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The thorny question of identity at the heart of the Quebec legislative elections

Isolated in the heart of a mainly English-speaking North America, Quebec has always defended tooth and nail its French-speaking identity.

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The thorny question of identity at the heart of the Quebec legislative elections

Isolated in the heart of a mainly English-speaking North America, Quebec has always defended tooth and nail its French-speaking identity. A fight taken up by the party in power since its election four years ago, the Coalition Avenir Québec (CAQ), a motley nationalist party located on the right.

Non-French-speaking immigration, if it is not limited in number, could constitute a threat to the social cohesion of the province, thus launched the outgoing Prime Minister, François Legault, at the start of the campaign.

It would be "a bit suicidal" to accept more newcomers given the decline of French, he said again this week.

During a debate, his Minister of Immigration Jean Boulet told him that "80% of immigrants do not work, do not speak French or do not adhere to the values ​​of Quebec society". An unfounded exit that caused an uproar and could earn him his job.

Especially since with the glaring labor shortage faced by the province of nearly 8.5 million inhabitants, the question of immigration is a real economic issue.

Between graying demographics and historically low unemployment rates, the French-speaking province is currently looking for more than 250,000 workers. And the government anticipates 1.4 million jobs to be filled in the province by 2030.

If re-elected, François Legault, a 65-year-old multimillionaire businessman, plans to keep the thresholds at 50,000 immigrants a year.

"We tend to put all the responsibility (for the decline of the French language, editor's note) on the backs of immigrants", stresses sociologist Jean-Pierre Corbeil with concern. "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", comments for his part Richard Marcoux, also a sociologist and expert of the French-speaking world, adding that "we will really have to resume the discussion after the elections to be at even approach immigration issues in a different way".

Among the major parties in the running, although opinions on the question of immigration diverge, all agree on the need to preserve a French in decline.

"We are in a critical situation. There is a real linguistic emergency in Quebec," launched the campaign leader of the Parti Québécois (sovereignist), Paul St-Pierre Plamondon.

The politicians base these concerns in particular on the latest census figures, according to which "the proportion of the population who speaks French most often at home has been decreasing since 2001 in Quebec". This proportion has increased from 81.1% in 2001 to 77.5% in 2021.

But the situation "is not so catastrophic", tempers Jean-Pierre Corbeil, who is also a former head of the government program for linguistic statistics.

He denounces the "very simplistic" vision of institutions in their definition of a French-speaking person, which only counts those who mainly speak French at home.

"Are we interested in the evolution of the number of Francophones -- and we have to agree on a definition -- or should the objective not be to discuss the situation of French", he wonders, referring to all these citizens with "multiple affiliations" who speak French, but whose mother tongue it is not.

This "multilingualism" is not sufficiently taken into consideration in Quebec, also believes Richard Marcoux.

"When we are told about indicators based on the mother tongue, for me that does not take into account the vitality and the place of French within populations", explains the man who is director of the Demographic and Statistical Observatory of the French-speaking area.

For the researcher, "English is progressing, here as everywhere else on the planet, whether in Italy, Poland, Romania, France, but at the same time, languages ​​are not disappearing".

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