There are plans.
By the way, it's refreshing to have a proud Canadian patriot on the opposition benches, as opposed to what we've seen over the past decade, and congratulations on your appointment.
The answer is yes, but all these things have to be done in partnership, and I think it worked very well in the 400th anniversary of Quebec City.
Certainly, the last thing Quebeckers want—or any Canadian wants—is the federal government and a heritage minister who is from Vancouver going into Montreal to say, “Here's how we envision things”. It's not how you do it. It's not respectful. It's not the right way to do it, so we work in partnership.
The City of Montreal, which is really one of the cultural capitals of the planet, obviously is going to have a very ambitious, very large, and very exciting program. I'm sure you know that Montreal is home to the largest comedy festival in the world, the largest jazz festival in the world, and the second-largest—they argue the largest, but I think it's the second-largest—St. Patrick's Day on the planet.
Montreal does everything big, and they do it very well, I think, certainly on the cultural side. I'm looking forward to working with the mayor. I know you're the heritage critic for the opposition, but you come from Montreal, so working with you on specific projects will add a pan-Canadian scope to Canada's second-largest city but will also be respectful of the fact that this is a Montreal celebration as much as it is a Canadian one.