The Hill Times
KAMOURASKA, QUE.—There is no question that we are living in tumultuous times. We face economic warfare with our southern neighbour, the consequences of which could be serious hardships for Canadians. In the midst of all this, Canadians are going to the polls, with the real possibility of foreign interference by the countries we should most fear: China and Russia. Given the turmoil in Canada and the world, the last thing we need is greater destabilization.
Bill 96 also defines who qualifies as an English-speaking Quebecer based on whether the majority of their schooling was in Canada. This excludes half a million English-speaking Quebecers from recognition as “historic anglophones,” and thus prevents them from requesting government services in their mother tongue. Many are elderly or from visible minority communities who emigrated to Quebec as teenagers. But in bills 84 and 94, we now see a double dosage of Quebec nationalism.
Heritage Intergovernmental Polarization Politics Quebec
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