Claude Morin, architect of Quebec’s Quiet Revolution and RCMP informant, dead at 96
MONTREAL —
Claude Morin, architect of the Quiet Revolution who helped shape modern Quebec but whose political career unravelled in controversy, has died at 96.
A former Parti Québécois minister, Morin played a central role in Quebec’s transformation during the 1960s, helping engineer the PQ’s historic 1976 election victory and shaping the party’s referendum strategy on sovereignty.
His reputation, however, was overshadowed by revelations that he had maintained ties to the Royal Canadian Mounted Police as a paid informant, a scandal that made him a political outcast in Quebec nationalist circles.

