Étapisme (French for gradualism) is the term for a strategy for independence dominant in the Parti Québécois since 1974.
It is associated with the figure of Claude Morin,[1] who convinced Parti Québécois leader René Lévesque and eventually a majority of party delegates to adopt its principles.
Before 1974, the Parti Québécois programme stipulated that independence would be declared upon electing a majority of Parti Québécois Members of the National Assembly of Quebec (MNAs), under Quebec's first-past-the-post electoral system and its British parliamentary system.
Under étapisme, the Parti Québécois would promise a good government first and propose a referendum on independence second.
Two of the most famous challenges to étapisme were at the 1981 National Congress, colloquially known as the Renérendum (because René Lévesque put his leadership in question in an internal vote on the question), and with the so-called Parizeau-Laplante Proposition of the 2000s.