Poll data Polls show that Canadians consistently and strongly support two key aspects of Canadian official languages policy: • bilingual federal government services, • the right of official-language minorities to receive an education in their maternal language. However, among English-speaking Canadians there is only limited support for broadening the scope of official bilingualism, and reservations exist among Anglophones as to the intrusiveness and/or fairness of the policy. Among Francophones, polls have revealed no such reservations. Among Anglophones, support for providing federal French-language services to French-speakers living outside Quebec has remained consistently high over a quarter-century period—79% in 1977 and 76% in 2002. Over the same period, support among English-speakers for the "right to French language education outside Quebec where numbers make costs reasonable" has ranged from 79% to 91%. Among French-speaking Canadians, support for these policies was even higher. The national consensus has, at times, broken down when other aspects of official bilingualism are examined. However, a significant shift in anglophone opinion has occurred since the mid-2000s, in favour of bilingualism. According to a review of three decades' worth of poll results published in 2004 by Andre Turcotte and Andrew Parkin, "Francophones in Quebec are almost unanimous in their support of the official languages policy" but "there is a much wider variation in opinion among Anglophones ..." This variation can be seen, for example, in responses to the question, "Are you, personally, in favour of bilingualism for all of Canada?" Between 1988 and 2003, support for this statement among Francophones ranged between 79% and 91%, but among Anglophones support was never higher than 48%, and fell as low as 32% in the early 1990s. The ebb in support for bilingualism among anglophones can likely be attributed to political developments in the late 1980s and 1990s, including the failure of the
Meech Lake Accord, and the 1995 referendum on Quebec independence. This helps to explain results that would otherwise seem contradictory, such as a 1994 poll in which 56% of Canadians outside Quebec indicated that they either strongly or moderately supported official bilingualism, but 50% agreed with a statement that "the current official bilingualism policy should be scrapped because it's expensive and inefficient." In English Canada, there is some regional variation in attitudes towards federal bilingualism policy, but it is relatively modest when compared to the divergence between the views expressed by Quebecers and those expressed in the rest of the country. For example, in a poll conducted in 2000, only 22% of Quebecers agreed with the statement, "We have gone too far in pushing bilingualism," while positive response rates in English Canada ranged from a low of 50% in the Atlantic to a high of 65% in the Prairies. Both French-speaking and English-speaking Canadians tend to regard the capacity to speak the other official language as having cultural and economic value, and both groups have indicated that they regard bilingualism as an integral element of the Canadian national identity. Once again, however, there is a marked divergence between the responses of French-speaking and English-speaking Canadians. In a 2003 poll, 75% of Francophones indicated that "having two official languages, English and French" made them proud to be Canadian. Among English-speakers, 55% said that bilingualism made them proud, but far higher percentages (86% and 94%, respectively) indicated that multiculturalism and the Charter of Rights made them feel proud.
Findings of public hearings From time to time, boards or panels are commissioned, either by the federal government or the government of one of the provinces, to conduct hearings into the public’s views on matters of policy. Some of these hearings have dealt largely, or even primarily, with official languages policy, and the responses that they have collected provide snapshots into the state of public opinion at particular points in time.
Findings of the public hearings into the Poirier-Bastarache Report (1985) The
Advisory Committee on the Official Languages of New Brunswick was commissioned by the provincial legislature as a way of determining the response of the population to the 1982 Poirier-Bastarache Report, which had recommended a considerable expansion of French-language services. Public hearings were conducted in twelve cities and towns across the province in 1985, and a report was submitted by the committee in 1986. The briefs submitted to the Advisory Committee were subsequently summarized in an academic study of the hearings in the following terms:
Findings of the Spicer Commission (1990) In late 1990, a six-man
Citizens’ Forum on Canada’s Future was established by the federal government with a mandate to engage in "a dialogue and discussion with and among Canadians ... to discuss the values and characteristics fundamental to the well-being of Canada". The Forum, which was headed by former Commissioner of Official Languages Keith Spicer, published a report in June 1991, which included a detailed discussion of Canadians’ reactions to a variety of issues, including federal official languages policy. These comments, which probably represent the most extensive consultation ever with Canadians on the subject of official bilingualism, were compiled statistically by the Spicer Commission, and tend to reinforce the findings of pollsters, that Canadians are favourable towards bilingual services, but frustrated with the implementation of official languages policy. Thus, for example, nearly 80% of group discussions sponsored by the Commission produced favourable comments from participants on what the commission's report refers to as "bilingualism generally", but nearly 80% of these discussions produced negative comments on "official languages policy". These results prompted Spicer to write,
Advocacy groups ;Advocacy in support of expanding / extending official bilingualism exclusively of other language communities A number of groups exist, which, as part of their mandate, seek to promote official bilingualism or to extend the scope of the policy (although advocacy is not always the sole, or even the primary activity, of the groups). Among these groups: •
Alliance Quebec (defunct) • '''L'Association des municipalités francophones du Nouveau-Brunswick ''' •
Canadian Parents for French, established with the assistance of the Commissioner of Official Languages in 1977, promotes French second-language education for children whose mother tongue is English; •
Commission nationale des parents francophones •
Fédération des communautés francophones et acadienne du Canada serves as an umbrella for 22 groups representing French-speaking minorities in different provinces and territories; •
Fédération des jeunes francophones du Nouveau-Brunswick •
Fédération nationale des conseils scolaires francophones •
Francophone Association of Municipalities of Ontario seeks to oversee the maintenance and development of municipal government services in French, in Ontario municipalities with French-speaking populations. •
Impératif français seeks to promote the use of French within Quebec, and to challenge inequalities between the languages that may arise within areas of federal administration. •
Quebec Community Groups Network serves as an umbrella for 38 English language community organizations across Quebec for the purposes of supporting and assisting the development and enhancing the vitality of the English-speaking minority communities; •
Société des Acadiens et Acadiennes du Nouveau-Brunswick ;Advocacy in favour of restraining or abolishing official bilingualism A number of groups have existed, since the first
Official Languages Act was proclaimed in 1969, which sought to end official bilingualism or to reduce the scope of the policy. Among these groups: •
The Alliance for the Preservation of English in Canada (often referred to as "APEC"). In 2000, the group was renamed
Canadians Against Bilingualism Injustice. In 2001, the organization changed its name again, becoming the
Canadian Network for Language Awareness.; •
Canadians for Language Fairness; •
The New Brunswick Association of English-speaking Canadians was formed in 1984 and disbanded in 1986. Its primary purpose was to oppose the proposals of the province's "Poirier-Bastarache Committee" for an expansion of the province's policy of official bilingualism. In the first decade or so following the 1969 adoption of the act, opposition to the new policy sometimes took a radical form that has subsequently nearly disappeared. Books such as Jock V. Andrew's
Bilingual Today, French Tomorrow, advocated either the repeal of the
Official Languages Act or an end to the policy of official bilingualism.
Leonard Jones, the mayor of
Moncton, New Brunswick, was an aggressive opponent of bilingualism in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Jones challenged the validity of the
Official Languages Act in court, arguing that the subject matter was outside the jurisdiction of the federal government. In 1974, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled against Jones, and
found the law constitutional. In 1991, a local resurgence in anti-bilingualism sentiments allowed the
Confederation of Regions Party to win 21.2% of the vote in New Brunswick's provincial election and to briefly form the
official opposition with eight seats in the
provincial legislature. Some organizations or individuals within certain movements also propose introducing a more inclusive language policy either via official multilingualism, or an official unilingual language policy in an auxiliary language so as to intrude minimally into the first-language choice of residents. Such ideas are sometimes inspired by Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights relating to discrimination on the basis of language, and Article 26(3) of the same Declaration so as to give parents the freedom "to choose the kind of education that shall be given to their children." Others can be inspired by religious or other beliefs.
Assembly of First Nations: National First Nations Language Strategy, presented by the Assembly of First Nations on 5 July 2007, inspired by previous statements including the report of the Royal Commission on Aboriginal Peoples presented in 1996, rejects official bilingualism in favour of linguistic equality for speakers of indigenous languages: "First Nations seek legislated protection via a First Nations Languages Act that would be consistent with First Nations and Government of Canada laws dealing with languages."
The French Nation of Canada (FRENCA): The NAFRAC favours a more interlingual approach to language policy that promotes the local sign language, the local indigenous language, Esperanto or another international auxiliary language, and more linguistic freedom in unofficial domains.
Positions of the federal political parties Language issues dividing the parties The issues on which Canada’s political parties have most recently shown divergent voting patterns are two
private members’ bills. The first,
An Act to amend the Official Languages Act (Charter of the French Language) (Bill C-482), was introduced by Bloc MP
Pauline Picard. If adopted, it would have had the effect of amending the
Official Languages Act, the
Canada Labour Code, and the
Canada Business Corporations Act, to cause them to conform to the
Charter of the French Language, "effectively making the federal government French-only in the province," according to
Maclean’s. This bill was defeated in May 2008, with Bloc and NDP MPs voting in favour and Conservative and Liberal MPs opposed. The second private member’s bill is NDP MP
Yvon Godin’s Act to amend the Supreme Court Act (understanding the official languages) (Bill C-232). If adopted, this bill will have the effect of blocking any candidate who is not already sufficiently bilingual to understand oral arguments in both official languages from being appointed to the Supreme Court. This bill was passed at third reading on 31 March, with all NDP, Liberal and Bloc members in support and all Conservative MPs opposed. but did not pass the Senate.
Conservative Party of Canada and its predecessors The
Conservative Party of Canada was created in 2003 by the merger of the old
Progressive Conservative Party of Canada and the Canadian Alliance. The new party adopted the principles of the old Progressive Conservatives as its founding principles, with only a handful of changes. One of these was the addition of the following founding principle, which is lifted almost verbatim from Section 16(1) of the
Charter of Rights: "A belief that English and French have equality of status, and equal rights and privileges as to their use in all institutions of the Parliament and Government of Canada." At its founding convention in 2005, the new party added the following policy to its
Policy Declaration (the official compilation of the policies that it had adopted at the convention): "The Conservative Party believes that Canada’s official languages constitute a unique and significant social and economic advantage that benefit all Canadians. "i) A Conservative Government will support the Official Languages Act ensuring that English and French have equality of status and equal rights and privileges as to their use in all institutions of the Parliament and Government of Canada. "ii) The Conservative Party will work with the provinces and territories to enhance opportunities for Canadians to learn both official languages." Prior to this, in the 1980s and 1990s, the
Reform Party of Canada had advocated the policy's repeal. However, the party's position moderated with time. By 1999, the
Blue Book (the party's declaration of its then-current policies) stated that "The Reform Party supports official bilingualism in key federal institutions, such as Parliament and the Supreme Court, and in critical federal services in parts of the country where need is sufficient to warrant services on a cost-effective basis." By 2002, the policy declaration of the Reform Party's political successor, the
Canadian Alliance, had been moderated further, and stated that it was "the federal government's responsibility to uphold minority rights" by providing services in both languages in any "rural township or city neighbourhood where at least ten percent of the local population uses either English or French in its daily life".
Liberal Party of Canada The Liberal Party sees itself as the party of official bilingualism, as it was a Liberal prime minister, Pierre Trudeau, who enacted the first
Official Languages Act in 1969 and who entrenched detailed protections for the two official languages in the
Charter of Rights and Freedoms in 1982. The depth of the party’s commitment to official bilingualism is demonstrated by the fact that the constitution of the Liberal Party contains provisions modelled almost word-for-word on
Section 16(1) of the
Charter of Rights: "English and French are the official languages of the Party and have equality of status and equal rights and privileges as to their use in all federal institutions of the Party. In pursuing its fundamental purposes and in all its activities, the Party must preserve and promote the status, rights and privileges of English and French."
New Democratic Party New Democrat MPs voted in favour of the 1969
Official Languages Act, the 1988
Official Languages Act, and the protections for the two official languages contained in the
Charter of Rights. More recently, the party has edged towards supporting an asymmetrical version of bilingualism. Early in 2008, the party’s languages critic, Yvon Godin, stated that its MPs would vote in favour of a bill, sponsored by the Bloc Québécois, which would cause federal institutions to operate on a French-preferred or French-only basis in Quebec. In 2017, NDP MP Romeo Saganash spoke forcefully against making Anglo-French bilingualism a requirement for Supreme Court judges in addition to criticizing official bilingualism generally due to the linguistic barriers it imposes on indigenous candidates.
Positions of other political figures W. A. C. Bennett B.C. premier W. A. C. Bennett mused that Pierre Trudeau implemented bilingualism because he was a Quebec‐oriented politician who was mainly interested in promoting and protecting French Canada. ==See also==