The Prague Post - Immigration, identity shape election in French-speaking Quebec

EUR -
AED 4.284404
AFN 77.937118
ALL 96.796006
AMD 446.382628
ANG 2.088714
AOA 1069.787893
ARS 1667.99906
AUD 1.77066
AWG 2.09991
AZN 1.981275
BAM 1.955719
BBD 2.351203
BDT 142.124136
BGN 1.955487
BHD 0.439751
BIF 3439.358083
BMD 1.166617
BND 1.509131
BOB 8.083424
BRL 6.226007
BSD 1.167352
BTN 103.556727
BWP 15.529359
BYN 3.969119
BYR 22865.690502
BZD 2.347803
CAD 1.627255
CDF 2939.874917
CHF 0.930523
CLF 0.028592
CLP 1121.643587
CNY 8.30573
CNH 8.333436
COP 4509.34749
CRC 587.375763
CUC 1.166617
CUP 30.915347
CVE 110.260923
CZK 24.386084
DJF 207.880531
DKK 7.466033
DOP 73.086984
DZD 151.513157
EGP 55.49538
ERN 17.499253
ETB 169.705206
FJD 2.634746
FKP 0.865788
GBP 0.868196
GEL 3.179021
GGP 0.865788
GHS 14.592335
GIP 0.865788
GMD 83.996369
GNF 10124.582233
GTQ 8.944631
GYD 244.188878
HKD 9.079511
HNL 30.649735
HRK 7.537283
HTG 152.753697
HUF 393.439173
IDR 19358.840214
ILS 3.825806
IMP 0.865788
INR 103.503298
IQD 1529.336896
IRR 49085.404551
ISK 141.592354
JEP 0.865788
JMD 186.838677
JOD 0.82717
JPY 176.269978
KES 150.668477
KGS 102.020223
KHR 4686.786524
KMF 491.145677
KPW 1049.951144
KRW 1648.744718
KWD 0.357334
KYD 0.972856
KZT 631.013963
LAK 25316.063895
LBP 104534.350476
LKR 353.09543
LRD 213.040296
LSL 20.079271
LTL 3.444716
LVL 0.705675
LYD 6.328278
MAD 10.648561
MDL 19.471113
MGA 5199.785443
MKD 61.664256
MMK 2449.356603
MNT 4196.186952
MOP 9.358174
MRU 46.566079
MUR 53.023313
MVR 17.860678
MWK 2023.807819
MXN 21.435844
MYR 4.916712
MZN 74.558221
NAD 20.079271
NGN 1714.92659
NIO 42.958227
NOK 11.618396
NPR 165.691163
NZD 2.009276
OMR 0.448563
PAB 1.167357
PEN 4.040633
PGK 4.898798
PHP 67.781024
PKR 330.673456
PLN 4.253748
PYG 8164.663105
QAR 4.266897
RON 5.099305
RSD 117.13179
RUB 95.750926
RWF 1694.922799
SAR 4.376102
SBD 9.601947
SCR 16.627247
SDG 701.690048
SEK 10.963725
SGD 1.507654
SHP 0.916778
SLE 27.211315
SLL 24463.37657
SOS 667.152456
SRD 45.0524
STD 24146.613661
STN 24.498989
SVC 10.214579
SYP 15168.194765
SZL 20.072172
THB 37.864295
TJS 10.827307
TMT 4.094825
TND 3.412459
TOP 2.732334
TRY 48.653288
TTD 7.928673
TWD 35.533398
TZS 2864.044245
UAH 48.242909
UGX 4014.834337
USD 1.166617
UYU 46.599076
UZS 14036.420821
VES 216.01842
VND 30757.853576
VUV 141.081046
WST 3.241483
XAF 655.927124
XAG 0.024281
XAU 0.000293
XCD 3.15284
XCG 2.103913
XDR 0.81284
XOF 655.932746
XPF 119.331742
YER 278.821783
ZAR 20.079447
ZMK 10500.956964
ZMW 27.695026
ZWL 375.650154
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    78.22

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0500

    23.75

    -0.21%

  • CMSD

    -0.0200

    24.42

    -0.08%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1600

    15.54

    -1.03%

  • GSK

    0.1400

    43.59

    +0.32%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    14.13

    -0.35%

  • SCS

    -0.0900

    16.89

    -0.53%

  • NGG

    0.4550

    74.355

    +0.61%

  • RIO

    -0.3800

    66.6

    -0.57%

  • BCC

    0.2800

    75.46

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    -0.9100

    45.5

    -2%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    11.26

    -0.27%

  • BTI

    0.7450

    51.925

    +1.43%

  • AZN

    0.4400

    85.93

    +0.51%

  • BP

    -0.0500

    34.78

    -0.14%

  • BCE

    0.0750

    23.265

    +0.32%

Immigration, identity shape election in French-speaking Quebec
Immigration, identity shape election in French-speaking Quebec / Photo: Mathiew LEISER - AFP

Immigration, identity shape election in French-speaking Quebec

Does immigration threaten the unique culture of French-speaking Quebec? However controversial, the claim is being pushed hard by the Canadian province's ruling party, whose brand of identity politics looks set to deliver them a win at the ballot box next week.

Text size:

A French-speaking bastion in mostly English-speaking North America, Quebec has long defended tooth and nail the language of Moliere. It's a fight taken up by the governing party since coming to power four years ago, the conservative Coalition Avenir Quebec (CAQ) -- but with an added focus on immigration.

Incumbent Quebec Premier Francois Legault made his views clear at the outset of the campaign: unchecked immigration by non-French speakers risks undermining social cohesion in the province.

It would be "a bit suicidal" to take in more newcomers given the decline of French, Legault -- whose party is leading in the polls ahead of Monday's provincial election -- argued again this week.

During a debate, his immigration minister, Jean Boulet, went further -- and provoked an uproar -- with the baseless claim that "80 percent of immigrants do not work, do not speak French or do not adhere to the values of Quebec society."

His comments are also glaringly at odds with the economic reality in the province of nearly 8.5 million inhabitants facing a severe labor shortage -- one that could be remedied through increased immigration.

With an ageing population retiring en masse and an unemployment rate at a historic low, Quebec is looking to fill more than 250,000 jobs. And the government anticipates that number will keep rising -- reaching some 1.4 million by 2030.

If reelected, Legault, a 65-year-old multi-millionaire businessman, plans to keep annual immigration capped at 50,000 people.

But some observers, like the sociologist Jean-Pierre Corbeil, are ringing alarm bells over the growing political conversation in Quebec linking language and immigration.

"We tend to put all the responsibility (for the decline of French) on the backs of immigrants," he told AFP. "And that's where it's dangerous, there is a discourse of exclusion that is taking shape."

"I find that it is extremely, I would almost say, unhealthy," echoed linguistics expert Richard Marcoux. "We will really have to resume the discussion after the elections to be able to address immigration issues in a different way."

- Is Quebec French in decline? -

Although views diverge on the question of immigration, all major parties vying for seats in Quebec's national assembly agree on the need to preserve the French language.

"We are in a critical situation. There is a real linguistic emergency in Quebec," said Paul St-Pierre Plamondon, leader of the separatist Parti Quebecois.

Such fears are based on the latest census data which found that the proportion of the population that speaks French most often at home has been on the decline in Quebec since 2001, falling from 81.1 percent to 77.5 percent last year.

But the sociologist Corbeil, who is also the former head of the government's data collection on linguistic trends, disputes the suggestion the situation is "catastrophic."

He says institutions are relying on an overly "simplistic" definition of a French-speaker -- including only those who use it as their main language at home.

"Shouldn't the objective be to discuss the state of French?" he asks, pointing to the many citizens with diverse backgrounds who are fluent in French -- although it may not be their mother tongue.

Marcoux agrees that such "multilingualism" is not being sufficiently taken into consideration in Quebec.

"When we speak about indicators based on the mother tongue, for me, that does not take into account the vitality and use of French by the population," explains Marcoux, who heads the Francophone Demographic and Statistical Observatory (ODSEF).

"English is progressing here as everywhere else on the planet, whether in Italy, Poland, Romania or France," he noted.

"But at the same time, native languages are not disappearing."

I.Mala--TPP