For years there have been hints that the Community wanted to better demonstrate the link between
Wallonia and
Brussels, the two main territories where the French speakers are in the majority. These include the creation of several organisations such as
Wallonie-Bruxelles International, a public body in charge of international cultural affairs set up jointly by the French Community, the
Walloon Region and the
Commission communautaire française (COCOF, a French-speaking institution of the
Brussels-Capital Region). The concept of "
Wallonie-Bruxelles" is however not mentioned in the
Belgian constitution, and appeared only in a few official legal texts, such as the "''Arrêté du Gouvernement de la Communauté française fixant le code de qualité et de l'accueil
" of 17 December 2003, mentioning the name "Communauté Wallonie-Bruxelles
", and the "Arrêté du Gouvernement de la Communauté française approuvant le programme quinquennal de promotion de la santé 2004–2008
" of 30 April 2004, mentioning the name "Communauté française Wallonie-Bruxelles''". In May 2011, the parliament of the Community voted a resolution according to which it would, from then on, use the name "Wallonia-Brussels Federation" (French: "
Fédération Wallonie-Bruxelles") for all its communications, campaigns and in the administration. The move was immediately interpreted as aggressive by the Flemish authorities, the Minister-President of Flanders announcing he would not recognize the federation as an official body and saying that documents that would be sent by the federation would be unconstitutional and therefore would not exist. That name also obscures the fact that this institution does not represent the Flemings living in Brussels, nor their local Flemish Community Commission ('Vlaamse Gemeenschapscommissie', or VGC) nor the Brussels-Capital Region. While the authorities of the Community acknowledge the fact that the new name is not mentioned in the Belgian Constitution, they insist that their move is not illegal, as long as the new name is used as an additional name for the Community and is not used when it could create a legal issue (such as with the official texts published in the
Belgian Official Journal). Although the then
Belgian Prime Minister Yves Leterme said that the federal government would not use the new name and the Flemish
VRT decided not to use the new name in its news programs either, it is used by the French-speaking media, including the
RTBF public network, which is fully controlled by the Community. The independent/private media uses both the alternative and the original designation. In September 2011, the Community adopted a new logo that incorporates its new name. ==Politics and government==