Revamp of the Official Languages Act raises concerns among legal experts and Quebec Anglos
CBC
The Trudeau government's attempt to modernize the Official Languages Act has raised eyebrows in legal circles, sparked pushback from language rights activists, and prompted four Liberal MPs to take a stand against a bill that was tabled by their own party.
But what is Bill C-13? And why has it faced significant resistance?
Here's a rundown of what's included in the proposed legislation and why it has many in Quebec's English-speaking community worried.
According to Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, Bill C-13 "seeks to protect linguistic minorities across the country and protect French in Quebec," but critics have voiced concerns that the legislation will serve to further erode the rights of English-language minority communities within Quebec.
The main point of contention is the reference within the legislation to Quebec's Charter of the French Language, which was modified last year with the province's adoption of the controversial Bill 96 (now Law 14).
That law makes pre-emptive use of the notwithstanding clause, the part of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms that enables provincial governments to sidestep the Charter.
"What is important is that people realize that the reason behind the desertion of the English community in Quebec is purely political," said Montreal-based constitutional lawyer Julius Grey.
Bill C-13 is divided into three parts. The first part makes amendments to the Official Languages Act. The second part regulates the use of French in federally regulated private businesses, and the third part outlines the legal applications of the legislation.
While the bill includes a commitment to "enhancing the vitality of the English and French linguistic minority communities in Canada and supporting and assisting their development," there are concerns that a series of amendments led by the Bloc Québécois and supported by other opposition parties will further erode the rights of English-speaking Quebecers by emphasizing that anglophones in Quebec have "different needs" than francophones outside Quebec.
According to Bloc MP Mario Beaulieu, the amendments are necessary.
"By putting anglophones in Quebec and francophone Acadian communities on the same footing, every time they are given a right, the French language in Quebec is weakened, since English in Quebec is strengthened," reasoned Beaulieu during a December meeting of the standing committee on official languages.
In the 2019 throne speech, the Liberal government reaffirmed its commitment to reform the Official Languages Act. Although the act has been revised several times since its adoption in 1969, it was the first time a federal government declared a responsibility to protect and promote French, not only outside Quebec but also within Quebec.
This announcement came on the heels of a 2016 Statistics Canada census revealing that about 20 per cent of Quebecers speak English at home at least some of the time. This represented an increase of about five percentage points from the previous census and contributed to concerns that French in Quebec is on the decline.
While that same census also showed that 94 per cent of Quebecers can communicate in French, a number virtually unchanged from the previous census of 2011, perceptions in Quebec that go as far back as the 1839 Durham report — which strongly suggested that francophones be assimilated — have led most people in the province to see English as a threat to the long-term survival of French.