housing crises in Montreal, where rents soar. Stats show enrollment dips from policies, projecting revenue shortfalls unless reversed.
Stakeholder Perspectives: From Protests to Policy
CRUES urges assemblies, mobilization committees, and worker alliances. Centrale des syndicats du Québec (CSQ) slammed per-student funding drops. No direct Legault response noted, but budget defenders cite enrollment-tied increases. Experts like IRIS advocate 3.8% hikes minimum. Balanced views: some praise targeted success investments ($315M), but unions decry half-measures.CityNews coverage details the fervor.
Photo by Laurence BL on Unsplash
Toward Resolution: Escalation and Solutions
CRUES eyes indefinite strikes if unmet. Solutions include AFE indexation, infrastructure bonds, federal aid boosts. Positive paths: partnerships for paid co-ops, efficiency audits. For Canadian higher ed, Quebec's unrest signals national affordability crises, urging multi-province advocacy. AcademicJobs.com offers resources for navigating job markets amid uncertainty—explore higher ed jobs in Canada or career advice.
Outlook: Sustained pressure could yield reforms, echoing 2012's partial reversal, fostering equitable access long-term.
Global Lessons for Canadian Higher Education
Quebec's model, once envy-inducing for affordability, now warns of austerity's perils: innovation stalls, equity erodes. Peers like Ontario face OSAP cuts; solidarity grows. Actionable insights: students, join unions; faculty, ally; policymakers, prioritize per-student funding. With 64% postsecondary attainment milestone nearing, reversing cuts ensures Canada's talent pipeline thrives.





